BSc Fundamental Physics, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain, 2003-2008 MSc Oceanography, Universite Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France, 2009-2011 PhD Marine Biogeochemistry, Universite Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France, 2011-2014
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Biography

Joan Llort is a biogeochemical oceanographer dedicated to understand the links between the blue ocean (temperature, salinity, density, currents) and the green ocean (plankton, organic matter, bacteria, fish). To this aim he combines biogeochemical models with observations obtained with satellites, autonomous floats (bgcArgo) and ship-based in-situ observations. Joan has shaped a strong interdisciplinary background by participating in several long duration sea-cruises (KEOPS2 and EDDY), working in high-performance computing environments and developing a wide international network with collaborators from different disciplines. Amongst his research highlights, he provided a new theoretical framework to explain high-latitude phytoplankton blooms and he developed a detection method to observe small-scale carbon vertical injections using autonomous floats. He is currently interested on understanding how dust storms and bushfires in Australia's continent influence phytoplankton growth in the Tasman Sea and the Southern Ocean. Joan holds a BSc on Fundamental Physics from the Universitat de Barcelona (Barcelona, Spain) and a PhD in Marine Biogeochemistry delivered by the Sorbonne Université (Paris, France), under the supervision of Dr. Marina Lévy. He has worked as a Research Fellow in LOCEAN-IPSL laboratory (Paris, France) and at the Institute of Marine and Antarctic Studies at the University of Tasmania (Hobart, Australia). He has enjoyed research stays in the British Antarctic Survey (Cambridge, UK), at Southern Ocean Carbon & Climate Observatory (Capetown, South-Africa) and at the State Key Laboratory of Marine Science (Xiamen, China). He is currently based at the Barcelona Supercomputing Centre in Barcelona, Spain.