World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
73
Citations
15974
World Ranking
1206
National Ranking
161

Overview

Stephen C. Maberly is affiliated with Lancaster University in the United Kingdom. Their research primarily spans the fields of Environmental Science and Earth and Planetary Sciences, with a strong focus on subfields such as Environmental Chemistry, Oceanography, Ecology, Molecular Biology, and Nature and Landscape Conservation.

The core topics of their work include Aquatic Ecosystems and Phytoplankton Dynamics, Marine and Coastal Ecosystems, Fish Ecology and Management Studies, Microbial Community Ecology and Physiology, Soil and Water Nutrient Dynamics, Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms, and Algal Biology and Biofuel Production.

Recent publications by Stephen C. Maberly demonstrate engagement with climate change impacts on aquatic systems and lake environments. Notable papers include:

  • Global lake thermal regions shift under climate change, 2020, Nature Communications
  • Lake heatwaves under climate change, 2021, Nature
  • Climate change drives widespread shifts in lake thermal habitat, 2021, Nature Climate Change
  • Hydropower reservoirs on the upper Mekong River modify nutrient bioavailability downstream, 2020, National Science Review
  • Deeper waters are changing less consistently than surface waters in a global analysis of 102 lakes, 2020, Scientific Reports

Stephen C. Maberly frequently collaborates with a number of other researchers, including Brigitte Gontero, R. Iestyn Woolway, Stephen J. Thackeray, Wenmin Huang, and Donald C. Pierson. These collaborations reflect a consistent pattern of interdisciplinary and international research partnerships.

Their work has been published in several recurring academic venues. The most frequent publication outlets for their research include Inland Waters, Nature Climate Change, Limnology and Oceanography, Frontiers in Plant Science, and Protist.

Best Publications

  • Impacts of multiple stressors on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning: the role of species co‐tolerance

    Rolf D. Vinebrooke;Kathryn L. Cottingham;Jon Norberg;Marten Scheffer

  • Microbial diversity and ecosystem function

    Bland J. Finlay;Stephen C. Maberly;J. Ian Cooper

  • Fluxes of methane and carbon dioxide from a small productive lake to the atmosphere

    Peter Casper;Stephen C. Maberly;Grahame H. Hall;Bland J. Finlay

  • Lake heatwaves under climate change.

    R. Iestyn Woolway;R. Iestyn Woolway;Eleanor Jennings;Tom Shatwell;Malgorzata Golub

  • State of the Climate in 2014

    Arlene P. Aaron-Morrison;Steven A. Ackerman;Nicolaus G. Adams;Robert F. Adler

  • Algal evolution in relation to atmospheric CO2: carboxylases, carbon-concentrating mechanisms and carbon oxidation cycles

    John A. Raven;John A. Raven;Mario Giordano;John Beardall;Stephen C. Maberly

  • Long-term changes in oxygen depletion in a small temperate lake: effects of climate change and eutrophication

    Brian Foley;Ian D. Jones;Stephen C. Maberly;Brian Rippey

  • Discrimination between12C and13C by marine plants.

    S. C. Maberly;J. A. Raven;A. M. Johnston

  • Freshwater angiosperm carbon concentrating mechanisms: processes and patterns

    Stephen C. Maberly;Tom V. Madsen

  • Nutrient limitation of phytoplankton and periphyton growth in upland lakes

    S. C. Maberly;L. King;M. M. Dent;R. I. Jones

  • Long‐term change in the phenology of spring phytoplankton: species‐specific responses to nutrient enrichment and climatic change

    S. J. Thackeray;I. D. Jones;S. C. Maberly

  • PHOTOSYNTHETIC INORGANIC CARBON USE BY FRESHWATER PLANTS

    Unknown

  • Algal and aquatic plant carbon concentrating mechanisms in relation to environmental change.

    John A. Raven;Mario Giordano;John Beardall;Stephen C. Maberly

  • EXOGENOUS SOURCES OF INORGANIC CARBON FOR PHOTOSYNTHESIS BY MARINE MACROALGAE 1

    Unknown

  • Catchment productivity controls CO 2 emissions from lakes

    Stephen C. Maberly;Philip A. Barker;Andy W. Stott;Mitzi M. De Ville

  • Hyperspectral remote sensing of cyanobacterial pigments as indicators for cell populations and toxins in eutrophic lakes

    Peter D. Hunter;Andrew N. Tyler;Laurence Carvalho;Geoffrey A. Codd

  • Sediment amendment with Phoslock® in Clatto Reservoir (Dundee, UK): Investigating changes in sediment elemental composition and phosphorus fractionation.

    Sebastian Meis;Bryan M. Spears;Stephen C. Maberly;Michael B. O'Malley

  • A new widespread subclass of carbonic anhydrase in marine phytoplankton.

    Erik L Jensen;Romain Clement;Artemis Kosta;Stephen C Maberly

  • Hypothesis: The Rate and Scale of Dispersal of Freshwater Diatom Species is a Function of their Global Abundance

    Bland J Finlay;Elaine B Monaghan;Stephen C Maberly

  • Global lake thermal regions shift under climate change

    Stephen C. Maberly;Ruth A. O'Donnell;R. Iestyn Woolway;Mark E. J. Cutler

  • Algae lacking carbon-concentrating mechanisms

    John A Raven;Lucy A Ball;John Beardall;Mario Giordano

  • The British river of the future: How climate change and human activity might affect two contrasting river ecosystems in England

    Andrew C. Johnson;Mike C. Acreman;Michael J. Dunbar;Stephen W. Feist

  • The influence of the North Atlantic Oscillation on the physical, chemical and biological characteristics of four lakes in the English Lake District

    D. G. George;S. C. Maberly;D. P. Hewitt

  • State of the Climate in 2016

    Arlene P. Aaron-Morrison;Steven A. Ackerman;Nicolaus G. Adams;Robert F. Adler

Frequent Co-Authors

Stephen J. Thackeray
Stephen J. Thackeray Lancaster University
Ian J. Winfield
Ian J. Winfield Lancaster University
Laurence Carvalho
Laurence Carvalho Natural Environment Research Council
Linda May
Linda May Natural Environment Research Council
R. Iestyn Woolway
R. Iestyn Woolway Bangor University
Gesa A. Weyhenmeyer
Gesa A. Weyhenmeyer Uppsala University
Bryan M. Spears
Bryan M. Spears UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
Rita Adrian
Rita Adrian Freie Universität Berlin
Gavin Simpson
Gavin Simpson University of Regina
Colin S. Reynolds
Colin S. Reynolds Freshwater Biological Association

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