Janet Grieve Explained

Janet Grieve
Other Names:Janet Bradford-Grieve, Janet Bradford
Nationality:New Zealander
Fields:Biological oceanography
Workplaces:National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
Alma Mater:University of Canterbury
Thesis Title:The annual cycle of plankton off Kaikoura
Thesis Url:https://ir.canterbury.ac.nz/handle/10092/4752
Thesis Year:1966
Doctoral Advisor:George Knox
Known For:Global expert on copepod biosystematics
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Janet Mary Grieve, also known as Janet Bradford-Grieve and Janet Bradford, is a New Zealand biological oceanographer, born in 1940. She is researcher emerita at the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research in Wellington. She has researched extensively on marine taxonomy and biological productivity. She was president of both the New Zealand Association of Scientists (1998–2000)[1] and the World Association of Copepodologists (2008–11).[2]

Education and early career

Her PhD, supervised by George Knox at the University of Canterbury,[3] developed new observations in copepod taxonomy but also produced insights into the processes affecting zooplankton in Kaikōura submarine canyon.[4] Her pioneering research in this canyon provides a baseline for the biological and physical changes associated with the 2016 Kaikōura earthquake.[5]

Immediately after her PhD she joined the New Zealand Oceanographic Institute, a section within the New Zealand Department of Scientific and Industrial Research as a scientist. She broke this with a period as a visiting scholar at the Smithsonian Institution, copepod taxonomy for a time (1970–73).[6]

She participated in the Ross Ice Shelf Project expedition to the central Ross Ice Shelf. The team successfully bored through the ice shelf in 1977 to retrieve data and samples in the ice shelf cavity.[7]

She continued with the New Zealand Oceanographic Institute and remained when it was absorbed into National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research.[8]

Science and impact

Publishing under surnames Grieve, Bradford and Bradford-Grieve, she has made a significant contribution to the fields of biological oceanography in New Zealand and internationally.[9] She is responsible for some of the first measurements of open ocean productivity in New Zealand waters.[10] Her research has extended from the subtropics to the Antarctic/Southern Ocean. She has researched topics such as ocean food webs and ecology, and is regarded as the global expert on copepod biosystematics.[11]

Grieve was a key researcher involved in the environmental survey work that underpinned and guided the development of the Maui oil and gas production facilities within the Taranaki Bight.[12] This was one of the first marine developments to consider detailed environmental management. In addition she was also on the Task Force group responsible for reviewing the NZ Fisheries Legislation in 1991–92.[13]

Science leadership

She was Manager of the Marine and Freshwater Division of the NZOI, DSIR (1989–91).[8] She was President of the New Zealand Association of Scientists (1998–2000).[1] In addition she was President of the World Association of Copepodologists (2008–11).[2]

Honours and awards

In 1990, Grieve was awarded the New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal.[14] In the 2007 Queen's Birthday Honours, she was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to marine science.[15] In 1995, she received the New Zealand Marine Sciences Society Award (1995).[16]

In 2017, Grieve was selected as one of the Royal Society Te Apārangi's "150 women in 150 words", celebrating the contributions of women to knowledge in New Zealand.[17]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Gregory, G., 2016. A better way: New Zealand Association of Scientists 1922–2016. New Zealand Science Review, 73(2), pp.42–54.
  2. Web site: Officers . 24 March 2019 . 24 March 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190324101116/http://www.monoculus.org/officers.html . dead .
  3. Grieve . J. . 1966 . Doctoral thesis . The annual cycle of plankton off Kaikoura . UC Research Repository, University of Canterbury . 10092/4752 . 10.26021/6589 .
  4. Bradford, J.M. (1972). Systematics and ecology of New Zealand central east coast plankton sampled at Kaikōura. N.Z. Oceanographic Institute Memoir 54: 1–87.
  5. Mills, J.A., Yarrall, J.W., Bradford-Grieve, J.M., Morrissey, M. and Mills, D.A., 2018. Major changes in the red-billed gull (Larus novaehollandiae scopu-linus) population at Kaikoura Peninsula, New Zealand; causes and consequences: a review. Notornis, 65(1), pp.14–26.
  6. Bradford-Grieve, J.M., 2016. Is there a taxonomic crisis?. NZ Sci Rev, 73, p.83.
  7. Bradford, J.M.; Wells, J.B.J. (1983). New calanoid and harpacticoid copepods from beneath the Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica. Polar Biology 2: 1–15.
  8. Thompson R-M, The First Forty Years, New Zealand Oceanographic Institute: Lives and Times, 1954–1994. 40th Jubilee Committee, 1994.
  9. Web site: Janet Grieve.
  10. Bradford, J.M.; Heath, R.A.; Chang, F.H.; Hay, C.H. (1982). The effects of warm-core eddies on oceanic productivity off north eastern New Zealand. Deep-Sea Research 29: 1501–1516.
  11. Bradford-Grieve, J.M.; Boxshall, G.A.; Ahyong, S. Ohtsuka, S. (2010). Cladistic analysis of the calanoid Copepoda. Invertebrate Systematics 24: 291–321.
  12. Bradford‐Grieve, J.M., Lewis, K.B. and Stanton, B.R., 1991. Advances in New Zealand oceanography, 1967–91. New Zealand journal of marine and freshwater research, 25(4), pp.429–441.
  13. Web site: Fisheries Act 1996 No 88 (As at 22 October 2018), Public Act Contents – New Zealand Legislation.
  14. Book: Taylor . Alister . Coddington . Deborah . Alister Taylor . Deborah Coddington . Honoured by the Queen – New Zealand . 1994 . New Zealand Who's Who Aotearoa . Auckland . 0-908578-34-2 . 75.
  15. Web site: Queen's Birthday honours list 2007 . Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet . 4 June 2007 . 15 June 2019.
  16. Web site: Awards.
  17. Web site: Janet Bradford-Grieve. 2021-05-10. Royal Society Te Apārangi.