Dr Simon Oliver

Senior Lecturer, Programme Leader MSc Marine and Coastal Resource Management

School of Natural Sciences
Dr Simon Oliver

I am a marine ecologist with broad interests in tropical marine systems, environmental impact assessment, marine protected areas, and coastal zone management.

My doctoral work focused on the behaviour, biology and conservation of pelagic thresher sharks with particular emphasis on their cleaning and hunting strategies. In 2013 my work in this area gained recognition in the scientific community from Nature, Science, and Scientific American, and has attracted considerable media attention (BBC, The Guardian, NERC Planet Earth, National Geographic etc.).

In 2008 I founded the Thresher Shark Research and Conservation Project (TSRCP) and its field station in the Philippines to promote and disseminate shark research, education and conservation to a broad local, regional and international public and scientific outreach.  TSRCP, which is ongoing and has sustained itself since its inception, regularly hosts BSc and MSc students who join its expeditions to assimilate data for their thesis projects. These have enabled me to expand the scope of my research interests to encompass the relevance and impact of conservation on local communities, and foster international collaborations.

My current teaching responsibilities include leading undergraduate modules on conservation and environmental impact, managing marine environmental impacts, and team teaching on population biology, conservation genetics, behavioural ecology, and threats to biodiversity.

At the postgraduate level, I lead the research (thesis) module for the MSc programme in Wildlife Conservation, and team teach on managing wildlife populations.

My research interests revolve around using integrated approaches to understanding animal behaviour in the context of their use of habitats, ecological services, cooperation, and predator-prey interactions. I am particularly interested in the behavioural ecology of oceanic sharks in response to their cleaning, hunting, and migration strategies, and applying associated behavioural knowledge to address conservation problems. 

Recently I was awarded £500,000 by Discovery Communications to further my research on pelagic thresher sharks in the Philippines, and I am currently collaborating with colleagues from Rutgers University Marine Field Station, Ghent University’s Marine Biology Research Group, Bangor University’s School of Ocean Sciences, and the Department of Marine Ecology at University of Liverpool.

Postgraduate Supervision

PhD

 

 

Alesha Naranjit

The status of cetaceans in Trinidad and Tobago

2014 - 2022

Calum Murie

The movements, habitat use, and residency patterns of large predatory sharks in southern Mozambique.

2019 - Present

Alp Gokgoz

The cleaning ecology of Pelagic thresher sharks

2018 - Present

 

 

 

MRes

 

 

 

William Goddard

 

Vertical zonation patterns of benthic macroinvertebrates in a tropical fringing mangrove system in the Philippines

 

2016 - 2017

Natasha Mosley

The population dynamics of pelagic thresher sharks (Alopias pelagicus) at a shallow coastal seamount in the Philippines

 

2016 - 2017

MSc

 

 

Afonso Gomes

Assessing the impact of Typhoon Rai on the fringing reefs of the southwestern Cebu coastline, in the Philippines

2022-Present

Alexis Bishop

Facial expression in pelagic thresher sharks (Alopias pelagicus).  

2021-2022

Ruth Kennedy

The community composition of foraminifera at Parkgate saltmarsh.

2021-2022

Emily Hobson

Visitor effects on the behaviour of fish in public aquaria

2021-Present

Katie Yeomans

Quantifying microplastics in coastal sediments in the UK

2020-2021

Amy Smethurst

Artificial coastal defense structures provide intertidal rock pool habitats

2020-2021

Laura McBride

Devil ray clients that pose are more likely to receive cleaner services

2020-2021

Leah Cox

Assessing the dietary components of Irish bats through guano dissection

2020-2021

Jack Hughes

Community composition of benthic foraminifera in the saltmarshes of the Dee Estuary and their potential use as bioindicators of climate change

2019-2020

Jessica Walls

Maternal investment and territoriality in grey seals (Halichoerus grypus) at Donna Nook.

2019-2021

Madeleine Berge

 

The effects of spinal deformities in aquarium housed sandtiger sharks

2019-2020

Elizabeth Fletcher

Assessing dietary componants of British bats through guano dissection

2018-2020

Chakshudaa Masih

The abundance and distribution of Blue mussels Mytilus edulis in the United Kingdom

2018-2019

Natasha Rajpurohit

The Breeding seasonality of  the glossy swiftlet in north Andaman

2018-2019

Alissa Böhm

An assessment of the efficacy of Grenada’s National Adaptation Plan

2017-2018

Abby Cooper

The Physiology of Thresher Shark Eyes

2017-2018

Daryl Kwong Loong Chong

The Anatomy of a Thresher Shark’s Tail

2016-2017

Kristyn Decker

The development and implementation of a facial action coding system (FACS) for sharks

2016-2017

Murie CJG*, Lebrato M, Lawrence A, Brown J, Gavard L, Bowles K, Jije M, Dicken M, Oliver SP* (2023) A Mozambican marine protected area provides important habitat for vulnerable pelagic sharks. Scientific Reports 13, 6454.

Kennedy, Ruth; Biro, Mariann; Oliver, Simon* (2023) First records of benthic foraminifera in the surface sediments of the Little Neston saltmarsh of the Dee Estuary in England, UK. PANGAEA, doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.956788.

Kennedy, Ruth; Biro, Mariann; Marret-Davis, Fabienne; Oliver, Simon* (2023) New records of benthic foraminifera in the surface sediments of the Dulas Bay saltmarsh in North Wales, UK. PANGAEA, doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.956787.

Oliver SP*, Grothues TM, Mayo ZJ,Williams AL, Silvosa M, Cases G (2023) Depth and temperature profiles reflect individual differences in the daytime diving behaviours of pelagic thresher sharks. Frontiers in Marine Science 10:1128473.  doi: 10.3389/fmars.2023.1128473.

Rambahiniarison J, Agustines A, Alexopoulos K, Araujo G, Armstrong A, Arnold S, Barruga A, Cañete T, Conales Jr. S, Delijero K, Enolva NP Flam AL, Keane E, Labaja J, Legaspi C, Murie C, Murray R, Oliver SP, Pierce SJ, Ponzo A, Rohner CA, Schifferer R, Snow S, Spakowski M, Stevens GM, Tilgel T, Wong JN, Yaptinchay AA, Barr Y (2022) Distribution of the reef manta ray Mobula alfredi and the oceanic manta ray Mobula birostris in the Philippines: A collaborative effort for conservation. Journal of Fish Biology.  doi: 10.1111/jfb.15283.

Murie C, Spencer M, Oliver SP* (2020) Current strength, temperature, and bodyscape modulate cleaning services for giant manta rays. Marine Biology 167: 54. doi: 10.1007/s00227-020-3674-2.

Oliver SP*, Grothues TM, Williams AL, Cerna V, Silvosa M, Cases G, Reed M, Christopher S (2019) Risk and resilience: high stakes for sharks making transjurisdictional movements to use a conservation area.  Biological Conservation 230: 58-66.  doi:  10.1016/j.biocon.2018.11.013.

Hood FE, Klinger B, Newlaczyl AU, Sieber A, Dorel M, Oliver SP, Coulson JM, Blüthgen N, Prior IA (2019) Isoform-specific Ras signaling is growth factor dependent. Molecular Biology of the Cell. mbcE18100676. National Library of Medicine. Scientific Society Publisher Alliance.

Oliver S* (2016), Integrating role-play with case study and carbon footprint monitoring; A transformative approach to enhancing learners' behaviour for a more sustainable environment.  International Journal of Environmental and Science Education 11(6), 1323-1335.  doi: 10.12973/ijese.2016.346a,

Oliver SP*, Bicskos AE (2014) A pelagic thresher shark (Alopias pelagicus) gives birth at a cleaning station in the Philippines.  Coral Reefs. doi: 10.1007/s00338- 014-1249-8.

Cadwallader HF, Turner JR, Oliver SP* (2014), Cleaner wrasse forage on ectoparasitic digeneans (phylum Platyhelminthes) that infect pelagic thresher sharks (Alopias pelagicus). Marine Biodiversity  do:i10.1007/s12526-014-0290-8.

Balabanova S, Holmberg C, Steele I, Ebrahimi B, Rainbow L, Burdyga T, McCaig C, Tiszlavicz L, Lertkowit N, Giger OT, Oliver S, Prior I, Dimaline R, Simpson D, Beynon R, Hegyi P, Wang TC, Dockray GJ, Varro A (2014), The neuroendocrine phenotype of gastric myofibroblasts and its loss with cancer progression. Carcinogenesis. 35(8):1798-806. doi: 10.1093/carcin/bgu086.

Oliver SP*, Turner J R, Gann K, Silvosa M, D’Urban Jackson T (2013), Thresher Sharks Use Tail-Slaps as a Hunting Strategy. PLoS ONE 8(7): e67380. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0067380.

Oliver SP*, Hussey N E, Turner J R, Beckett A J (2011), Oceanic Sharks Clean at Coastal Seamount. PLoS ONE 6(3): e14755. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0014755.

Cocks D, King J, Oliver S, Turner J, Roberts G (2008), A software package for Environmental Impact Assessments. Centre for Applied Marine Sciences. Report 2008-06. (id:1682).

  • BA (McGill University)
  • MSc (University of Wales, Bangor)
  • PhD (Bangor University)