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Kiho Kim Adjunct Professor Environmental Science

Additional Positions at Â鶹Æƽâ°æ
Degrees
PhD, Biology, University at Buffalo; MS, Biology, Florida International University; BSc Biology, Environmental Studies, Brock University

Bio
Kiho Kim (he/him) is an adjunct Professor in the Department of Environmental Science.

As a marine scientist, his research focuses on understanding how environmental drivers, such as nutrient pollution and climate change, affect the health of coral reefs. His current work documents the impact of development on coastal ecosystem health in support of conservation, protection, or mitigation efforts in the tropical Western Pacific. Professor Kim has contributed to the United Nation's World Ocean Assessment, participated in working groups examining the ecology of diseases at the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, and served as an advisor to the Coral Disease Working Group of the World Bank. He completed two terms as a member of the Ocean Studies Board of the National Academies, a term as an Executive Member of the International Coral Reef Society, and is on the editorial board of the journal Coral Reefs.
See Also
For the Media
To request an interview for a news story, call Â鶹Æƽâ°æ Communications at 202-885-5950 or submit a request.

Scholarly, Creative & Professional Activities

Grants and Sponsored Research

Active Grants

  • 2021 NSF, Enhanced Teaching and Learning Through Problem-Based PedagogyÌý

  • 2021 NSF, Multiscale RECIPES (Resilient, Equitable, and Circular Innovations with Partnership and Education Synergies) for Sustainable Food Systems

  • 2021 NSF, Noyce Scholar Retention in Racially and Culturally Non-dominant Communities: Partnerships and PersistenceÌý

  • 2019 NOAA – Office for Coastal Management, Investigating the role of groundwater in pollutant transport to Nu`uuli Pala Lagoon, American Samoa (Co-PI)

Selected Publications

Sinigalliano C, K Kim, M Gidley, K Yuknavage, KL Knee, D Palacois, C Bautista, A Bonacolta, HW Lee & L Maurin (2021) Microbial source tracking of fecal indicating bacteria in coral reef waters, recreational waters, and groundwater of Saipan by real-time quantitative PCR. Frontiers in Microbiology 11, 596650 []

Knapp MA*, N Geeraert, K Kim & KL Knee (2020) Submarine Groundwater Discharge (SGD) to Coastal Waters of Saipan (Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, USA): Implications for Nitrogen Sources, Transport and Ecological Effects. Water 12, 3029 [] (** undergraduate, * graduate student)

Geeraert N, NM Duprey, S McIlroy, PD Thompson, BR Goldstein**, C LaRoche**, K Kim, LJ Raymundo & DM Baker. 2020. The anthropogenic nitrogen footprint of a tropical lagoon: spatial variability in Padina δ15N. Pacific Science 74:19-29 []

Kwon MJ*, C Tudge, K Kim, D Baker, SE MacAvoy (2018) Museum collections yield information on nitrogen sources for coastal Gulf of Mexico, North Carolina, USA and Caribbean Sea invertebrates 1850 to 2004. Journal of Shellfish Research 37: 1159-1165 doi.org/10.2983/035.037.0525 []

LaRoche C**, BR Goldstein**, JD Cybulski*, LJ Raymundo, LR Aoki & K Kim§ (2018) A decade of change in Enhalus acoroides seagrass meadows in Guam. Marine & Freshwater Research doi.org/10.1071/MF18062 []

Bacalan V*, T Poinsatte**, DM Baker, ML Fogel & K Kim§ (2018) Stable isotope analyses of manatee bones measure historical nitrogen pollution in Florida waters, 1975 – 2010. Marine Biology 165: 85, doi.org/10.1007/s00227-018-3349-4 []

Duprey N, XT Wang, PD Thompson, J Pleadwell, LJ Raymundo, K Kim, DM Sigman & DM Baker (2017) Life and death of a sewage treatment plant recorded in a coral skeleton δ15N record. Marine Pollution Bulletin doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2017.04.023 [][]

Baker D, C Freeman, N Knowlton, R Thacker, K Kim & M Fogel (2015) Productivity links morphology, symbiont specificity, and bleaching in the evolution of Caribbean octocoral symbioses. ISME Journal 9: 2620–2629 []

Pinkerton K*, DM Baker, MR Cuddy**, LJ Raymundo, KA Meyer** & K Kim§ (2015) Nitrogen dynamics on Guam as revealed by the seagrass Enhalus acoroides. Marine Ecology Progress Series 528: 117–126 []

MacAvoy SE, V Bacalan*, M Kazantseva, J Rhodes & K Kim (2015) Sulfur isotopes show importance of freshwater primary production for Florida manatees. Marine Mammal Science 31: 720–725 []