Professor Colin Jago
Emeritus Professor

Affiliations
Contact info
Dean of College
Room: 104 Marine Centre Wales orG7 Memorial Building
Phone: 01248 382603
E-mail: c.f.jago@bangor.ac.uk
Research Interests
My research interests encompass the sedimentary processes of continental margins from estuaries to continental slopes. My work has focussed on measuring lateral and vertical fluxes of sedimentary material (e.g. rate of infilling of estuarine sediments, settling flux of suspended matter on the shelf, cross-margin flux of suspended matter) and their relation to physical forcing (e.g. turbulence, resuspension, advection). These processes require an interdisciplinary approach and I am especially interested in biota-sediment interactions and their control of benthic-pelagic coupling: influence of micro- and macro-fauna on seabed properties and erosion rate, mediation of particle aggregation and settling flux by plankton. I also have an interest in sedimentary processes in the tropical lagoons of Mauritius. All of these studies have required the design and/or application of novel acoustic and optical technologies for remotely sensing sediment properties.
Research Groups
Research Themes
- Marine Optics
- Coral Reef Biology, Ecology and Conservation
- Coastal Zone Management and Conservation
- Oceanographic remote sensing
- Nutrient Influences on Catchment to Coast Processes
- CASIX - Centre for observation of Air-Sea Interactions and Fluxes
- MATSIS - Methods of Assessment of Trophic Status of the Irish Sea
- Remote Sensing of Shallow Tropical Marine Ecosystems
- Coral Reefs of Mauritius
- Chapter › Research › Not peer-reviewed
- Published
The Mascarene Region
Turner, J. R., Jago, C. F., Daby, D., Klaus, R. & Sheppard, C. R. (Editor), 1 Jan 2000, Seas at the Millenium: An Environmental Evaluation: An Environmental Evaluation. 2000 ed. Elsevier Science, p. 243-258Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter
- Paper › Research › Not peer-reviewed
- Published
Suspended and bedload dynamics in a tidally influenced river: the river Dyfi, Wales, UK.
Brewer, P., Vericat, D., Baas, J. H., Jago, C. F., Brasington, J., Wheaton, J. M. & Causer, F., 1 Jan 2007.Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper
- Published
The river-estuarine transition zone (RETZ) of the Afon Dyfi (West Wales) as test bed for sediment transfer between river catchments and coastal environments.
Baas, J. H., Jago, C. F., Macklin, M. & CCCR Team, 1 Jan 2008.Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper