J
Jeffrey J. Kelleway
Researcher at University of Wollongong
Publications - 55
Citations - 4433
Jeffrey J. Kelleway is an academic researcher from University of Wollongong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blue carbon & Wetland. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 47 publications receiving 3102 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey J. Kelleway include Department of Planning and Environment & Macquarie University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Australian vegetated coastal ecosystems as global hotspots for climate change mitigation
Oscar Serrano,Catherine E. Lovelock,Trisha B. Atwood,Trisha B. Atwood,Peter I. Macreadie,Robert Franklin C Canto,Stuart R. Phinn,Ariane Arias-Ortiz,Le Bai,Jeff Baldock,Camila Bedulli,Camila Bedulli,Paul E. Carnell,Rod M. Connolly,Paul Donaldson,Alba Esteban,Carolyn J. Ewers Lewis,Bradley D. Eyre,Matthew A. Hayes,Matthew A. Hayes,Pierre Horwitz,Lindsay B. Hutley,Christopher R. J. Kavazos,Christopher R. J. Kavazos,Jeffrey J. Kelleway,Gary A. Kendrick,Kieryn Kilminster,Kieryn Kilminster,Anna Lafratta,Shing Lee,Shing Lee,Paul S. Lavery,Paul S. Lavery,Damien T. Maher,Núria Marbà,Pere Masqué,Miguel Ángel Mateo,Miguel Ángel Mateo,RE Mount,Peter J. Ralph,Chris Roelfsema,Mohammad Rozaimi,Mohammad Rozaimi,Radhiyah Ruhon,Radhiyah Ruhon,Cristian Salinas,Jimena Samper-Villarreal,Jimena Samper-Villarreal,Jonathan Sanderman,Jonathan Sanderman,Christian J. Sanders,Isaac R. Santos,C Sharples,Andrew D. L. Steven,Toni Cannard,Stacey M. Trevathan-Tackett,Carlos M. Duarte,Carlos M. Duarte +57 more
TL;DR: This assessment, the most comprehensive for any nation to-date, demonstrates the potential of conservation and restoration of VCE to underpin national policy development for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Journal ArticleDOI
The future of Blue Carbon science
Peter I. Macreadie,Andrea Anton,John A. Raven,John A. Raven,John A. Raven,Nicola Beaumont,Rod M. Connolly,Daniel A. Friess,Jeffrey J. Kelleway,Hilary Kennedy,Tomohiro Kuwae,Paul S. Lavery,Catherine E. Lovelock,Dan A. Smale,Eugenia T. Apostolaki,Trisha B. Atwood,Jeff Baldock,Thomas S. Bianchi,Gail L. Chmura,Bradley D. Eyre,James W. Fourqurean,James W. Fourqurean,Jason M. Hall-Spencer,Jason M. Hall-Spencer,Mark Huxham,Iris E. Hendriks,Dorte Krause-Jensen,Dan Laffoley,Tiziana Luisetti,Núria Marbà,Pere Masqué,Pere Masqué,Pere Masqué,Karen J. McGlathery,J. Patrick Megonigal,Daniel Murdiyarso,Daniel Murdiyarso,Bayden D. Russell,Rui Santos,Oscar Serrano,Brian R. Silliman,Kenta Watanabe,Carlos M. Duarte +42 more
TL;DR: The authors identify the top-ten unresolved questions in the field and find that most questions relate to the precise role blue carbon can play in mitigating climate change and the most effective management actions in maximising this.
Journal ArticleDOI
Global patterns in mangrove soil carbon stocks and losses
Trisha B. Atwood,Trisha B. Atwood,Rod M. Connolly,Hannan Almahasheer,Paul E. Carnell,Carlos M. Duarte,Carolyn J. Ewers Lewis,Xabier Irigoien,Jeffrey J. Kelleway,Paul S. Lavery,Paul S. Lavery,Peter I. Macreadie,Oscar Serrano,Oscar Serrano,Christian J. Sanders,Isaac R. Santos,Andrew D. L. Steven,Catherine E. Lovelock,Catherine E. Lovelock +18 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present global baseline estimates of mangrove soil C stocks enabling countries to begin to assess their manglove soil C stock and the emissions that might arise from manglobve deforestation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Wetland carbon storage controlled by millennial-scale variation in relative sea-level rise
Kerrylee Rogers,Jeffrey J. Kelleway,Neil Saintilan,J. Patrick Megonigal,Janine B. Adams,James R. Holmquist,Meng Lu,Meng Lu,Lisa Schile-Beers,Atun Zawadzki,Debashish Mazumder,Colin D. Woodroffe +11 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that coastal wetlands characteristic of tectonically stable coastlines have lower carbon storage owing to a lack of accommodation space and that carbon sequestration increases according to the vertical and lateral accommodation space created by RSLR.
Journal ArticleDOI
Thresholds of mangrove survival under rapid sea level rise
Neil Saintilan,Nicole S. Khan,Erica Ashe,Jeffrey J. Kelleway,Kerrylee Rogers,Colin D. Woodroffe,Benjamin P. Horton +6 more
TL;DR: It is very likely that mangroves were unable to initiate sustained accretion when RSLR rates exceeded 6.1 millimeters per year, and this threshold is likely to be surpassed on tropical coastlines within 30 years under high-emissions scenarios.