Skip to content

Collin Ward Learn more

Keep exploring!

Join us—for our ocean, our planet, and our future.

Collin Ward
Collin Ward

Collin Ward

Associate Scientist, Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry

Dr. Collin P. Ward is an Associate Scientist in the Department of Marine Chemistry & Geochemistry at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. His group characterizes how fast organic molecules, like those in natural organic matter, crude oil, and plastics, are transformed in the environment. A core element of his scientific approach is to understand the fundamental controls of transformation reactions and their timescales. This opens the door to make predictions of how important these reactions will be in the future and to design new materials that are simultaneously useful to consumers and demonstrably degrade if leaked into the environment. He also builds new instruments and methods that make science cheaper, faster, and more accessible. He received the 2024 James J. Morgan Environmental Science & Technology Early Career Award from the American Chemical Society. He earned a BS and MS in Environmental Sciences from The Ohio State University and a PhD in Earth and Environmental Sciences from the University of Michigan.

See Collin Ward's Lab website

Ocean Topic: Marine Microplastics

What are marine microplastics, where are they found, and why are they important

Microplastics Initiative at WHOI

Interdisciplinary research program designed to understand the fate and impacts of plastics in the marine environment

Does plastic last for thousands of years in the environment?

Plastics don’t last forever, but break down slowly through physical, chemical, biological processes, posing environmental harm

Breaking down plastics together

Through a surprising and successful partnership, WHOI and Eastman scientists are reinventing what we throw away.

Related Multimedia

Ocean Encounters: Ocean Plastics

Plastics are everywhere–even in our ocean. Discover the surprising and costly impacts of plastic pollution on us and our ocean planet

What are marine microplastics?

Discover what microplastics are and their potential impacts on ocean life, ecosystems, and human health

Dive Deeper

WHOI scientists discover fastest degrading bioplastic in seawater

A new version of CDA was found to be the fastest degrading bioplastic material tested in seawater and is a promising replacement for other long-lasting foam plastic materials.

Some plastic straws degrade quicker than others, new study shows

WHOI researchers determine lifetimes of drinking straws in the coastal ocean and develop a prototype bioplastic straw that degrades even faster than paper

WHOI researchers say accounting for plastic persistence can minimize environmental impacts

WHOI researchers develop a new sustainability metric for plastic products

Scroll To Top