Thomas George Allan GreenNZAM is a lichenologist, terrestrial ecologist and botanist. He is a professor emeritus at the University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand. His work particularly studies how lichens respond to extreme low temperatures and dryness, and especially how this affects photosynthesis. He has studied the ecology of Antarctica.
Green moved to University of Waikato in 1974, and has continued to work there throughout his career. By 2022 he held an emeritus professor position. He has long-standing collaborations in Spain and Germany, and he also works with scientists at research stations in Antarctica. His research focuses on the physiology of lichens and especially how they respond to their environment, particularly extreme dry and cold environments. He has made extensive studies of the lichens that live in the Antarctic as well as those living in alpine and arid regions. One of the partners in a lichen symbiosis is always a phototroph and his research has provided insight into the process and control of carbon dioxide fixation in lichens, especially in relation to the water content of the lichen.[2]
Green is the author or co-author of over 100 scientific publications, books and book chapters and many more conference papers. Some of the most significant are:
I. R. Cowan, O. L. Lange & T. G. A. Green (1992) Carbon-dioxide exchange in lichens: determination of transport and carboxylation characteristics. Planta187 pp 282–294
Lange, O. L., Green, T. G. A., Ziegler H. (1988) Water status related photosynthesis and carbon isotope discrimination in species of the lichen genus Pseudocyphellaria with green or blue-green photobionts and in photosymbiodemes. Oecologia75 (4) pp 494 - 501
^"The Queen's Birthday Honours List 2013". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, New Zealand - Te tari o te pirimia me te komiti matua. 3 June 2013. Retrieved 6 September 2022.