Above and below-ground specialisation in Australian orchids and its implications for diversification and vulnerability. Many of Australia's unique terrestrial orchids may face heightened extinction risk because of their obligate dependence on pollinators and fungi. This project will investigate the consequences of these interactions for orchid speciation and vulnerability. The outcomes will inform both evolutionary theory and future conservation programs.
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE120100107
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$375,000.00
Summary
Eggshells: genetic and biochemical information encapsulated. Tough, waterproof and impervious to decay, extraordinary eggshell can do more than just project baby birds: DNA from eggshells helps wildlife officers to bust wildlife criminals, scientists to investigate the role of humans and climate change in bird extinctions, and conservationists to save our endangered birds.
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE200101286
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$425,118.00
Summary
Conserving the evolutionary processes that generate coral reef biodiversity. Coral reefs have evolved to become the most biodiverse marine ecosystem we know. They now face an uncertain future due to escalating human impacts and this project aims to investigate how these disturbances change the evolutionary processes that generate and maintain life on the reef. Using an interdisciplinary approach, this project seeks to create new knowledge and demonstrate how evolutionary theory can be used to ad ....Conserving the evolutionary processes that generate coral reef biodiversity. Coral reefs have evolved to become the most biodiverse marine ecosystem we know. They now face an uncertain future due to escalating human impacts and this project aims to investigate how these disturbances change the evolutionary processes that generate and maintain life on the reef. Using an interdisciplinary approach, this project seeks to create new knowledge and demonstrate how evolutionary theory can be used to advance biodiversity conservation. Other expected outcomes include developing new techniques and an enhanced capacity to solve conservation problems through cross-disciplinary and cross-institutional collaborations. This should benefit the conservation of Australia’s coral reef biodiversity through improved management policies.Read moreRead less
Solving the problems of estimating extinction rates in recent and geological time. Human activity is causing species to go extinct at rates not seen for at least 65 million years: this is the sixth mass extinction event in the history of the Earth. This project will use state-of-the-art modelling tools applied to Australian and global species and land-use change data to quantify humanity's influence on recent and future extinctions.
Australian Laureate Fellowships - Grant ID: FL110100104
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$2,939,883.00
Summary
New approaches to discovering biodiversity and understanding its response to past climate change. New technologies will be used to predict and discover biodiversity hotspots in Australia, especially in the monsoonal tropics. New capacity will be built in biodiversity science, and the results used to improve conservation policy and the effectiveness of conservation planning.