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Research Topic : Social Program Evaluation
Field of Research : Biological Adaptation
Australian State/Territory : TAS
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Biological Adaptation (4)
Ecological Physiology (2)
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Behavioural Ecology (1)
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Evolutionary Impacts of Climate Change (1)
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Effects of Climate Change and Variability on Australia (excl. Social Impacts) (3)
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Management of Water Consumption by Plant Production (1)
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Plant Extract Crops (e.g. Pyrethrum, Jojoba) (1)
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  • Researchers (5)
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  • Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP140100307

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $347,000.00
    Summary
    Fire, air, water and earth: Using fossils to discover the evolution of Australia’s open vegetation. How Australia came to be dominated by open, tough-leaved vegetation is an old but still highly controversial question, especially with recent developments in molecular biology that challenge paradigms established from the fossil record. The project will test this new molecular paradigm with innovative use of characteristics of fossil leaves to identify the timing and drivers of the evolution of Au .... Fire, air, water and earth: Using fossils to discover the evolution of Australia’s open vegetation. How Australia came to be dominated by open, tough-leaved vegetation is an old but still highly controversial question, especially with recent developments in molecular biology that challenge paradigms established from the fossil record. The project will test this new molecular paradigm with innovative use of characteristics of fossil leaves to identify the timing and drivers of the evolution of Australia’s open vegetation. The integration of new and rigorous evidence derived from living and fossil plants will provide the clearest evidence yet for the origins of Australian environments. This has ramifications for understanding plant responses to past and future climate changes.
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    Funded Activity

    ARC Future Fellowships - Grant ID: FT100100237

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $812,512.00
    Summary
    Drought and death: past, present and future survival limits in the Australian vegetation landscape. Science cannot predict the point at which water stress becomes lethal for plants. This research into plant water transport aims to find a new way to understand whether plant species will die or adapt to a future drier climate.
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    Funded Activity

    Linkage Projects - Grant ID: LP170100103

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $263,000.00
    Summary
    Finding damage thresholds in pyrethrum to optimise crop profitability. This project aims to use a new vascular approach to develop a quantitative stress tolerance framework for the crop species pyrethrum, defining the risks to plant production of water, heat and frost stress. Using novel optical and x-ray technology, this project seeks to pinpoint damaging stress thresholds and combine this knowledge with crop monitoring technology in a way that will allow crop managers to avoid damaging stress .... Finding damage thresholds in pyrethrum to optimise crop profitability. This project aims to use a new vascular approach to develop a quantitative stress tolerance framework for the crop species pyrethrum, defining the risks to plant production of water, heat and frost stress. Using novel optical and x-ray technology, this project seeks to pinpoint damaging stress thresholds and combine this knowledge with crop monitoring technology in a way that will allow crop managers to avoid damaging stress events. The intended outcome is to enable the pyrethrum industry, and ultimately a diversity of crop managers, to better utilise new advances in monitoring technology to maximise the benefits of irrigation such that yields are high relative to water use and damage by stress is avoided. Immediate beneficiaries will be the pyrethrum industry, but the research will provide a model, applicable to the multitude of irrigated crops in Australia.
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    Funded Activity

    ARC Future Fellowships - Grant ID: FT110100597

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $745,096.00
    Summary
    Climate change: bridging the gap between environmental induced phenotypic change, population dynamics, and long-term evolution. It is becoming impossible to ignore the impact of global climate change on organisms around the world from changes in migration, distribution to extinction events - yet there is much to understand. This project examines the role of a changing environment during developmental and its effects on ecological and evolutionary outcomes.
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    Showing 1-4 of 4 Funded Activites

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