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Author: CJAB

I am the Matthew Flinders Professor of Global Ecology at Flinders University.
PhD…

You’ll be on the Red List if your supervisor goes extinct

15 Jun 2020
Bearing in mind that a PhD candidacy will last roughly three and a half years, the planned endeavour should be achievable in the given time, according to personal capability and…
research

Amphibian conservation in a managed world

1 Apr 2020
The amphibian class is diverse, and ranges from worm-like caecilians to tiny frogs that live their entire lives within bromeliads high in the rainforest canopy. Regardless of form or habit,…
research

Climate change and humans together pushed Australia’s biggest beasts to extinction

25 Nov 201926 Nov 2019
Over the last 60,000 years, many of the world’s largest species disappeared forever. Some of the largest that we generally call ‘megafauna’ were first lost in Sahul — the super-continent…
research

Logbook of Australia’s ancient megafauna

20 Nov 201920 Nov 2019
Australia is home to some of the most unique species worldwide, including egg-laying mammals, tree-climbing, desert-bouncing and and burrow-digging marsupials, and huge flightless birds. While these animals are fascinating, the…
policy

Fires, floods and “inner-city raving lunatics”

16 Nov 2019
It’s a Monday night and I am frantically checking with friends from back home on the Eyre Peninsula if they and their homes are safe from the fire. I am scrolling social…
concepts

What is a ‘mass extinction’ and are we in one now?

13 Nov 2019
(reproduced from The Conversation) -- For more than 3.5 billion years, living organisms have thrived, multiplied and diversified to occupy every ecosystem on Earth. The flip side to this explosion of…
policy

Respecting Aboriginal culture through language

16 Oct 201916 Oct 2019
What's in a name? Well, rather a lot, I think. Names have meanings, and not just in the way that they tag people, places or objects. I am of the…
careers…

A new environment for personal transformation: what Australia has meant to me

12 Sep 2019
When developing an academic career, sticking in one’s homeland has its pros and cons. -- On your home turf there will usually be at least a few family members with…
student experiences

10 things I wish I knew before doing an Honours degree

19 Aug 201921 Nov 2019
In 2018 I started my Honours degree in biodiversity and conservation at Flinders University. I had completed my Bachelor of Science in 2017, after being accepted in the Honours stream…
research

Rising human populations drive environmental degradation in Africa

27 Jun 201925 Jun 2019
  Almost a decade ago, I (co-) wrote a paper examining the socio-economic correlates of gross, national-scale indices of environmental performance among the world's nations. It turned out to be rather…
research

First Australians arrived in large groups using complex technologies

18 Jun 2019
One of the most ancient peopling events of the great diaspora of anatomically modern humans out of Africa more than 50,000 years ago — human arrival in the great continent…
research

Koala extinctions past, present, and future

12 Jun 201912 Jun 2019
Koalas are one of the most recognised symbols of Australian wildlife. But the tree-living marsupial koala is not doing well throughout much of its range in eastern Australia. Ranging as…
careers…

Being empathetic for better interdisciplinarity

4 Jun 2019
Scientists appear to have mixed feelings when it comes to interdisciplinarity in science — the reaction spans from genuine enthusiasm right through to pure disdain. I myself have crossed many…
careers…

11 things academic research and surfing have in common

2 May 2019
The last time I went surfing the waves were very slow and between sets I had a lot of time to contemplate life. This was when it occurred to me…
careers…

Skydive your PhD

23 Apr 201923 Apr 2019
  Many students start a PhD by just continuing in the same subject and same institution from their Masters or Honours project. But this is not necessarily the best way…
workshop

Network Analysis Workshop

6 Apr 2019
We are most fortunate that Dr Giovanni Strona of the EU Joint Research Centre in Ispra, Italy, will be visiting Flinders University for most of April. As a recipient of…
publishing

The push for open access

1 Mar 20193 Mar 2019
Academic articles from publicly funded research are frequently hidden behind paywalls. The research community spends a huge amount of money to access this research — more than AU$12.5 billion goes…
careers

Good English and the scientific career: hurdles for non-native English speakers

13 Feb 2019
It's no secret that to be successful in academia, it's not enough just to be a good scientist — being able to formulate and test hypotheses. You also need to…

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Hours & Info

Biological Sciences
Bedford Park, South Australia
+61 (0) 8 8201 2090
Monday-Friday 09:00-18:00
My Tweets

Recent Posts

  • Children born today will see literally thousands of animals disappear in their lifetime, as global food webs collapse 19 Dec 2022
  • Warming oceans might force New Zealand’s sperm and blue whales to shift to cooler southern waters 19 Aug 2022

RSS The Conversation

  • Indigenous knowledge offers solutions, but its use must be based on meaningful collaboration with Indigenous communities 30 Mar 2023
    One key difference between kaitiakitanga and conservation is that the former considers people as part of the environment, while the latter manages nature as if people were separate from it.
  • Whether you're a snorkeller or CEO, you can help save our vital kelp forests 30 Mar 2023
    When we stopped whaling, the whales recovered. But our vital kelp forests won’t return without our help
  • Australia will have a carbon price for industry – and it may infuse greater climate action across the economy 30 Mar 2023
    The revised safeguard mechanism could form the basis of an economy-wide carbon price.
  • Torrents of Antarctic meltwater are slowing the currents that drive our vital ocean 'overturning' – and threaten its collapse 29 Mar 2023
    In a plot reminiscent of the 2004 movie The Day After Tomorrow?, Australian scientists are warning that the Southern Ocean’s deep “overturning” circulation is slowing and headed for collapse.

Affiliated labs

  • Centre for Biodiversity Dynamics in a Changing World
  • Centre for Tropical Environmental and Sustainability Science
  • Flinders Archaeology
  • Flinders University Molecular Ecology Lab
  • Flinders University Southern Shark Ecology Group
  • Human-Wildlife CoEx Lab
  • Laboratoire Ecologie, Systématique & Evolution
  • Morphological Evo-Devo Group
  • Okanagan Institute for Biodiversity, Resilience, and Ecosystem Services
  • Saving Nemo
  • Stouffer Lab

Blogroll

  • ALERT
  • Bright New World
  • ConservationBytes
  • Hot Topics in Ecology
  • Methods.blog
  • Millennium Alliance for Humanity and the Biosphere

Societies

  • British Ecological Society
  • Ecological Society of Australia
  • Flinders University Biodiversity & Animal Behaviour Society
  • Flinders University Palaeontology Society

Upcoming Events

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