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Hamis Campbell
Professor Hamish Campbell is a Senior Research Fellow and Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Science and Technology.
Natasha Stacey
Professor Natasha Stacey is an environmental anthropologist and currently leads a small group of postgraduate and postdoctoral researchers in RIEL researching sustainable resource management, food security and coastal livelihood projects in northern Australia, Indonesia and Timor Leste. 
Clément Duvert
Dr Clément Duvert is a catchment hydrologist and biogeochemist at CDU’s Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods
Professor Jenny Davis
Her current research focuses on groundwater-dependent waterbodies in arid, semi-arid and wet/dry tropical regions and the processes that support the persistence of aquatic refugia and biodiversity hotspots.
Karen Gibb
Professor Gibb is currently Director of the Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods and is an active researcher in the Environmental Chemistry and Microbiology Unit (ECMU) at Charles Darwin University. The ECMU is a research and commercial unit that has research strengths in determining the source of contaminants and interpreting changes in marine, estuarine and aquatic environments.
Dr Christine Schlesinger
Associate Professor Schlesinger is a Senior Research Fellow and Senior Lecturer at the Faculty of Science and Technology. She is based at Charles Darwin University’s desert campus in Alice Springs.
Keith Christian
Professor Keith Christian did his PhD on the determinants of space use by Galapagos Land Iguanas at Colorado State University. He expanded his interests in tropical ecology while working at the University of Puerto Rico, before moving to Australia in 1985.
Associate Prof Brett Murphy
Originally from Western Australia, Professor Brett Murphy completed his PhD studies into the fire ecology of kangaroos at Charles Darwin University. Upon completion, he worked for Bushfires NT, before taking on postdoctoral roles at the University of Tasmania, South Dakota State University and the University of Melbourne.
Prof Lindsay Hutley
Lindsay Hutley is a plant physiologist with expertise in plant ecology, ecophysiology, ecohydrology, land-atmosphere exchange and soil science.
 Professor Alan Andersen
Prof Andersen’s primary research interests are in the global ecology of ant communities, where he integrates community ecology, historical and contemporary biogeography, and systematics to gain a predictive understanding of ant diversity, behavioural dominance and functional composition in relation to environmental stress and disturbance throughout the world.
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