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Charles Darwin University researchers have successfully harvested native rice this season, but make it a commercial crop requires more work.
Putting Australian native rice on our plates and in restaurants is one step closer after a successful harvest of three species sourced from Northern Australian wetlands.
RIEL Adjunct Professor Dr Margaret Friedel.
The much maligned buffel grass was not the only weed brought to arid Australia by camel, according to an internationally renowned ecologist in Central Australia.
boab tree
The historic Boab tree on the site of Charles Darwin University’s city campus will be protected and become a key feature of the new campus into the future.
Charles Darwin University (CDU) hydrologist Dr Clément Duvert is studying how much carbon is lost from our landscape through the water cycle.
A CDU hydrologist says the drenching of Australia’s East Coast could have an important impact on the carbon cycle due to the loss of terrestrial ecosystems.
quolls
A researcher at Charles Darwin University (CDU), Gavin Trewella, has been working to improve the conservation outlook for an iconic Australian native animal, the northern quoll.
first nations enabling program
A new cohort of First Nations students have graduated from enabling programs in business, accounting and law disciplines at Charles Darwin University (CDU) and are ready to begin their studies in Semester 1.
Charles Darwin University (CDU) PhD candidate Ruth Patterson believes that uncrewed vessels (USVs) are the key in understanding the oceanography of remote seas that are difficult for scientists to explore.
In the future uncrewed vessels (USVs) will roam the world’s oceans providing valuable data to oceanographers and meteorologists, while also protecting it against illegal fishing and smuggling, that’s the vision of one Charles Darwin University (CDU) researcher.
A new paper co-authored by CDU researcher Dr Peter Kyne has been published in the journal Science discussing the plight of deepsea sharks. Photo Bluntnose Sixgill Shark (Hexanchus griseus) off Puget Sound, United States. Photo Credit: Greg Amptman
A Charles Darwin University (CDU) researcher is part of an international team highlighting the global status of sharks that lurk in the deep waters of the ocean, discovering that the group is under threat.
A paper with Charles Darwin University has highlighted the need for a science-based approach to shark conservation in Brazil’s Marine Protected Areas.
Brazilian authorities must take a science-based approach to shark conservation, with experts warning extreme reactions to bite incidents and population growth will undermine the recovery of the fish.
trail at night
For many people running in an ultra-trail race in central Australia might seem an unsurmountable challenge, but Charles Darwin University Paramedicine Lecturer Elissa Martyn is no stranger to adversity.
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