Skip to main content
Start of main content
Showing 814 results
Professor Stephen Garnett
Professor Stephen Garnett is an environmental scientist with an interest in the knowledge needed to live sustainably in the tropics.
Dr Andrew Edwards
Dr Andrew Edwards has helped develop a program of techniques for fire and vegetation mapping, including extensive field sampling, applying spatial science to fire ecology.
Penny Wurm
Dr Penny Wurm is an ecologist with a research background in wetland and invasive species ecology.
Peter Kyne
Dr Kyne’s research program aims to fill knowledge gaps impeding effective conservation and management of threatened species as well as data deficient species
Rohan Fisher
This seminar describes the use of projection augmented landscape technology to bring spatial data and local knowledge together in a way that facilitates two-way learning about the environment, science, and culture in diverse, cross-cultural, cross-linguistic contexts around the world.
Sam Banks
Professor Banks is a molecular ecologist at Charles Darwin University, (CDU), having moved to Darwin in Australia’s Top End from the Australian National University in Canberra in 2018.
Federal Environment and Water Minister Tayna Plibersek MP announced who has received an Innovative Biodiversity Monitoring Grant today at Charles Darwin University’s (CDU) Casuarina Campus.
Charles Darwin University and Environs Kimberley researchers, along with Kimberley partners, will soon be looking to monitor how fire management changes the structure and condition of about 43,000 km2 of savanna and desert vegetation using data collected by drones and satellites.
Dr Sean Bellairs
My research specialisations are in the areas of restoration ecology, seed biology and commercialisation of native plants. My restoration ecology investigations include assessing vegetation community development; determining indicators of successful ecological structure and functioning; establishment ecology; and seed biology and dormancy of Australian native plant species.
Back to top