Graduate Studies in the Ecology, Evolution and Systematics Discipline
ANU has exceptionally strong academic programs in evolutionary biology. The
Ecology, Evolution and Systematics research program is broad based, providing
access to a wide range of technical facilities and intellectual perspectives
to encourage inter-disciplinary research. It covers the full diversity of ecology
(from pure to applied and mathematical to empirical), evolution (from population
genetics to the evolution of life-history and behavioural traits), and phylogenetic
systematics (from descriptive taxonomy to phylogenetic analysis based on morphological
and molecular data).
Most of our staff are in the Research School of Biology,
but there is a wide range of expertise in
the
Centre for Resource and Environmental Studies, and related areas within the
ANU and many of the Divisions of CSIRO. The staff have a wide range of professional
experience including animal, plant and microbial ecology and evolution; behavioural,
physiological and theoretical ecology; conservation biology; molecular evolution;
population genetics; animal and plant systematics; information technology;
environmental management; geography; and prehistory. In addition to Australia,
they have experience in many parts of the world including Europe, Africa, North
America and the Pacific region.
Students have access to a wide range of equipment, computing facilities, fieldwork
opportunities and major national biological collections, such as the Australian
National Insect Collection, the Australian National Herbarium and the National
Wildlife Collection are also in Canberra. They are encouraged to take advantage
of opportunities to collaborate with the rich and diverse community of biologists
engaged in teaching, research, environmental management and policy formulation
in the nation's capital.
Canberra is particularly well placed for ready access to a wide range of environments,
including grasslands, semi-arid woodlands, sclerophyll forests, forest plantations,
temperate rainforests, alpine herbfields, freshwater lakes, marine estuaries
or mangroves and rocky intertidal areas. The ANU also provides biological research
facilities at two well-equipped field stations within three hours drive of
Canberra. Some projects are conducted further afield in arid, tropical and
subantarctic environments.
If you have any questions, please contact the potential supervisor directly,
or Associate Professor Scott Keogh, Convenor of the Graduate Program in Ecology,
Evolution and Systematics ( Scott.Keogh@anu.edu.au ).
You can see an alphabetical
list of academics and their research topics.
Any questions?
Please contact the Graduate Convenors for further
assistance.
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Our PhD students
Links
What do our PhD students say?
"'I'm doing my PhD for a number of reasons. The foremost: being a desire to direct my own research. The silliest: to be able to call myself Dr, and to get that floppy hat for graduation', Kate says."
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