Find out about our latest news and events.

News

Wednesday, 05 Jun 2024

Australia’s ski industry is at risk of major disruptions and shorter seasons if the current level of climate pollution continues, according to new modelling from Protect Our Winters Australia (POW) and The Australian National University (ANU).

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Friday, 31 May 2024

In new research published in Science, biologists show how coevolution drives the creation of new species of cuckoos.

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Wednesday, 29 May 2024

Working on the Clever Cockie Project, Dr Julia Penndorf is tracking all the odd but fascinating behaviours that Sydney and Canberra cockatoos get up to in urban environments.

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A bee
Tuesday, 27 Feb 2024

We have a small and vanishing window to collect bees before the inevitable rapid spread of the varroa mites, and the mass die-offs, occur.

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Friday, 23 Feb 2024

Australia can lay claim to two new native mammal species, discovered as part of collaborative new research published in the journal Molecular Ecology.

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Tuesday, 16 Jan 2024

“We just need to educate people and build awareness of spiders, to show that they’re not actually the bad guys we want them to be.”

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Events

Two birds flying against a clear sky.
8 Aug 2024 | 1 - 2pm

Competition is often proposed to drive niche segregation along multiple axes in speciose communities. Understanding spatial partitioning of foraging areas is particularly important in species that are constrained to a central place.

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24 Jul 2024 | 12:30pm

NGS for food security, disease resistance and bioengineering for climate adaption applications

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A collage showing a woman conducting field research in a lush forest, featuring images of a waterfall, tropical plants, and close-ups of exotic flowers.
21 Jun 2024 | 3:30 - 4:30pm
A young man smiles for a selfie with a scenic river and traditional European buildings in the background.
13 Jun 2024 | 1 - 2pm

In nature, organisms do not exist in isolation. They interact with surrounding biotic and abiotic components to form complex ecological networks, such as food webs. It is the states and dynamics of these networks that then foster biodiversity at the community level or beyond.

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Three cartoon birds standing in front of a speaker in a natural setting.
7 Jun 2024 | 3:30pm

Information about danger is vital for wildlife, yet can be difficult to gain in complex environments. Anthropogenic and other noise can disrupt acoustic communication, and predators may be visually hidden in cluttered environments.

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A smiling man in a pink striped shirt standing in front of a wall covered with pink bougainvillea flowers.
30 May 2024 | 1 - 2pm

New Guinea is the heart of global linguistic diversity. New Guinea makes up 1% of the global land area as an island, containing less than <0.2% of the world's population and 20% of all languages. The obvious linguistic and anthropological question is why?

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