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Division of Environmental and Life Sciences

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ELS Cultivates a Tall Poppy


Outstanding young ELS based scientist
Dr Craig O'Neill is among 13 NSW/ACT
winners of the 2007 Young Tall Poppy Science Awards.

Click here for
more information


 


No. 344, 31 March 2008

 

In this edition:

 

News From the Dean
The weekly update from the Dean of Division, A/Prof Kevin McCracken

     
 

Science News Asks: Should Scientists Sell Science?
We welcome your opinion

     
 

Opportunities
- General Staff Development Grants Now Open
- Job Opportunity: Research Officer (Food, Environment & Health), Rockhampton
- Job Opportunity: Senior Project Officer at the Australian Biosecurity CRC

     
 

Events
- Biological Science Seminar this Wednesday
- St Vincent's Hospital Talk - history and medical achievements
- Gleebooks Special - David Stratton & Margaret Pomeranz LIVE!
- Aust. Museum Talk: The Astrolabe - the most remarkable scientific instrument devised in pre-modern times?
- Free Adyar Talk: Meet the Author of The Celestine Prophecy
- ELS Seminar Series

     
  Snippets
     
  Science News Archive
     

 

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News from the Dean

 

Dear Colleagues,

First off this week let me thank Hatch Stokes for his valuable contribution to the Department of CBMS as Head, and welcome Helena Nevalainen as the new Head of this Department.

Staff intending to apply for OSP for 2009 should start thinking about their applications now. The first step should be to consult the HR OSP Policy Document: http://www.pers.mq.edu.au/policy/develop/1904.pdf . It is essential to inform yourself of OSP Policy/Principles and Procedures. Applications for 2009 OSP need to be submitted to my office by Monday 14 July 2008 to allow time for applications to be considered and recommendations forwarded to Human Resources and the DVC (Research) by the end of that month.

Congratulations to Katherine Barry, Greg Holwell and Marie Herberstein (Biological Sciences) for managing to hit both a prestigious journal ( Behavioural Ecology ) and The Sydney Morning Herald (March 24) in the one go with their research on sexual cannibalism amongst praying mantids. Male readers of the SMH piece were no doubt pleased they were born a bit higher up the evolutionary scale than mantids. I am sure the article stimulated a fair bit of conversation across the breakfast tables of Sydney .

Oxfam Australia have written to me congratulating the university and in particular the Indigenous Bioresources Research Group for the development and application of ethically sound research protocols governing collaborative research with Indigenous people. This has prompted Oxfam to invite us to support their CLOSE THE GAP campaign which aims to level life expectancy between Indigenous and other Australians. The ELS Centre will be supporting this campaign and the national Close the Gap Day on Tuesday 22 April. Further information will be sent shortly. To find out more about the campaign see www.oxfam.org.au/closethegap .

The Vice-Chancellor's office have sent through details about the first issue of the Higher Education 2020 Newsletter. This aims to keep the sector and stakeholders informed about the Australian Government's higher education policies and programs. The current issue includes information on the recently announced Review of Australian Higher Education, updates on key issues and developments, and contact details for the Higher Education Group. The newsletter will be published on a bimonthly basis. This issue, along with archived copies of the former newsletter, are available at: http://www.dest.gov.au/sectors/higher_education/publications_resources/2020_newsletter/default.htm .

For those teaching an introductory course (at undergraduate or postgraduate level) we have been invited to participate via e-mail in a research project investigating effective teaching approaches. If interested, please spend a few minutes reading the information on the web (2 pages) at http://www.usyd.edu.au/stuserv/documents/maths_learning_centre/TeachingApproaches.pdf , which has full information about the project and how to participate. For more information or if you have difficulty accessing the web-link please email Sue on s.gordon@mail.usyd.edu.au.

The Australian Centre for Environmental Law is hosting "The state of environmental assessment: a national conference" on 23 May 2008 at the National Museum of Australia , Canberra . This conference is the first to take a national look at this issue, examining the state of the law and practice of environmental assessment across the country and the need for reform at both a state and federal level. Program information and registration details can be found on the ACEL website: http://law.anu.edu.au/acel . Enquiries to: rsvp@law.anu.edu.au

And finally, a reminder that EOI's for Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities are due to the Research Office by 5:00 pm on Monday 31 March (ie today)!

Till next time,

Kevin

 

 

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We ask you: Scientists Should Sell Science?

 

While the new Labor government is proposing a "charter" to encourage scientists to express views freely and to protect them when engaging in public debate about science-related issues, a young scientist is urging a broadening of the university science curriculum to prepare his fellow scientists better for educating the public about science's value.

Writing in the April issue of Australasian Science magazine, Dr Andrew Baker, a lecturer in Environmental Science at Queensland University of Technology, challenges his colleagues to be proactive.

He says:
"It is up to us to enhance how the world perceives and values science" "If members of the public are not more scientifically aware, how can they apply informed pressure on aspiring or reigning governments to make policy based on sound scientific thinking?"

While the solution may seem simply that scientists should sell science, he believes: "Regrettably, most scientists are unable to broker knowledge in a clear, understandable fashion to the person on the street [and] a rising tide of jargon is almost submerging scientific disciplines. Practitioners, even in closely related disciplines within science, can have trouble understanding each other. If so, how can they hope to speak with a clear voice to the public?"

One way to combat this trend is for university science educators to place strategic focus on developing creative thinking skills in their students. We currently spend much time indoctrinating science students in rules of method. This is critically important in allowing students to grasp how to do good science, but it also stifles creativity.

Would we also benefit in also getting students to think outside the box by writing opinion essays and composing work into simple, powerful prose aimed at the layperson? Would this process ensure that our young scientists more clearly understand the fundamental implications of their work? Would it foster an ability to translate science¹s value to an eager, but currently frustrated and confused, public?

What do you think? All comments welcome, simply e-mail sciencenews@els.mq.edu.au.

 

 

 

 

 

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Opportunities

 

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General Staff Porfessional Development Grants

Applications for General Staff Professional Development Grants for 1st semester 2008 are to be submitted to gill Ellis by 5pm, 18th April. These grants are available to all continuing members of the Division's general staff.

Please follow the instructions that can be found on the Division's web page at http://www.els.mq.edu.au/staff/generalpd_info.htm

 

 

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Research Officer (Food, Environment & Health), Centre for Social Science Research Rockhampton

Fixed Term (2 years) - Full Time

Total remuneration range from $60 102 to $73 098 per annum includes salary from $51 369 to $62 477 per annum and employer superannuation plus annual leave loading.

CQU is seeking to recruit a Research Officer to work in multidisciplinary teams with a strong focus on evidence-based population health and service delivery interventions. The position is focussed on the relationships between food, environment and health. Opportunities to contribute to the learning and teaching activities of Central Queensland University in relevant discipline areas may also be negotiated.

Applications close: 28 April 2008

Enquiries: Associate Professor Stewart Lockie, Director, Centre for Social Science Research on telephone (07) 4930 6539 ; email: s.lockie@cqu.edu.au

 

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Job Opportunity: Senior Project Officer: Australian Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre

A Senior Project Officer is required to work with a multi disciplinary expert committee on an ongoing basis in assessing risk to the animal and human population in Australia of emergent infectious disease. In particular, the project officer and committee will provide advice to the Australian Biosecurity CRC (AB-CRC) of immediate and longer term research needs in risk assessment, communication and early detection.

In this role you will be directly responsible to the Biosecurity Risk Intelligence Scanning Council (BRISC) of the AB-CRC and be involved in the development of BRISC and its functions. You will be required to work with the members of BRISC and to collaborate with other members of the centre’s multidisciplinary (and multi-site) management team to develop a framework for biosecurity risk assessment. You will work with BRISC to develop interpretive tools and to commission additional research work as required, analysing data and other information and overseeing/commissioning work. The position will assist BRISC to determine priorities by ensuring background papers and additional research reports are provided.

You will have a broad knowledge of the science of emerging infectious disease in the animal and public health arena. A background in risk assessment and a good understanding of research processes is ideal. You will also have the ability to perform literature reviews and provide preliminary analysis of those reviews.

This is a full time, fixed term position for 1 year with an option to renew for a further year. The remuneration package will be in the range of $69,944 - $74,609pa, plus employer superannuation contributions.

Please contact Sue Campbell to obtain the position description and selection criteria at sue.campbell@abcrc.org.au. To discuss the role contact Dr Stephen Prowse, telephone (+61) 07 3346 8862.

Applications close 24 April 2008

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Events

 

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Biological Science Seminar:

"Fatal attraction or just attraction?  Evaluating alternative hypotheses on the occurrence of sexual cannibalism in praying mantids"

Prof. Michael Maxwell, National University, La Jolla, California.
Wednesday 2 April at 1 pm, Block E8A room 290 (Biology tearoom)


Abstract

Sexual cannibalism, the consumption of the male by the female during or after courtship or copulation, occurs in many predatory arthropods, including praying mantids.  Explanations of the occurrence of this bizarre behavior involve ultimate (fitness consequences) and proximate (mechanistic, physiological) considerations.  Previous work has addressed ultimate explanations of sexual cannibalism in mantids, but less attention has been devoted to the proximate question of how males come to be with cannibalistic females in nature.  This talk addresses several hypotheses about the occurrence of sexual cannibalism in the North American mantid Stagmomantis limbata.  Field experiments examine mechanisms of mate attraction.  Results indicate that S. limbata females emit pheromones for long-distance attraction of males, and that pheromone emission is dependent on the female's nutritional status.  Two working hypotheses concerning the expression of sexual cannibalism are considered.  The first is "Fatal mate", which posits that relatively well-fed females emit pheromones, and then attack males at some stage in the sexual encounter.  The second is "Poaching" by poorly-fed females that do not emit pheromones, but may intercept males that are attracted to the pheromones of other conspecific females.  Current research seeks to test these hypotheses.

 

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St Vincent's Hospital Talk - history and medical achievements
Wednesday 2 April
In 2007, St Vincent's Hospital celebrated its sesquicentenary. Dr Anne-Maree Whitaker, author of a pictorial history of the hospital's first 150 years will talk about the Sisters of Charity, the doctors and nurses, the buildings, the patients and the medical achievements of this historic Sydney institution.

Time: 1:00pm-3:00pm Apr 02 Cost: $7/$5 members
Venue: History House, 133 Macquarie St, Sydney
Bookings: Royal Australian Historical Society www.rahs.org.au (02) 9247 8001

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Gleebooks Special - David Stratton & Margaret Pomeranz LIVE!
Wednesday 2 April
Join popular sparring partners and film critics David Stratton and Margaret Pomeranz as they discuss Stratton's long-awaited memoir I Peed on Fellini. Stratton's hallmarks are his incredible depth of cinematic knowledge, his passionate opposition to censorship and his lifelong commitment to quality film.

Time: 6:30pm-8:00pm Apr 02 Cost: $10/$7 geeclub welcome
Venue: Gleebooks, 49 Glebe Point Rd, Glebe
Bookings: Gleebooks www.gleebooks.com.au/events/ 02 9660 2333


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The Astrolabe - the most remarkable scientific instrument devised in pre-modern times?
Thursday 3 April
Instrument of Medieval Astronomers and Astrologers and probably the most remarkable scientific instrument devised in pre-modern times. It is a portable map of the heaven used to perform a number of astronomical and mathematical operations. Discover the origins of astrology and learn about this medieval hi-tech instrument in this talk. Presented by Dr David Juste, University of Sydney.

Time: 6:30pm-8:15pm Apr 03 Cost: $20/$15 Members
Venue: Australian Museum, William Street entrance, 6 College Street, Sydney
Enquiries: Australian Museum www.australianmuseum.net.au/members 02

9320 6225
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Free Adyar Talk: Meet the Author of The Celestine Prophecy
Friday 4 April
Meet James Redfield and hear him discuss his bestseller, "The Celestine Prophecy", and his forthcoming book, "The Twelfth Insight". Discover how people everywhere are learning to develop their intuition, take advantage of mysterious chance meetings, and find a deeper calling that is leading them to success and fulfillment.

Time: 1:00pm-2:00pm Apr 04 Cost: Free
Venue: Adyar Bookshop, 230 Clarence St, Sydney
Enquiries: Adyar Bookshop www.adyar.com.au (02) 9267 8509

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ELS Seminar Series

Departments in ELS host seminars covering a wide range of topics associated with ongoing research projects and other areas of interest. The seminars are delivered by academics, research staff, and students from within the Division, as well as guest speakers from other institutions and industry. Details of times, dates, locations and topics of seminars to be held over the next few weeks are listed here.

 

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Snippets

Natural yeast makes tastier wine
Researchers have discovered a naturally occurring yeast that brings out fruity flavours in Sauvignon Blanc and may make New Zealand's wines even more famous.

School drug tests will create mistrust
Introducing drug testing in schools has not shown to be effective overseas and could create mistrust and damage students' relationships, a report has warned.

Breastfeeding needs support
Most women begin breastfeeding but only one per cent continue until the recommended age, due to social criticism and a lack of support, research has shown.

People in glasses aren't nerds
People who wear glasses are no more nerdy or introverted than anyone else, and are a little more agreeable, research has found.

Kids should read for fun
Children may improve their literacy more if they're allowed to select books they enjoy rather than following strict guidelines, experts have advised.

Brazil nuts boost health
Eating a Brazil nut a day can raise selenium levels, and having two of the healthy snacks may improve the immune system, new research has shown.

Fewer students choose maths
Fewer students are studying advanced maths in school or at the tertiary level, according to findings that foreshadow a skills shortage in the workforce.

Tiny marsupial is 'living fossil'
Despite the distance, South America's tiny Monito del Monte is the only living relative of Australia's oldest marsupial fossils, new findings have shown.

 

 

 

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  • CRICOS Provider No 00002J, ABN 90 952 801 237
  • Last Updated: January 2008
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