Richard Hobbs

Richard J. Hobbs FAA, is a distinguished professor, ARC Australian Laureate Fellow and ecologist at the University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia. He is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Science and a Highly-Cited author who has written extensively in the areas of vegetation dynamics and management, ecosystem fragmentation, ecosystem rehabilitation and restoration, landscape ecology, and conservation biology. Current research focuses on managing ecosystems in a rapidly changing world.[1][2][3][4]

Academic career

An alumnus of Edinburgh University, Scotland, Richard obtained a 1st class honours in Ecological Science in 1976. He secured a Fulbright Scholarship to the University of California Santa Barbara, USA where he completed a master's degree in 1977. He completed his PhD at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland in 1982, working on post-fire dynamics of heathland communities, supervised by Prof Charles Gimingham.

His first postdoctoral research position was at Stanford University, working with Prof Hal Mooney on serpentine grassland dynamics.

In 1984 he joined the CSIRO Division of Wildlife & Ecology in Western Australia and worked on the dynamics of fragmented ecosystems in the Western Australian wheatbelt, becoming the Officer in Charge of the Western Australian laboratory in 1997.

In 2000 he took up a Chair in Environmental Science at Murdoch University and was awarded an ARC Australian Professorial Fellowship in 2006.

Moving to the University of Western Australia in 2009, he was awarded an Australian Laureate Fellowship by the Australian Research Council for research into "Intervention ecology: managing ecosystems in the 21st century".[5]

Public and Professional Roles

  • President, Ecological Society of Australia 1998-1999
  • President, International Association for Landscape Ecology 1999-2003
  • Member, Scientific Advisory Committee, Worldwide Fund for Nature (Australia) 1997-2004
  • Member, Invasive Species Specialist Group, IUCN Species Survival Commission
  • Member, ARC Expert Advisory Panel (Engineering and Environment) 2001-2002
  • Member, Board of Governors, Society for Ecological Restoration International 2003-2004
  • Member, Wilderness Society Wildcountry Science Council 2003-2009
  • Member, ARC College of Experts 2004-2005
  • Member, Natural Heritage Trust Advisory Committee 2004-2007
  • Member, Editorial Board, Ecological Management and Restoration 1999-2010
  • Editor in Chief, Restoration Ecology, from 2005
  • Member, Editorial Advisory Board, Landscape Ecology, from 2006

Awards

  • Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science
  • ISI Highly Cited Researcher in Ecology and Environment
  • Distinguished Scholarship Award, 1999, International Association for Landscape Ecology
  • Finalist, 2001 Eureka Awards (The Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney Eureka Prize for Biodiversity Research)
  • Australian Laureate Fellowship, 2009[5]
  • Finalist, 2010 Western Australian Scientist of the Year
  • Winner, 2011 Western Australian Scientist of the Year[6]
  • Ecological Society of Australia, 2010 Gold Medal Recipient

Selected Recent Publications

gollark: You can do it. It's just harder.
gollark: It's the node.js libraries and implementation.
gollark: It's not the language.
gollark: "I want all my C code to be like what WHY outputs. Why won't X language do this"
gollark: Blocking IO it be slow, yo.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.