Michael Douglas
University of Western Australia, WA, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
Prof. Michael Douglas is an aquatic ecologist from Charles Darwin University who has been researching tropical rivers and wetlands in northern Australia for more than 20 years.
His research focusses on understanding the effects of catchment management practices including fire, weed, forestry and water management on tropical rivers, floodplains and riparian zones and has worked on aquatic invertebrate, fish, and plant communities and on the ecosystem processes that connect them, particularly food webs. For the past 6 years he has been leading collaborative research programs aimed at supporting land, water and biodiversity management across northern Australia. He is the Director of the Tropical Rivers and Coastal Knowledge Research Hub (TRaCK) and the National Environmental Research ProgramĀ¹s Northern Australia Hub.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Ecogenomic tracing of trophic connectivity in tropical coastal and freshwater fish communities. (#316)
10:30 AM
Tom Rayner
Morning Tea & Poster Session
Wet season movements of barramundi and forktail catfish: the role of fish movement as a driver of food web subsidies in a tropical lowland river (#62)
11:30 AM
David Crook
Movement/connectivity (1)
The importance of natural flow to the recruitment success of an amphidromous shrimp in tropical Northern Australia (#83)
2:00 PM
Peter Novak
Movement/connectivity (2)
Prioritizing management of dynamic threats in protected areas: a decision support tool for Kakadu National Park (#227)
2:45 PM
Vanessa M Adams
Rehabilitation and Restoration (2)
Talking together, working together, walking together (#185)
9:20 AM
Michael Douglas
Plenary - Michael Douglas & Mona Liddy