The University of Tasmania is helping local researchers at the cutting edge of the sciences, health and the humanities.
The University was awarded more than $5.5 million for 14 new research projects – 11 of which are led by women – from the Australian Research Council's highly competitive Discovery Projects round for 2022.
"We know – thanks to research – that greater gender diversity means more diverse perspectives, more new ideas, more accurate and higher quality science, more innovative solutions and more opportunities to grow the STEAM workforce so vital for our future of a prosperous and sustainable Tasmania and world."
All University of Tasmania-led projects receiving 2022 ARC Discovery Projects funding are:
* Old brain cells perform new tricks to allow life-long learning (Associate Professor Kaylene Young, Dr Carlie Cullen and Dr Nicholas Blackburn)
* Governing during an ocean climate crisis: Building integrative capacity (Dr Joanna Vince, Prof Marcus Haward)
* Australia's variable rainfall - how dry or wet can it really get? (Dr Tessa Vance)
* Carbon in - carbon out: can carbon inputs keep up with losses in peatland? (Professor Mark Hovenden)
* Using the last glacial cycle to understand carbon-climate feedbacks (Professor Zanna Chase, Dr Taryn Noble)
* How plants open up: revealing the evolution of stomatal opening mechanisms (Dr Frances Sussmilch, Professor Tim Brodribb)
* Extinction, Survival, Resurgence: Indigenous and colonial histories (Associate Professor Rebe Taylor)
* Optimising biodiversity conservation in managed forest landscapes (Dr Susan Baker, Dr Vanessa Adams, Professor Menna Jones)
* Universal properties and application of species size distributions (Dr Asta Audzijonyte, Dr Nils Krueck, Dr Shane Richards)
* Talking Maths: Bridging the gap through talk in Early Years mathematics (Dr Carol Murphy, Associate Professor Tracey Muir, Dr Damon Thomas)
* The drowned: cultural and political geographies (Professor Elaine Stratford)
* Micro-electrofluidic platforms for monitoring 3D human biological models (Professor Brett Paull, Dr Estrella Sanz Rodriguez)
* Unlocking telomere effects on life, death and fitness in a warming world (Professor Erik Wapstra)
* Creative Antarctica: Australian Artists and Writers in the Far South (Professor Elizabeth Leane, Dr Carolyn Philpott, Dr Martin Walch, Dr Hanne Nielsen)