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Research Fellow in Wildlife Conservation, University of Adelaide

Jasmin is passionate about protecting Australia's threatened communities and species. Her research aims to design innovative solutions, linking world-leading science with on-ground management, to better protect South Australia’s threatened communities and species as they adapt to global change. She works with wildlife as well as flora and fungi, and is the Vice President of Fungimap Inc., Austalia's national citizen science-led NGO for fungi.

Jasmin’s transdisciplinary research focuses on understanding how ecosystems respond to differing disturbance and other global changes - and what we can do to enhance their capacity to cope with the negative impacts. Her transdisciplinary approach bridges basic and applied research, and co-designs field surveys with industry partners to ensure their findings are put into action to make a difference for conservation. Jasmin uses design thinking to draw on her deep understanding of the needs of others, and brings together global (biogeography and invasion science) and local (community ecology, population ecology and citizen science) approaches, to build long term partnerships that have a real impact on improving biodiversity conservation.

Experience

  • –present
    Research Fellow in Wildlife Conservation, University of Adelaide

Education

  • 2014 
    The University of Adelaide, PhD Environmental Biology