Associate Professor Nick Coleman examining green-fluorescent bacteria under UV light.
鈥淭his work is primarily microbiology, but also involves genetics, biochemistry, chemistry, and ecology. It is fascinating to learn how microbes evolve, and learn to use synthetic toxic chemicals as food sources,鈥 says .
鈥淭hey really are amazing 鈥 in the the motto is 鈥榤icrobes can do anything鈥.鈥
Nick鈥檚 expertise is in the areas of environmental microbiology and biotechnology, with a particular focus on molecular genetic analysis of bacteria capable of degrading pollutants.
鈥淭hese microbes are useful for cleaning up contaminated sites. At the moment we are very interested in finding microbes that can biodegrade polyfluorinated compounds found in fire-fighting foams 鈥 these are very persistent contaminants at many air force bases and airports.鈥
Professor Glenda Wardle and researcher Stephanie Chen in the field.
People move plants all over the planet. This natural experiment is an opportunity to study how plant populations differ in their native and introduced ranges so that we can anticipate how species and communities are shifting under global environmental change. states, "Most species are only studied for a short time and in a few locations, limiting our ability to design management strategies for both threatened species or problem species that we want to ensure don鈥檛 spread and damage ecosystems. However, by focusing on聽the widespread herbaceous species聽Plantago lanceolata聽L. (ribwort plantain) as a model system聽we can record the differences in survival, growth and reproduction across the geographic range of the species."
This project is part of the global聽 collaboration (a spatially distributed model for population ecology; with over 50 sites globally. Locally, in Sydney we are exploring the details of alternative reproductive modes such as clonality and the role of a long-lived seed bank in population persistence. These methods use high resolution genomic data sets that can identify clones within populations and state-of-the-art integral projection models that model varying levels of seed dormancy from stored seeds in the soil to determine how populations persist under different environmental pressures.
"Plant population modelling will play a key role in ecology forecasting which is an imperative given the current rates of regional and global environmental change.聽Anthropogenic climate change is reconfiguring ecological systems. Therefore, future-looking ecology is an imperative to link science to decision-making and will also contribute to fundamental ecological knowledge."
"Understanding the interaction between demographic and genetic factors will further enhance the ability for adaptive management of threatened species. Through the model system of聽P. lanceolata,聽PlantPopNet provides a novel lens to study the abiotic and biotic drivers of plant persistence, distribution, and evolution while addressing the need for spatially distributed experiments required to provide decision-making tools for complex large-scale problems such as climate change," says Professor Wardle.
Mesenchymal stem cells growing on an extracellular matrix protein called tropoelastin. Photo taken by Dr Giselle Yeo at the Australian Centre for Mocroscopy and Microanalysis at the University of Sydney.
Stem cell engineering seeks to understand and manipulate regenerative stems cells, which can be used for various clinical applications.聽Stem cells are increasingly聽being used to treat a number of diseases and to repair tissue injuries.
, Early Career Development Fellow, says, 鈥淚 explore ways to make stem cells grow faster, live聽longer, or make specialised tissues better.聽I also look at methods to make synthetic materials more compatible with the body or more useful for tissue repair by covering them with functional molecules聽that interact with the body's own stem cells.鈥澛
鈥淢y research aims to understand and manipulate聽the fundamental聽properties of these regenerative cells, in order to create a more economically viable and functionally better starting material for stem聽cell therapies.鈥
鈥淚 work in the Charles Perkins Centre, which houses world-class cell culture, imaging and cell characterisation聽facilities which I need聽for my projects. The University聽is home to a vibrant, multi-disciplinary community of researchers, and聽I have聽formed productive collaborations with colleagues across Science and Engineering.鈥
Seahorses photo credit Jaquie Herbert.
鈥淢y team鈥檚 work aims to understand the way in which pregnancy and the placenta has evolved in animals. We study the fundamental biology of pregnancy in a range of animals, including mammals, reptiles, sharks, and seahorses,鈥 said , Research Fellow.
鈥淥ur work is fundamental 鈥榖lue sky鈥 research, which advances scientific knowledge. This is really important, because solving applied research problems can only come from a strong foundation of fundamental research, like the kind of work that my team does. For example, the reproductive biology of the species we work with is poorly understood, and yet the survival of a species depends on its successful reproduction.鈥
鈥淚t is essential to understand the fundamental biology of our unique native species if we鈥檙e going to predict their reproductive success under climate change, or even design successful captive breeding programs in the future. In addition, to thoroughly understand mechanisms underlying human pregnancy we need to study pregnancy in a variety of other animals. An evolutionary approach is a promising direction for medicine, and may shed light on the causes underlying the 30-50% of human pregnancies that fail in the first trimester.鈥
Apis florea dancing bee, South-East Asian species. Photo credit - Ben Oldroyd.
Using their body to make specific movements, all species of honeybees make use of the 鈥榙ance language鈥 to communicate the location of food sources and new nest sites.
鈥淲e can learn their language fairly easily and thus eavesdrop on the information,鈥 says .
As humans continue to alter the landscape, it is important to understand what honeybees require to sustain healthy populations. Only by understanding the bees鈥 needs, can we assist the bees to remain in optimal condition for their own good and ours.
鈥淚 am very interested to learn how our native Australian plants and the introduced honeybees work together. Do they indeed work together, or are they in a bad relationship? Do honeybees have a negative impact on native species of bees, of which we have many in Australia? All these questions can be answered here at the University of Sydney, as there are many people interested in such questions, who come from different backgrounds and have different expertise.鈥