Every gram of synthetic nitrogen fertiliser comes at a cost of energy, money, and carbon emissions. Over the past 50 years, this natural process has been overshadowed by industrial production and use of industrial fertilisers, which have become essential for food security but undermine environment and human health. There is a pressing need to explore more sustainable solutions that can
Plant Success and the Training Centre for Predictive Breeding hosted a week of soybean collaborative project meetings in Brisbane earlier this month, bringing together teams from BASF, Iowa State University (ISU), and QAAFI. A central objective of this collaboration is to tackle Genotype x Environment x Management (GxExM) interactions in soybean – a complex challenge that demands coordinated expertise across modelling, physiology, genomics, and breeding. The meetings
John Bowman grew up in Montana and later during secondary school Illinois, obtaining a BS degree in biochemistry from the University of Illinois in 1986. During his PhD studies with Elliot Meyerowitz at the California Institute of Technology (1986–1991), he studied the genetic basis of flower development in the model flowering plant Arabidopsis. He continued to study aspects of flower
When it comes to macadamia research, we often expect the science to be the complicated part. What is becoming increasingly clear, however, is that macadamia research – similar to a number of other crops – suffers from a variety of challenges which tend to surface before anyone steps into a lab or gets near an orchard. This is because macadamia,
A team of scientists from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Plant Success in Nature and Agriculture at Monash University has identified a single gene in a land plant that could help explain how plants first evolved the ability to grow continuously, a key trait that allowed them to colonise dry land and shape life on Earth. Published in Current Biology,
On November 10 we were thrilled to officially launch the ARC Research Hub for Engineering Plants to Replace Fossil Carbon (pictured above). As Director, I am pleased to have this opportunity to share an update with the Plant Success community about how our multidisciplinary team is taking a fresh approach to transforming plant waste into valuable carbon-based products such as jet fuel.
Dr James W Peacock, AC, FAA, FTSE, FRS, Australia’s Chief Scientist, President of the Academy of Science, was a colossus in Australian plant science. He was hugely respected both nationally and internationally, receiving numerous awards and honours. Jim passed away last week, and much will be written by others about his many achievements. He was my boss and mentor for
When I began my PhD, I was fascinated by a deceptively simple question: how do plants turn genes into colours? Walk through any garden and you’ll see the answer shimmering in red petals, purple leaves, or even blue flowers – colours born from anthocyanins. These pigments don’t just decorate plants; they act as antioxidants, sunscreens, and ecological messengers, protecting tissues,
Back Garden Biology — or from little things big things grow (with respect to Paul Kelly and Kev Carmody) On a sunny winter afternoon during a long Melbourne Covid lockdown, I found myself crawling about in the back garden looking for insects with my daughter as part of her home schooling and we chanced upon a liverwort growing between the
It was a very busy National Science Week for the Centre! Researchers from the University of Tasmania were at the Beaker Street Festival as Roving Scientists and working with high school art students at CoLab. Researchers also gave demonstrations as part of the Young Tassie Scientists Road Trips, and invited attendees at the Festival of Bright Ideas to become Plant Detectives! At
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