Visiting scientist support
The aim of this funding is to enhance collaboration and training opportunities by supporting external researchers to visit ANU, CSIRO and/or the University of Canberra.
Eligibility
Proposed visitors should be nominated by a lab leader(s)/research groups from at least one (or preferably more) CBA partner institutions, ie. ANU, CSIRO, UC, and plan to collaborate with researchers from these institution(s) during their time in Canberra (or other CSIRO sites).
Visiting scientist's research field/s should complement CBA’s biodiversity science focus, eg. evolutionary biology, population and ecosystem ecology, genomics, bioinformatics, and/or spatial modelling.
As a condition of CBA support, the visiting scientist will need to present a workshop and/or seminar that is advertised to the CBA community (and elsewhere when appropriate). It can be held at ANU, UC or CSIRO (other venues can be proposed if required).
If required, the CBA can provide coordination support, e.g. advertising, registration, venue and flight bookings, etc.
How to apply
Using the template (under Downloads) we invite you to submit to claire.stephens@anu.edu.au a short proposal (~2 pages or less) that includes:
- Inviters’ details
- Visitor's details, including date of proposed visit and research background
- Outline of workshop / seminar
- Budget
Applications will be assessed by the CBA Director and Liaison Committee.
Past CBA-funded visiting scientists
-
Adam Leaché Seminar: Comparative species delimitation: examples with lizards and Workshop: Multi-species Coalescent Analysis
-
Oskar Hagen Seminar: From German Romanticism to Modern Computational Biodiversity Models and Workshop: Gen3sis: Simulating the evolution of biodiversity
-
Bruce Walsh Seminar: Leveraging museum specimens to ask ecological questions in the era of genomics and Workshop: Detecting selection
-
Emma Sherratt Seminar: Shape of Life: reading the evolutionary history of animals by measuring them and Workshop: Leveraging morphological and genomic data to elucidate evolutionary patterns
-
Camille Roux Seminar: How far can genes travel in the living world? and Workshop: ABCday: Approximate Bayesian Computation in one day (and a half)
-
Mario Dos Reis Seminar: Bayesian molecular clock-dating of phylogenies: fossils, genomes and uncertainty and Workshop: Bayesian molecular clock dating using genome-scale datasets
- Tracy Heath Workshop Bayesian phylogenetics and macroevolution in RevBayes
- Jeff Good Seminar: The evolution of seasonal camouflage and Workshop Population genomics for non-model species
- Alan Lemmon Seminar and Workshop: Anchored Phylogenomics
- Sasa Stefanovic Seminar: Difficult questions on reticulate evolution in Cuscuta (dodders; Convolvulaceae)
- Vicki Funk Seminar: Evolution of the Composiate in Oceania
- Scott Edwards Workshop: Phylogenomic analyses using the multispecies coalescent model
- Olivier Loudet Workshop: Genomic and phenomic tools to identify the genetic basis underlying natural variation and adaptation
- Oliver Niehuis Workshop: DNA target enrichment in phylogenomics - molecular and bioinformatic principles
- Eddie Holmes RSB Director's seminar: The Greatest Experiment in Evolution: Viral Biocontrol of Rabbits
- Alexei Drummond RSB Director's seminar: Developing Darwin’s computer and Workshop: Phylogenomics using BEAST2
- Peter Smouse Workshop: Genetic analysis for population studies
- Steve Stones-Havas Workshop: Geneious
- Joseph Heled Workshop: BEAST