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Science Week – Breaking New Ground (Launceston)


 

The Royal Society of Tasmania

INVITES YOU TO

Breaking New Ground

PUBLIC PRESENTATIONS BY

University of Tasmania PhD Candidates

 

 

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This a FREE event, presented as part of NATIONAL SCIENCE WEEK

Venue: Auditorium, QVMAG at Inveresk

Time: 1.30 pm Sunday 11 August 2019

 

 

 

Microbiome: The new clinical frontier

Ravichandra Vemuri’s project is a collaboration between the UTAS, CSIRO (Brisbane),and UAS labs (a USA probiotic company) With ageing, the gut microbiota develops significant imbalances affecting host metabolism and overall health.Dietary supplementation with probiotics could beneficially change gut microbiota and metabolism. Ravi’s project is primarily focused on investigating the influence of probiotics on gut microbiota and metabolic profiles in ageing mice, and potential implications in humans.

 

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The Socio-Ecology of Wildlife Conservation on Private Land

Matt Taylor is researching the socio-ecology of wildlife conservation on private land. He has Interviewed landholders to capture their views about wildlife management, and organised 160 of them into using wildlife cameras and other technologies to collect information. His research aims to empower communities to become involved in scientific enquiry about matters relevant to the management of wildlife on their own land. Matt’s study is a partnership between UTAS and the Tasmanian Land Conservancy, where he works as an ecologist.

 

Changes in the surface waters of the Southeast Pacific and beyond

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Rachael Sanders is a PhD student at the British Antarctic Survey and University of Southampton, UK, which has funded a three-month internship at UTAS. Her research focuses on how the surface of the Southern Ocean is changing due to changes in the amount of sea ice and the strength of the winds around Antarctica.

 

 

 

Living long or living well: dilemmas older people face when considering dialysis

Rajesh Raj is a full-time nephrologist at Launceston General Hospital. He is studying the factors which affect the outcome of dialysis for older patients with kidney failure, as not enough is known about the impact of dialysis on quality of life. His research aims to identify information clinicians can use to help the elderly choose treatment options or to improve outcome after they have started therapy.

 

 

 

Generously supported by

 

 

Last modified: August 22, 2019. Copyright © 2025 The Royal Society of Tasmania ABN 65 889 598 100