Personal profile
Biography
John Leys has a PhD from Griffith University in wind erosion processes, has published 80 papers and book chapters and holds the positions of:
- Member of the NSW Soil Knowledge Network
John started his career with the New South Wales public sector with the Soil Conservation Service of New South Wales in 1981. Since then, he has worked with various natural resource management agencies with the aim of improving agricultural land management practices that reduce soil erosion and dust storms. He was awarded the New South Wales Science and Engineering award for innovation in the public-sector science and engineering for his work on Community DustWatch.
John founded DustWatch in 2002, while working with the NSW governement, to monitor and report the causes of wind erosion and dust levels across eastern Australia. DustWatch is a collaborative project that works with universities, the CSIRO, natural resource management agencies, and the community to increase knowledge on the causes and control of wind erosion.
The network remains managed by the NSW government, and John uses the data to report on dust storms across NSW. He maintains close ties to CSIRO, which, in collaboration with the Australian Bureau of Resource Economics, developed a free vegetation cover website, GEOGLAMM RAPP. Vegetation cover is a crucial factor in soil erosion, making RAPP an important tool in its management.
Qualifications
PhD
Research Interests
My areas of research interest include:
- wind erosion processes and dust storm monitoring
- and management practice impact and monitoring
- remote sensing of dust and ground cover and its management
- social research into how science can be better used
- how cultural science can improve our land management practices
Education/Academic qualification
Environmental Science, PhD, Wind erosion processes and sediments, Griffith University Queensland
Award Date: 24 Mar 1999
External Scholarly Memberships and Affiliations
Research student supervision
- Registered to supervise
Fingerprint
- 1 Similar Profiles
Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
-
Dust-storm frequencies, community attitudes, government policy and land management practices during three major droughts in New South Wales, Australia
Leys, J., Heidenreich, S., White, S., Guerschman, J. & Strong, C., 2022, In: Rangeland Journal. 44, 6, p. 343-355 13 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access9 Citations (Scopus) -
Challenges, solutions and research priorities for sustainable rangelands
Nielsen, U. N., Stafford-Smith, M., Metternicht, G. I., Ash, A., Baumber, A., Boer, M. M., Booth, S., Burnside, D., Churchill, A. C., El Hassan, M., Friedel, M. H., Godde, C. M., Kelly, D., Kelly, M., Leys, J. F., McDonald, S. E., Maru, Y. T., Phelps, D. G., Ridges, M. & Simpson, G. & 4 others, , Dec 2020, In: Rangeland Journal. 42, 5, p. 359-373 15 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Review article › peer-review
Open Access13 Citations (Scopus) -
Dust climatology of Mildura, Victoria, Australia: transport direction
Love, B. M., Leys, J. F., Strong, C. L. & McTainsh, G. H., 15 Jun 2019, In: Earth Surface Processes and Landforms. 44, 7, p. 1449-1459 11 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
10 Citations (Scopus) -
Where she blows! a ten year dust climatology of western New South Wales Australia
Leys, J., Strong, C., Heidenreich, S. & Koen, T., Jul 2018, In: Geosciences (Switzerland). 8, 7, 232.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access12 Citations (Scopus)