Calculated based on number of publications stored in Pure and citations from Scopus
Calculated based on number of publications stored in Pure and citations from Scopus
Calculated based on number of publications stored in Pure and citations from Scopus
20072024

Research activity per year

Personal profile

Biography

Richard is a research scientist with extensive experience working in, and with, science and science-policy agencies in the Australian government. He has worked in environmental, agricultural and forestry agencies developing several national initiatives and frameworks involving state and territory governments, universities NGOs and land managers.

These initiatives include:

  • being an instrumental player in the development of Australia's terrestrial and marine biogeographic regions;
  • the National Reserve Systems (terrestrial and marine);
  • establishing the framework for developing the National Vegetation Information System;
  • contributing to the development of national approaches for tracking change and trends in native vegetation condition and land cover dynamics; and
  • leading the development of a consistent framework for reporting impacts of spray drift on native vegetation in intensive agricultural landscapes.

Richard’s research involves assessing the transformation of ecosystems and landscapes due to the effect that changes in land use, land management regimes and practices have on ecological criteria and indicators including function, structure and composition.

His research aims to assist decision-makers in improving their ability to monitor and report on the status and to track and change trends in environmental conditions arising from deliberate and inadvertent land management regimes and practices. A focus of his current research involves evaluating regenerative landscape management regimes.

His research supports land managers and decision-makers to develop systems to track change and trends in ecological outcomes. Systems include developing response indicators and documenting soil-landscape management chronologies integral to understanding landscape transformation. Remote sensing is fundamental to upscaling ground-based measures and observations.

Qualifications

Master of Science (Environmental Studies), Centre for Resource and Environmental Studies, ANU. Conferred in 1985.

Bachelor of Science (Resource and Ecology), University of Canberra. Conferred 1980.

Research Interests

Landscape transformation associated with historic and contemporary land management regimes

Sustainable use and management of rangelands

Sustainable use and management of native forests

Monitoring outcomes of exclusion fences and regenerative landscape management

Assessing the impacts of feral animals in the Lower Snowy Valley, NSW

Developing a consistent framework for reporting the impacts of herbicide spray drift on native vegetation in intensive agricultural landscapes

 

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics where Richard Thackway is active. These topic labels come from the works of this person. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
  • 1 Similar Profiles