header
SWEARER LAB
 
Funding  
 
 
HOME

Research in the Swearer Lab has been made possible by grants from the:

A. E. Rowden White Foundation
ANZ Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment
Australia and Pacific Science Foundation
Australian Geographic
Australian Research Council
Department of Innovation, Industry, and Regional Development
Department of Sustainability and Environment
Fisheries Victoria
Melbourne Water Corporation
National Geographic
Natural Heritage Trust
New South Wales Fisheries
New South Wales Marine Parks Authority
Royal Society of New Zealand
University of Melbourne
Winifred Violet Scott Estate

Back to top

Research grants since 2001

Johnson, Swearer, The Reef Ecosystem Evaluation Framework (REEF): Managing for Resilience in Temperate Environments, Department of Sustainability and Environment, Marine Research Studies Fund 2011-2014

Pettigrove, Hoffmann, Keough, Swearer, Kolev, Allinson, Nugegoda, Victorian Centre for Aquatic Pollution Identification and Management (CAPIM), Victoria’s Science Agenda Investment Fund 2010-2012

Swearer, Shima, Ford, Should I stay or should I go? Identifying pathways of larval dispersal in a temperate reef fish, Australia and Pacific Science Foundation Grant, 2009-2011

Swearer, Jenkins, Hamer, What drives recruitment variability in Snapper? Application of a novel theoretical and empirical approach to predict fluctuations in fisheries, ARC Linkage Grant, 2009-2011

Shima, Swearer, Chiswell, Maelstrom in the matrix: extreme environmental heterogeneity necessitates a novel conceptual framework for marine metapopulations, Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Grant, 2007-2009

Swearer, Hindell, Jenkins, Western, Linking freshwater flows, salt wedge dynamics and fisheries productivity in estuaries, ARC Linkage Grant, 2006-2010

Swearer, Managing the health of reef fish communities, Natural Heritage Trust Grant, 2006-2008

Swearer, The conservation status of reef fish communities in Victorian waters, Natural Heritage Trust Grant, 2006-2007

Swearer, Effects of environmental heterogeneity on patch connectivity in marine metapopulations, Melbourne Research Grant, 2006

Keough, Swearer, Boxshall, Developing tools for assessing ecological performance of marine protected areas, ARC Linkage Grant, 2005-2007

Back to top

Barbee, Swearer, Downes, Assessing the impact of estuary management on the sustainability of aquatic ecosystems,Natural Heritage Trust Grant, 2005-2006

Swearer, Milton, Mechanisms of population replenishment in the Galapagos Marine Reserve: Identifying priority areas for conservation and fisheries sustainability, University of Melbourne-CSIRO Collaborative Research Grant, 2004-2005

Swearer, Melville, The evolutionary history of self-replenishment in endemic coral reef fishes, University of Melbourne Joint Research Projects Grant, 2004

Swearer, How connected are marine populations? Comparing life histories of endemic and non-endemic reef fishes to investigate the mechanisms behind self-recruitment, ARC Discovery Grant, 2003-2005

Swearer, Downes, Diadromous stream fishes: a model system for investigating sources of variation in recruitment, ARC Discovery Grant, 2003-2005

Shima, Swearer, Towards a mechanistic understanding of population connectivity in marine environments:  Integrating larval condition, dispersal pathways and post-recruitment survival, Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Grant, 2003-2004

Swearer, Mechanisms of population replenishment in the fish fauna of Lord Howe Island, National Geographic Society Grant, 2003-2004

Swearer, Keough, Marine resource management: is Australia sustainable? A. E. Rowden White Foundation Grant, 2003-2004

Swearer, Warner, Morgan, Reconstructing marine larval dispersal pathways using environmental markers, University of Melbourne International Collaborative Research Projects Grant, 2003

Back to top

Warner, Swearer, Morgan Botsford, Raimondi, Carr, Larval pathways and population connectivity in nearshore marine organisms, University of California CEQI Grant, 2002-2003

Swearer, Self-recruitment and population persistence in an island reef fish fauna, University of Melbourne Early Career Researcher Grant, 2002

Swearer, Boxshall, Biomonitoring of sublethal pollution: reconstructing heavy metal exposure history through chemical analysis of skeletal structures in marine organisms, University of Melbourne Joint Research Projects Grant, 2001

 

 

STEVE SWEARER
MEMBERS
ALUMNI
RESEARCH
PUBLICATIONS
FUNDING
LAB RESOURCES
LINKS

page authorised by

Stephen Swearer