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Professor Salit Kark
Professor

Salit Kark

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 51376

Overview

Background

Professor Salit Kark is a conservation and environmental scientist, with international experience examining the processes shaping biodiversity and their implications for conservation, ecology, environmental decisions, practice and management. Kark and her group provide international leadership in the areas of conservation science, prioritization, invasive species, urban ecology, spatial planning, island conservation, terrestrial, marine and coastal conservation, human-wildlife conflict, and cross-boundary collaboration, working across land-based, coastal and marine environments and collaborating with a wide range of stakeholders and partners in Australia and internationally. The Biodiversity Research Group is a dynamic research team led by Professor Salit Kark at The University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia with interests in conservation science, ecology and biodiversity. The Kark Group works on a range of conservation, environmental and ecological aspects and collaborates with multiple groups worldwide across terrestrial, coastal and marine ecosystems and across spatial scales, ranging from regional to global to help solve key environmental questions, ecological, sustainability and conservation challenges around the Planet. We mentor and train future generations of conservation scientists and practitioners, working with local communities and partners internationally to enhance conservation that supports livelihoods and communities.

Kark and her Biodiversity Research Group students and fellows work on addressing environmental and conservation challenges using advanced approaches and tools across multiple spatial scales, from global to local (examining latitudinal and altitudinal gradients), and in both terrestrial (birds and mammals mostly) and marine ecosystems. This includes work across both natural and human-dominated landscapes, examining the generality of spatial patterns and processes. Kark's work integrates socio-economic and historical factors as well as biological and ecological drivers in disentangling the role of the multiple factors that shape biodiversity and its conservation and management. In this framework, Kark's work advances the links between science, practice and policy and in leading actions that allow us to improve science-based conservation. Our group works to enhance close collaboration in conservation with Indigenous and local communities.

Kark is currently serving as a member of UQ's Cultural Inclusion Council and one of UQ's Senate committees and has served on the Promotions and the Confirmation Committee of the Faculty of Science (LCPC), as well as the School of Biological Science's Equity and Diversity Committee (ongoing), the research committee and the the First Nations Engagament committee (ongoing).

Professor Kark served as Deputy Director of UQ's Faculty of Science Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science. Kark was an Australian Research Council (ARC) Future Fellow and is currently teaching and research academic and Professor at the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Queensland, Brisbane (Australia) and was a Chief Investigator at the Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions (CEED; 2011-2018) and CEED's Theme A (Environmental Policy and Management) Leader. Kark was Chief Investigator of the Commonwealth-supported NESP Threatened Species hub (2015-2021). In this hub, Kark has initiated and led the national-scale Australian islands conservation project (Saving Species on Australian Islands), which aims to examine and prioritize the conservation of threatened species and actions for native and invasive species across Australia's 9000+ islands.

Kark's Biodiversity Research Group is very international, enhancing gender equity, cultural diversity, and Indigenous engagement, and includes students and fellows from over 20 countries. Kar's graduates are now based across continents in key positions in a broad range of governmental organizations, NGOs, academic organizations, industry, the private sector, and diverse conservation, management and policy roles.

Kark completed her PhD in 1999. She was a post-doctoral fellow at the Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University (between 1999-2002) working with Prof. Harold Mooney, Prof. Gretchen Daily and Prof. Paul Ehrlich at the Center for Conservation Biology at Stanford.

Between 2002 and June 2013, Kark was a full-time research and teaching faculty member (Senior Lecturer) where she established and led the Biodiversity Research Group, which she currently leads at the University of Queensland.

Availability

Professor Salit Kark is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Fields of research

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy, unknown

Research interests

  • Biodiversity, global change and conservation science

    Research Interests My research group studies the processes shaping biodiversity and their implications for conservation in a changing world. We work on both native and alien invasive species across different continents and at multiple spatial scales, from global to local. We work across environmental gradients ranging from native to human-dominated ecosystems, including urban and agricultural landscapes. We combine in our research fieldwork, field experiments, spatial and temporal analyses of large databases using geographic information systems, remote sensing, and other advanced tools. We collaborate widely internationally. We are interested in how we can wisely and efficiently prioritize biodiversity conservation actions and efforts to manage native and invasive species in both terrestrial and marine environments in the face of global change. Current main projects Conservation planning and prioritization at local, regional and global scales. Incorporating socio-political and human-related drivers into biodiversity conservation. The role of cross-boundary collaboration and conflicts in conservation. Invasive alien species – spatial patterns, processes, establishment, traits, impacts and prioritization of action How do interactions between alien species shape establishment success, spatial patterns and introduction outcomes? (with focus on birds and mammals). Urban ecology – spatial, temporal trends and conservation of urban biodiversity. The factors shaping the success of species in urban environments. Biodiversity changes along species distribution ranges and particularly across environmental and ecological gradients (such as altitudinal, latitudinal, urban-rural, land-sea, and bathymetric gradients). Island conservation Our group leads research on island conservation, ecosystems and threatened species across Australia's islands and the Indo-Pacific, as well as globally. Developing tools and approaches for 3D marine and terrestrial conservation Conservation planning and prioritization in the Mediterranean Basin and Sea at the regional scale in the face of new challenges, such as oil and gas operations. Examination of approaches that can be used to close the gap between managers, policymakers, and scientists (such as horizon scanning). The role of cross-boundary collaboration and conflicts in conservation.

Research impacts

Leadership – Science-policy: Professor Salit Kark has taken an important leading role in high-rank science-policy national projects, which I have initiated and have been leading. She established and led a large national project aimed at identifying the gaps between scientists, policy-makers and practitioners in the areas of biodiversity and conservation and proposing a national plan for narrowing these gaps. In this framework, she led via dedicated research grants I won a consortium of ±25 partners from governmental, non-governmental and academic organizations have organized international workshops. Kark wrote and published a national report entitled: Promoting science-based conservation in the Mediterranean: Identification of gaps and proposed action plan (http://www.sciencebasedconservation.org/default.aspx?pageid=14), which I presented to the Parliament Science and Technology Committee and which was widely distributed to parliament members, government offices, NGO's, the industry, a range of stakeholders and scientists worldwide. The report proposes a plan to establish the National Natural Resources and Biodiversity Institute (http://www.sciencebasedconservation.org/).

Leading of international and national workshops: In recent years, Kark has organised and chaired over 25 workshops and conferences, including international conferences/workshops. In 2012 and 2013, I chaired three international workshops on Conservation Planning in the Mediterranean Sea, which lead to new successful collaborations among multiple leading scientists working in the region on conservation prioritisation and planning. Management of alien invasive species also requires collaboration and coordination among different states and regions. In 2010, I coordinated and chaired an International Expert Workshop: Science-based Conservation: Achievements, Gaps and Challenges, to which I invited experts from 5 continents (http://www.sciencebasedconservation.org/default.aspx?pageid=15). During 2009-2011, I lead a working group and of monthly workshops on the links between science, policy and practice in biodiversity conservation (science-based conservation).

Policy advice: Kark has participated in academic and national policy committees and advisory boards, including the steering committee on invasive species (The Nature and Parks Authority); the National Biodiversity Plan, The Ministry of Environment; the Annual Backyard Bird Survey; Curriculum development in science teaching for the Ministry of Education; the Society for Protection of Nature and the Nature and Parks Authority and the National Ecological Monitoring Program. she an invited Steering Committee member for the Municipality (Local Action for Biodiversity) and was invited to The Nature Conservancy’s Global Mediterranean Action Network (Global NGO).

Outreach impact: Professor Salit Kark's scientific work and many of her papers have received substantial press, being covered in hundreds of national and international newspapers, magazines, online venues and Internet articles, such as Science Magazine news (ScienceNOW Daily News), ABC (Australian Broadcasting corporation), BBC news, BBC Science & Environment Earth News, United Press International (UPI), National Geographic (printed edition and on-line), Sigma Xi and Public Radio International, Globes, The Post, CBC Radio (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation), on TV and other media sources.

Works

Search Professor Salit Kark’s works on UQ eSpace

153 works between 1994 and 2024

21 - 40 of 153 works

2021

Journal Article

Inequitable protection of multidimensional biogeochemical regions in the Mediterranean Sea

Giménez, Joan, Venegas-Li, Rubén, Mazor, Tessa, Kark, Salit and Levin, Noam (2021). Inequitable protection of multidimensional biogeochemical regions in the Mediterranean Sea. Ocean and Coastal Management, 211 105747, 1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2021.105747

Inequitable protection of multidimensional biogeochemical regions in the Mediterranean Sea

2021

Journal Article

Polycentricity and adaptive governance of transboundary marine socio-ecological systems

Tuda, Arthur Omondi, Kark, Salit and Newton, Alice (2021). Polycentricity and adaptive governance of transboundary marine socio-ecological systems. Ocean & Coastal Management, 200 105412. doi: 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2020.105412

Polycentricity and adaptive governance of transboundary marine socio-ecological systems

2021

Journal Article

Breeding success and its correlates in native versus invasive secondary cavity-nesting birds

Lermite, Françoise, Kark, Salit, Peneaux, Chloe and Griffin, Andrea S. (2021). Breeding success and its correlates in native versus invasive secondary cavity-nesting birds. Emu, 121 (3), 261-266. doi: 10.1080/01584197.2020.1868945

Breeding success and its correlates in native versus invasive secondary cavity-nesting birds

2021

Book Chapter

Australia's urban cavity nesters and introduced parrots: patterns, processes, and impacts

Rogers, Andrew M. and Kark, Salit (2021). Australia's urban cavity nesters and introduced parrots: patterns, processes, and impacts. Naturalized parrots of the world: distribution, ecology, and impacts of the world's most colorful colonizers. (pp. 277-292) edited by Stephen Pruett-Jones. Princeton, NJ United States: Princeton University Press. doi: 10.2307/j.ctv1g13jxb

Australia's urban cavity nesters and introduced parrots: patterns, processes, and impacts

2021

Journal Article

Quantifying the human footprint and cumulative impacts on Earth's coastal areas

Allan, Hannah, Levin, Noam and Kark, Salit (2021). Quantifying the human footprint and cumulative impacts on Earth's coastal areas. SSRN Electronic Journal. doi: 10.2139/ssrn.3824996

Quantifying the human footprint and cumulative impacts on Earth's coastal areas

2021

Journal Article

Reply to: Ecological variables for deep-ocean monitoring must include microbiota and meiofauna for effective conservation

Danovaro, Roberto, Fanelli, Emanuela, Aguzzi, Jacopo, Billett, David, Carugati, Laura, Corinaldesi, Cinzia, Dell’Anno, Antonio , Gjerde, Kristina , Jamieson, Alan J. , Kark, Salit, McClain, Craig, Levin, Lisa A., Levin, Noam, Ramirez-Llodra, Eva, Ruhl, Henry A., Smith, Craig R., Snelgrove, Paul V. R. , Laurenz Thomsen, Cindy L. Van Dover and Moriaki Yasuhara (2021). Reply to: Ecological variables for deep-ocean monitoring must include microbiota and meiofauna for effective conservation. Nature Ecology and Evolution, 5 (1), 30-31. doi: 10.1038/s41559-020-01337-4

Reply to: Ecological variables for deep-ocean monitoring must include microbiota and meiofauna for effective conservation

2020

Journal Article

Strengthening Chile’s policies on invasive species

Caceres-Escobar, Hernan, Biggs, Duan, Martinez-Harms, Maria Jose, Jaksic, Fabian, Iriarte, Agustin, Briceño, Cristobal, Possingham, Hugh and Kark, Salit (2020). Strengthening Chile’s policies on invasive species. Science.

Strengthening Chile’s policies on invasive species

2020

Journal Article

More than just mud: the importance of wallows to Javan rhino ecology and behaviour

Wilson, Steven G., Hockings, Georgina, Deretic, Jo-Anne M. and Kark, Salit (2020). More than just mud: the importance of wallows to Javan rhino ecology and behaviour. Pachyderm, 2020 (61), 49-62.

More than just mud: the importance of wallows to Javan rhino ecology and behaviour

2020

Journal Article

Marine protected areas for demersal elasmobranchs in highly exploited Mediterranean ecosystems

Giménez, Joan, Cardador, Laura, Mazor, Tessa, Kark, Salit, Bellido, José Maria, Coll, Marta and Navarro, Joan (2020). Marine protected areas for demersal elasmobranchs in highly exploited Mediterranean ecosystems. Marine Environmental Research, 160 105033, 105033. doi: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2020.105033

Marine protected areas for demersal elasmobranchs in highly exploited Mediterranean ecosystems

2020

Journal Article

Quantifying the impact of light pollution on sea turtle nesting using ground-based imagery

Vandersteen, James, Kark, Salit, Sorrell, Karina and Levin, Noam (2020). Quantifying the impact of light pollution on sea turtle nesting using ground-based imagery. Remote Sensing, 12 (11) 1785, 1785. doi: 10.3390/rs12111785

Quantifying the impact of light pollution on sea turtle nesting using ground-based imagery

2020

Journal Article

Ecological variables for developing a global deep-ocean monitoring and conservation strategy

Danovaro, Roberto, Fanelli, Emanuela, Aguzzi, Jacopo, Billett, David, Carugati, Laura, Corinaldesi, Cinzia, Dell’Anno, Antonio, Gjerde, Kristina, Jamieson, Alan J., Kark, Salit, McClain, Craig, Levin, Lisa, Levin, Noam, Ramirez-Llodra, Eva, Ruhl, Henry, Smith, Craig R., Snelgrove, Paul V. R., Thomsen, Laurenz, Van Dover, Cindy L. and Yasuhara, Moriaki (2020). Ecological variables for developing a global deep-ocean monitoring and conservation strategy. Nature Ecology and Evolution, 4 (2), 181-192. doi: 10.1038/s41559-019-1091-z

Ecological variables for developing a global deep-ocean monitoring and conservation strategy

2020

Journal Article

Radiotracking invasive spread: Are common mynas more active and exploratory on the invasion front?

Burstal, Josephine, Clulow, Simon, Colyvas, Kim, Kark, Salit and Griffin, Andrea S. (2020). Radiotracking invasive spread: Are common mynas more active and exploratory on the invasion front?. Biological Invasions, 22 (8), 2525-2543. doi: 10.1007/s10530-020-02269-7

Radiotracking invasive spread: Are common mynas more active and exploratory on the invasion front?

2020

Book Chapter

Competition and invasive species impact on native communities

Rogers, A.M. and Kark, S. (2020). Competition and invasive species impact on native communities. Invasive birds: global trends and impacts. (pp. 341-349) edited by Colleen T. Downs and Lorinda A. Hart. Wallingford, United Kingdom: CABI. doi: 10.1079/9781789242065.0341

Competition and invasive species impact on native communities

2020

Journal Article

Noisy neighbours and myna problems: Interaction webs and aggression around tree hollows in urban habitats

Rogers, Andrew M., Griffin, Andrea S., van Rensburg, Berndt J. and Kark, Salit (2020). Noisy neighbours and myna problems: Interaction webs and aggression around tree hollows in urban habitats. Journal of Applied Ecology, 57 (10) 1365-2664.13698, 1891-1901. doi: 10.1111/1365-2664.13698

Noisy neighbours and myna problems: Interaction webs and aggression around tree hollows in urban habitats

2019

Journal Article

Collaboration across boundaries in the Amazon

Prist, Paula Ribeiro, Levin, Noam, Metzger, Jean Paul, de Mello, Kaline, de Paula Costa, Micheli Duarte, Castagnino, Romi, Cortes-Ramirez, Javier, Lin, Da-Li, Butt, Nathalie, Lloyd, Thomas J., López-Cubillos, Sofía, Mayfield, Helen J., Negret, Pablo José, Oliveira-Bevan, Isabella, Reside, April E., Rhodes, Jonathan R., Simmons, B. Alexander, Suárez-Castro, A. Felipe and Kark, Salit (2019). Collaboration across boundaries in the Amazon. Science, 366 (6466), 699.1-700. doi: 10.1126/science.aaz7489

Collaboration across boundaries in the Amazon

2019

Journal Article

Location-level processes drive the establishment of alien bird populations worldwide

Redding, David W., Pigot, Alex L., Dyer, Ellie E., Şekercioğlu, Çağan H., Kark, Salit and Blackburn, Tim M. (2019). Location-level processes drive the establishment of alien bird populations worldwide. Nature, 571 (7763), 103-106. doi: 10.1038/s41586-019-1292-2

Location-level processes drive the establishment of alien bird populations worldwide

2019

Journal Article

Global assessment of marine biodiversity potentially threatened by offshore hydrocarbon activities

Venegas‐Li, Rubén, Levin, Noam, Morales‐Barquero, Lucía, Kaschner, Kristin, Garilao, Cristina and Kark, Salit (2019). Global assessment of marine biodiversity potentially threatened by offshore hydrocarbon activities. Global Change Biology, 25 (6) gcb.14616, 2009-2020. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14616

Global assessment of marine biodiversity potentially threatened by offshore hydrocarbon activities

2019

Journal Article

Exploring the prospects for adaptive governance in marine transboundary conservation in East Africa

Tuda, Arthur Omondi, Kark, Salit and Newton, Alice (2019). Exploring the prospects for adaptive governance in marine transboundary conservation in East Africa. Marine Policy, 104, 75-84. doi: 10.1016/j.marpol.2019.02.051

Exploring the prospects for adaptive governance in marine transboundary conservation in East Africa

2019

Journal Article

Participation for protection: how collaboration between local communities, government agencies, and researchers can protect native species from invasive species

Caceres-Escobar, Hernan, Kark, Salit, Atkinson, Scott C., Possingham, Hugh P. and Davis, Katrina J. (2019). Participation for protection: how collaboration between local communities, government agencies, and researchers can protect native species from invasive species. People and Nature, 1 (2), 220-223. doi: 10.1002/pan3.27

Participation for protection: how collaboration between local communities, government agencies, and researchers can protect native species from invasive species

2019

Journal Article

Integrating local knowledge to prioritise invasive species management

Caceres‐Escobar, Hernan, Kark, Salit, Atkinson, Scott C., Possingham, Hugh P. and Davis, Katrina J. (2019). Integrating local knowledge to prioritise invasive species management. People and Nature, 1 (2) pan3.27, 220-233. doi: 10.1002/pan3.27

Integrating local knowledge to prioritise invasive species management

Funding

Current funding

  • 2022 - 2026
    Research to inform the conservation of Norfolk Island's insects and other terrestrial arthropods
    Director of National Parks
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2019 - 2023
    Understanding barriers to the recruitment of threatened plant species on Norfolk Island
    Director of National Parks
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2021
    NESP Threatened Species Recovery Hub
    National Environmental Science Program
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2016
    The role of behavioural interactions in shaping invasion dynamics: A global synthesis using the common myna as a model system
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2013 - 2019
    Systematic Prioritisation of Action for Confronting Invasive Vertebrates in Australia (INVERSE)
    ARC Future Fellowships
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2018
    ARC Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions (CEED)
    ARC Centres of Excellence
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Salit Kark is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • Incorporating Indigenous Ecological Knowledge into conservation

    Incorporating Indigenous Ecological Knowledge, language and culture into biodiversity and ecosystem conservation

  • Conservation planning and prioritization in marine and coastal systems

    Systematic conservation planning and prioirtisation in the Mediterranean Basin and Sea at the regional scale in the face of new challenges, such as oil and gas operations.

  • The role of collaboration and conflict in conservation

    The role of cross boundary collaboration and conflicts in conservation in terrestrial, marine and freshwater systems

    Land-sea interactions and conservation prioirtization in the world's largest rivers

  • Biodiversity along environmental gradients and ecotone in the face of global change

    Biodiversity changes along species distribution ranges and particularly across environmental and ecological gradients (such as altitudinal, latitudinal, urban-rural, land-sea and bathymetric gradients).

  • Science-policy gaps in biodiversity conservation

    Examination of approaches that can be used to close the gap between managers, policy makers and scientists (such as horizon scanning).

  • Island biodiversity and conservation

    Shaping conservation and management prioritiies on Australian and global islands

  • Urban biodiversity and ecology of urban birds

    Urban ecology – spatial, temporal trends and conservation of urban biodiversity. The factors shaping success of species in urban environments.

  • Prioritization of action for confronting invasive alien mammals and birds in Australia

    Invasive alien species – spatial patterns, processes, establishment, traits, impacts and prioritization of action

  • The role of interactions between invasive alien species in shaping introduction success

    How do interactions between alien species shape establishment success, spatial patterns and introduction outcomes? (with focus on birds and mammals).

  • Incorporating socio-political drivers into conservation prioritization

    Conservation planning and prioritisation at local, regional and global scales. Incorporating socio-political and human-related drivers into biodiversity conservation.

  • Coastal conservation and spatial mapping of biodiversity, threats and conservation actions

    We are studying coastal ecosystem conservation at global, regional and local scales using spatial approaches and tools. We are also interested in the interactions between humans and wildlife and at local and Indigenous knowledge and its key roles in conservation.

  • New Caledonia, Pacific Islands and Norfolk Island conservation

    Conservation of island biodiversity, threatened species, introduced species across islands in the region

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Integrating Ecosystem Services in Marine Spatial Planning (MSP) for planning the Blue Economy of Bangladesh

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Noam Levin, Dr Md. Ali Akber

  • Doctor Philosophy

    From the UK to Australia: when a native species becomes an invader

    Principal Advisor

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Can honey help save large threatened animals?

    Principal Advisor

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Factors shaping butterfly conservation on Australian islands

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Emeritus Professor Myron Zalucki

  • Doctor Philosophy

    The Distribution and Invasiveness of the Common myna (Acridotheres tristis) along Gradients

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Barriers to the recruitment of endemic and threatened plant species on Norfolk Island

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr John Dwyer, Dr Noam Levin

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor Salit Kark directly for media enquiries about:

  • biodiversity
  • collaboration in conservation
  • conservation
  • conservation prioritization
  • cross-boundary collaboration in conservation
  • ecological gradients
  • invasive birds
  • island conservation
  • marine conservation
  • Mediterranean conservation
  • Mediterranean Sea
  • urban biodiversity

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