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Associate Professor Tatsuya Amano
Associate Professor

Tatsuya Amano

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 56907

Overview

Background

I am primarily interested in how we, as scientists, can make meaningful contributions to halting and reversing the ongoing global biodiversity crisis. I am particularly committed to tackling gaps in our knowledge needed for biodiversity conservation, focusing on the following three aspects.

(i) Identifying gaps in existing information and their drivers: I have been working on how information on biodiversity is distributed over space, time and taxa, and what causes the existing gaps in information availability.

(ii) Overcoming information gaps with modelling approaches: I have been applying modelling approaches to better inform conservation initiatives through the use of available, imperfect data. For this I have intensively worked on assessing long-term changes in global waterbird diversity (see for example our recent papers in Nature (also see my blog post) and Nature Climate Change (blog post))

(iii) Bridging the research-implementation gap: I am also keen to provide scientific information for conservation in a more accessible way and have been involved in the Conservation Evidence project as a statistical editor, with the aim of contributing to the implementation of evidence-based decision making in conservation.

I am leading the translatE project (transcending language barriers to environmental sciences), funded by the Australian Research Council, which incorporates the above three aspects in order to understand the consequences of language barriers in biodiversity conservation. The project aims to:

  • assess the importance of scientific knowledge that is available in non-English languages,
  • understand how language barriers impede the application of science in decision making,
  • quantify language barriers to the career development of non-native English speaking scientists, and
  • devise solutions for exchanging information across languages and cultures in an effective manner.

See our work on language barriers in science featured in Nature in 2019 and July and August in 2023, Science in 2020 and 2023, The Conversation in 2021 and 2023, The Guardian, and The Economist, and my presentation on findings from the project (plenary at the 2022 Joint Conference of the Ecological Society of Australia and the Society for Conservation Biology Oceania: from 48:48).

Also see the website of Kaizen Conservation Group for our research, members and latest publications.

I am also an affiliated researcher at the Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science.

Availability

Associate Professor Tatsuya Amano is:
Available for supervision

Qualifications

  • Bachelor of Science, University of Tokyo
  • Masters (Coursework) of Science, University of Tokyo
  • Doctor of Philosophy, University of Tokyo

Research interests

  • Understanding and overcoming consequences of language barriers in science

    I have been investigating (i) the importance of scientific knowledge that is available in non-English languages, (ii) how language barriers impede the application of science in decision making, (iii) impacts of language barriers on the career development of non-native English speaking scientists, and (iv) solutions for exchanging information across languages and cultures in an effective manner.

  • Facilitating evidence-based conservation

    I am keen to generate and provie scientific evidence in a more accessible way and have been involved in the Conservation Evidence project as a statistical editor, with the aim of contributing to the implementation of evidence-based decision making in conservation.

  • Identifying gaps in biodiversity information/research and their drivers

    I have been working on how knowledge on biodiversity and its conservation is distributed over space, time and taxa, and what causes the existing gaps in knowledge availability.

  • Overcoming biodiversity information gaps with modelling approaches

    I have been applying modelling approaches to better inform conservation initiatives through the use of available, imperfect data. For this I have intensively worked on assessing long-term changes in waterbird diversity at the global and national scales.

Research impacts

Through the translatE project I have not only been producing scientific outcomes, but also transforming people’s views of the problem through dissemination activities. Our research is extremely wide-reaching. For example, one of our recent papers has been viewed over 80,000 times to date. Since 2019 our work has been featured in over 300 media outlets globally including Nature, Science, The Guardian, Scientific American, Le Monde, Japan Times, and the ABC, a number of policy documents (including those by the OECD and International Union for Conservation of Nature), and so on. I have delivered over 30 invited/keynote presentations so far in Australia, Germany, Japan, the Philippines, South Korea, Taiwan, UK, and USA.

I am also committed to devising, proposing, and implementing solutions to the issue of language barriers in science. For example, I published a list of ten tips for overcoming language barriers in science (on UQ website and in Amano et al 2021 Nature Human Behaviour), proposed ideal policies and supports for non-native English speakers in academic journals by reviewing guidelines across more than 700 biological science journals (Arenas-Castro et al 2024 Proc R Soc B), released two interactive tools to raise awareness of language barriers in conservation (Bird language diversity shiny app and a database of non-English-language evidence for conservation), organised two workshops at UQ on overcoming language barriers in science involving academics and journal editors, and supported the launch of an English writing workshops at the UQ Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science. Our project has driven a number of positive movements in overcoming language barriers in science and the implementation of solutions in various sectors, thereby contributing to enhancing diversity, inclusion, and integrity in science.

I have also led collaborations with non-academic organisations (Australian Government’s Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water and Birdlife Australia) in evaluating the latest status of migratory shorebird species in Australia. The project’s outcomes, now published as a report to the National Environmental Science Program, provide comprehensive assessments of population status of 14 migratory shorebird species, some of which are seriously endangered. The results have directly informed the Federal Government’s Threatened Species Listing decisions, and Birdlife International/International Union for Conservation of Nature’s latest revision to global bird species conservation status.

Works

Search Professor Tatsuya Amano’s works on UQ eSpace

156 works between 2004 and 2025

41 - 60 of 156 works

2022

Book Chapter

Presenting conclusions from assessed evidence

Sutherland, William J., Amano, Tatsuya, Boenisch, Nicolas, Cheng, Samantha H., Christie, Alec P., Godfray, Hugh Charles Jonathan, Grainger, Matthew J., McLean, Angela R., Morgan, William H., Ockendon, Nancy, Randall, Nicola P., Sahlin, Ullrika and White, Thomas B. (2022). Presenting conclusions from assessed evidence. Transforming conservation: a practical guide to evidence and decision making. (pp. 95-132) edited by William J. Sutherland. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Open Book Publishers. doi: 10.11647/obp.0321.04

Presenting conclusions from assessed evidence

2021

Journal Article

Comments on ‘Effects of modern drainage systems on the spatial distribution of loach in rice ecosystems’

Katayama, Naoki, Tatsuya, Amano and Miyashita, Tadashi (2021). Comments on ‘Effects of modern drainage systems on the spatial distribution of loach in rice ecosystems’. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems, 32 (2), 400-400. doi: 10.1002/aqc.3757

Comments on ‘Effects of modern drainage systems on the spatial distribution of loach in rice ecosystems’

2021

Journal Article

Seven ecological and technical attributes for biofilm‐based recovery of shorebird populations in intertidal flat ecosystems

Kuwae, Tomohiro, Elner, Robert W., Amano, Tatsuya and Drever, Mark C. (2021). Seven ecological and technical attributes for biofilm‐based recovery of shorebird populations in intertidal flat ecosystems. Ecological Solutions and Evidence, 2 (4) e12114. doi: 10.1002/2688-8319.12114

Seven ecological and technical attributes for biofilm‐based recovery of shorebird populations in intertidal flat ecosystems

2021

Journal Article

Seasonal spatial dynamics of butterfly migration

Chowdhury, Shawan, Zalucki, Myron P., Amano, Tatsuya, Woodworth, Bradley K., Venegas‐Li, Ruben and Fuller, Richard A. (2021). Seasonal spatial dynamics of butterfly migration. Ecology Letters, 24 (9), 1814-1823. doi: 10.1111/ele.13787

Seasonal spatial dynamics of butterfly migration

2021

Journal Article

Power line corridors in conifer plantations as important habitats for butterflies

Oki, Kazuhito, Soga, Masashi, Amano, Tatsuya and Koike, Shinsuke (2021). Power line corridors in conifer plantations as important habitats for butterflies. Journal of Insect Conservation, 25 (5-6), 829-840. doi: 10.1007/s10841-021-00343-6

Power line corridors in conifer plantations as important habitats for butterflies

2021

Journal Article

Urban green space use during a time of stress: a case study during the COVID‐19 pandemic in Brisbane, Australia

Berdejo‐Espinola, Violeta, Suárez‐Castro, Andrés F., Amano, Tatsuya, Fielding, Kelly S., Oh, Rachel Rui Ying and Fuller, Richard A. (2021). Urban green space use during a time of stress: a case study during the COVID‐19 pandemic in Brisbane, Australia. People and Nature, 3 (3), 597-609. doi: 10.1002/pan3.10218

Urban green space use during a time of stress: a case study during the COVID‐19 pandemic in Brisbane, Australia

2021

Other Outputs

Language barriers in global bird conservation

Negret, Pablo Jose, Atkinson, Scott C., Woodworth, Bradley K., Tor, Marina Corella, Allan, James R., Fuller, Richard A. and Amano, Tatsuya (2021). Language barriers in global bird conservation. doi: 10.1101/2021.05.24.445290

Language barriers in global bird conservation

2021

Journal Article

Steps to diversify priority-setting research in conservation: reflections on de Gracia 2021

Jucker, Tommaso, Amano, Tatsuya, Bell, Alexandra, Garnett, Emma E., Geffert, Jan Laurens, Guth, Miriam K., Hacket-Pain, Andrew, Luke, Sarah H., Mumby, Hannah S., Nunes, Matheus, Rademacher, Tim, Rose, David C., Schleicher, Judith, Simmons, Benno I., Zabala, Aiora and Mukherjee, Nibedita (2021). Steps to diversify priority-setting research in conservation: reflections on de Gracia 2021. Conservation Biology, 35 (4) cobi.13790, 1324-1326. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13790

Steps to diversify priority-setting research in conservation: reflections on de Gracia 2021

2021

Journal Article

Effectively integrating experiments into conservation practice

Ockendon, Nancy, Amano, Tatsuya, Cadotte, Marc, Downey, Harriet, Hancock, Mark H., Thornton, Ann, Tinsley-Marshall, Paul and Sutherland, William J. (2021). Effectively integrating experiments into conservation practice. Ecological Solutions and Evidence, 2 (2) e12069. doi: 10.1002/2688-8319.12069

Effectively integrating experiments into conservation practice

2021

Journal Article

Evaluating impact using time-series data

Wauchope, Hannah S., Amano, Tatsuya, Geldmann, Jonas, Johnston, Alison, Simmons, Benno I., Sutherland, William J. and Jones, Julia P.G. (2021). Evaluating impact using time-series data. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 36 (3), 196-205. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2020.11.001

Evaluating impact using time-series data

2021

Journal Article

Widespread use of artificial habitats by shorebirds in Australia

Jackson, Micha V., Woodworth, Bradley K., Bush, Robert, Clemens, Robert S., Fuller, Richard A., Garnett, Stephen T., Lilleyman, Amanda, Maron, Martine, Purnell, Chris, Rogers, Danny I. and Amano, Tatsuya (2021). Widespread use of artificial habitats by shorebirds in Australia. Emu - Austral Ornithology, 121 (3), 1-10. doi: 10.1080/01584197.2021.1873704

Widespread use of artificial habitats by shorebirds in Australia

2021

Journal Article

Culturally diverse expert teams have yet to bring comprehensive linguistic diversity to intergovernmental ecosystem assessments

Lynch, Abigail J., Fernández-Llamazares, Álvaro, Palomo, Ignacio, Jaureguiberry, Pedro, Amano, Tatsuya, Basher, Zeenatul, Lim, Michelle, Mwampamba, Tuyeni Heita, Samakov, Aibek and Selomane, Odirilwe (2021). Culturally diverse expert teams have yet to bring comprehensive linguistic diversity to intergovernmental ecosystem assessments. One Earth, 4 (2), 269-278. doi: 10.1016/j.oneear.2021.01.002

Culturally diverse expert teams have yet to bring comprehensive linguistic diversity to intergovernmental ecosystem assessments

2021

Journal Article

Monolingual searches can limit and bias results in global literature reviews

Nuñez, Martin A. and Amano, Tatsuya (2021). Monolingual searches can limit and bias results in global literature reviews. Nature Ecology and Evolution, 5 (3), 264-264. doi: 10.1038/s41559-020-01369-w

Monolingual searches can limit and bias results in global literature reviews

2021

Journal Article

Training future generations to deliver evidence‐based conservation and ecosystem management

Downey, Harriet, Amano, Tatsuya, Cadotte, Marc, Cook, Carly N., Cooke, Steven J., Haddaway, Neal R., Jones, Julia P. G., Littlewood, Nick, Walsh, Jessica C., Abrahams, Mark I., Adum, Gilbert, Akasaka, Munemitsu, Alves, Jose A., Antwis, Rachael E., Arellano, Eduardo C., Axmacher, Jan, Barclay, Holly, Batty, Lesley, Benítez‐López, Ana, Bennett, Joseph R., Berg, Maureen J., Bertolino, Sandro, Biggs, Duan, Bolam, Friederike C., Bray, Tim, Brook, Barry W., Bull, Joseph W., Burivalova, Zuzana, Cabeza, Mar ... Sutherland, William J. (2021). Training future generations to deliver evidence‐based conservation and ecosystem management. Ecological Solutions and Evidence, 2 (1) e12032, 1-11. doi: 10.1002/2688-8319.12032

Training future generations to deliver evidence‐based conservation and ecosystem management

2020

Journal Article

Quantifying and addressing the prevalence and bias of study designs in the environmental and social sciences

Christie, Alec P., Abecasis, David, Adjeroud, Mehdi, Alonso, Juan C., Amano, Tatsuya, Anton, Alvaro, Baldigo, Barry P., Barrientos, Rafael, Bicknell, Jake E., Buhl, Deborah A., Cebrian, Just, Ceia, Ricardo S., Cibils-Martina, Luciana, Clarke, Sarah, Claudet, Joachim, Craig, Michael D., Davoult, Dominique, De Backer, Annelies, Donovan, Mary K., Eddy, Tyler D., França, Filipe M., Gardner, Jonathan P. A., Harris, Bradley P., Huusko, Ari, Jones, Ian L., Kelaher, Brendan P., Kotiaho, Janne S., López-Baucells, Adrià, Major, Heather L. ... Sutherland, William J. (2020). Quantifying and addressing the prevalence and bias of study designs in the environmental and social sciences. Nature Communications, 11 (1) 6377, 1-11. doi: 10.1038/s41467-020-20142-y

Quantifying and addressing the prevalence and bias of study designs in the environmental and social sciences

2020

Journal Article

Different response of the taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional diversity of birds to forest fragmentation

Bełcik, Michał, Lenda, Magdalena, Amano, Tatsuya and Skórka, Piotr (2020). Different response of the taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional diversity of birds to forest fragmentation. Scientific Reports, 10 (1) 20320, 1-11. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-76917-2

Different response of the taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional diversity of birds to forest fragmentation

2020

Other Outputs

Seasonal Spatial Dynamics of Butterfly Migration

Chowdhury, Shawan, Zalucki, Myron, Amano, Tatsuya, Woodworth, Bradley, Venegas-Li, Ruben and Fuller, Rich (2020). Seasonal Spatial Dynamics of Butterfly Migration. doi: 10.22541/au.160674308.88970816/v1

Seasonal Spatial Dynamics of Butterfly Migration

2020

Journal Article

Collect, connect, upscale: towards coordinated monitoring of migratory shorebirds in the Asia-Pacific

Fuller, Richard A., Jackson, Micha V., Amano, Tatsuya, Choi, Chi-Yeung, Clemens, Robert S., Hansen, Birgita D., Lin, Da-Li, Steven, Rochelle and Woodworth, Bradley K. (2020). Collect, connect, upscale: towards coordinated monitoring of migratory shorebirds in the Asia-Pacific. Australian Zoologist, 41 (2), 205-213. doi: 10.7882/az.2020.027

Collect, connect, upscale: towards coordinated monitoring of migratory shorebirds in the Asia-Pacific

2020

Journal Article

The challenge of biased evidence in conservation

Christie, Alec P., Amano, Tatsuya, Martin, Philip A., Petrovan, Silviu O., Shackelford, Gorm E., Simmons, Benno I., Smith, Rebecca K., Williams, David R., Wordley, Claire F. R. and Sutherland, William J. (2020). The challenge of biased evidence in conservation. Conservation Biology, 35 (1) cobi.13577, 249-262. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13577

The challenge of biased evidence in conservation

2020

Journal Article

Estimating the risk of species interaction loss in mutualistic communities

Simmons, Benno I., Wauchope, Hannah S., Amano, Tatsuya, Dicks, Lynn V., Sutherland, William J. and Dakos, Vasilis (2020). Estimating the risk of species interaction loss in mutualistic communities. PLoS Biology , 18 (8) e3000843, e3000843. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000843

Estimating the risk of species interaction loss in mutualistic communities

Funding

Current funding

  • 2024 - 2026
    Research and tools to support recovery and management of migratory shorebirds in Australia (NESP2 MaC Hub - Reef and Rainforest Research Centre funded project)
    Reef and Rainforest Research Centre Limited
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2026
    Tapping into non-English-language science in tackling global challenges
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2021 - 2022
    Australia's Coastal Shorebirds: Trends and Prospects
    University of Tasmania
    Open grant
  • 2019 - 2024
    Transcending Language Barriers to Environmental Sciences
    ARC Future Fellowships
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Associate Professor Tatsuya Amano is:
Available for supervision

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Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Enhancing International Collaboration for Migratory Bird Conservation

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Towards responsible AI systems for automated biodiversity monitoring

    Principal Advisor

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Why are waterbirds declining globally?

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Tapping into non-English-language science in tackling global challenges

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Understanding language barriers to the use of scientific knowledge in conservation decision making

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Understanding language barriers to the use of scientific knowledge in conservation decision making

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Developing a Drone Based Shorebird Survey Method

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Revealing bird migration patterns in Eastern Australia by integrating weather radar and citizen science data

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Revealing bird migration patterns in Eastern Australia by integrating weather radar and citizen science data

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Where no eyes can see: Tracking Australian shorebird migration using radar

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Reducing Barriers to Drone-Based Bird Surveys

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Richard Fuller

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

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