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Adjunct Professor Brian Keating
Adjunct Professor

Brian Keating

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Overview

Background

Brian Keating (PhD University of Queensland 1981) is currently Adjunct Professor at the University of Queensland in association with the Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation (QAAFI). This honorary appointment follows on from a 40 year engagement in agricultural research in Australia and abroad. Brian’s career has focused on the productivity and sustainability of agricultural systems in Australia and sub-Saharan Africa. He was a pioneer in the application of simulation models in farming systems research in eastern and southern Africa in the 1980’s and 90’s. Over the last two decades, Brian has held a number of senior leadership roles in CSIRO, including: Chief of CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems (2004-2008), Director of Sustainable Agriculture Flagship (2008-2013) and the member of the CSIRO Executive responsible for Agriculture, Food and Health (2014-2015).

Brian served (2010-2015) on the Australian Government’s statutory committees responsible for independent advice on the scientific and environmental integrity of greenhouse gas mitigation programs- namely Carbon Farming Initiative (DOIC- Domestic Offsets Integrity Committee) and the Emissions Reduction Fund (ERAC – Emissions Reduction Assurance Committee).

Recent international advisory roles have include Chair of the Science Advisory Panel of AgResearch - New Zealand (2013-2018) and Chair Independent Steering Committee of the CGIAR Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) (2014-2019). Brian remains a member of the Scientific Advisory Boards of the Irish agricultural research and extension agency, Teagasc and Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation (QAAFI). He was recognised as Distinguished Lecturer and Fellow of the International Union of Food Science and Technology (IUFOST) in 2014.

Academic Qualifications

B.Agr.Sc (1st Class Honours) University of Queensland 1976

Ph.D University of Queensland 1981

Career Timeline

PhD Student University of Queensland 1977-80

Research Scientist CSIRO Tropical Crops and Pastures 1981-85

Research Scientist ACIAR/CSIRO/KARI Project Kenya 1985-89

Senior Research Scientist CSIRO Tropical Crops & Pastures 1990-98 Principal Research Scientist CSIRO Tropical Agriculture 1998-2000

Senior Principal Research Scientist CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems 2000-02

Program Leader, Agricultural Landscapes CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems 2002-03

Chief Research Scientist / Acting Chief CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems 2003-04

Deputy Chief - Science Integration CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems 2004-2006

Chief of Division CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems 2006 – 2008

Director, Sustainable Agriculture Flagship CSIRO 2008 – 2014

Executive Director, Ag, Food & Health CSIRO 2014 – 2015

Honorary Fellow CSIRO Agriculture & Food 2016 – 2020

Adjunct Professor University of Queensland 2020 - present

Publication Summary Google Scholar reports 260 cited articles (3/4/2020) with 10,999 lifetime citations (4303 since 2015) and a lifetime h-index of 50. View my Google Scholar profile here.

Availability

Adjunct Professor Brian Keating is:
Available for supervision

Research impacts

Brian Keating has 40 years’ experience in the conduct and leadership of agricultural and natural resource management R&D, initially as a post-graduate researcher with the University of Queensland (1977-1980) and then via a diverse range of roles in Australia’s national science agency, the CSIRO (1981- 2016). Leadership roles in CSIRO have included Deputy Chief and then Chief of the Division of Sustainable Ecosystems (2004-2008), Director of Sustainable Agriculture National Research Flagship (2008-2013) and the member of the CSIRO Executive responsible for Agriculture, Food and Health (2014-2015). From 2016 to 2020, Brian continued his association with CSIRO via an Honorary Fellowship in Agriculture and Food.

Leadership and governance roles beyond CSIRO in the 1990’s and 2000’s have included Board memberships of three Cooperative Research Centres (CRC), namely CRC for Sustainable Sugar Production, CRC for Rainforest Ecology and Management and CRC for Tropical Savannas.

Brian’s core disciplinary background is in plant physiology, crop agronomy and soil science. These disciplines have formed the foundation for a career built around systems approaches to profitable and sustainable agricultural practice, in the face of climate variability and the social and economic factors shaping farming practice. Brian played a lead role in the development of the APSIM farming systems modelling suite of tools. This simulation model capability is increasingly supporting management decisions on Australian grain farms via the Yield Prophet tools. His research has primarily focused on sustainable broad-acre farming systems R&D in the Australian grains and sugar industries and smallholder agricultural systems in sub Saharan Africa. He is a long standing member of the Editorial Board of the international journal, Agricultural Systems. He has authored over 200 scientific papers covering diverse topics including soil and water management, plant nutrition, soil carbon and nitrogen cycling, crop physiology, farming systems analysis and design, bioenergy, simulation modelling, climatic risk management and food security.

As leader of the Sustainable Agriculture National Research Flagship, Brian worked across all CSIRO business units to create an integrated program of research and engagement in all aspects of agricultural sustainability, including a major focus on greenhouse gas mitigation in the Australian land sector (soils, crops, livestock and forests). This included significant advisory roles in the Australian government policy domain over the 2010-2015 period via participation in the Domestic Offsets Integrity Committee for the Carbon Farming Initiative (CFI) and the Emissions Reduction Assurance Committee (ERAC) of the Emissions Reduction Fund (ERF).

Brian retired from CSIRO in February 2016 and he continued (2016-2020) as Fellow to CSIRO Agriculture and Food (an honorary role). Brian is currently a member of the International Scientific Advisory Board of the Irish agricultural research and extension agency, TEAGASC and the Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation (QAAFI) at the University of Queensland. He recently stood down as Chair of the Science Advisory Panel for AgResearch (a Crown Research Institute owned by the New Zealand Government and leader in pastoral systems research for NZ) and Chair of the Science Advisory Panels for the CGIAR Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS).

He was recognised as a Fellow of the International Union of Food Science and Technology in 2014.

Brian is a graduate (2002) of the Australian Institute of Company Directors (AICD) program for Company Board members.

In February 2020, Brian was recognised as an Adjunct Professor at the University of Queensland.

Works

Search Professor Brian Keating’s works on UQ eSpace

68 works between 1981 and 2024

21 - 40 of 68 works

2010

Journal Article

Emerging opportunities and challenges for Australian broadacre agriculture

Keating, B. A. and Carberry, P. S. (2010). Emerging opportunities and challenges for Australian broadacre agriculture. Crop and Pasture Science, 61 (4), 269-278. doi: 10.1071/cp09282

Emerging opportunities and challenges for Australian broadacre agriculture

2010

Conference Publication

Eco-efficient agriculture: concepts, challenges, and opportunities

Keating, Brian A., Carberry, Peter S., Bindraban, Prem S., Asseng, Senthold, Meinke, Holger and Dixon, John (2010). Eco-efficient agriculture: concepts, challenges, and opportunities. CGIAR Science Forum 2009, Wageningen, Netherlands, 16-17 June, 2009. Hoboken, NJ, United States : John Wiley & Sons. doi: 10.2135/cropsci2009.10.0594

Eco-efficient agriculture: concepts, challenges, and opportunities

2009

Other Outputs

An analysis of greenhouse gas mitigation and carbon biosequestration opportunities from rural land use

Eady, Sandra, Grundy, Mike, Battaglia, Mike and Keating, Brian (2009). An analysis of greenhouse gas mitigation and carbon biosequestration opportunities from rural land use. CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems St Lucia, QLD, Australia: CSIRO publishing. doi: 10.4225/08/58615c9dd6942

An analysis of greenhouse gas mitigation and carbon biosequestration opportunities from rural land use

2005

Conference Publication

The historical and future contribution of crop physiology and modelling research to sugarcane production systems

Lisson, S.N., Inman-Bamber, N.G., Robertson, M.J. and Keating, B.A. (2005). The historical and future contribution of crop physiology and modelling research to sugarcane production systems. International Workshop on Sugarcane Physiology - Integrating from Cell to Crop to Advance Sugarcane Production, Brisbane, QLD, Australia, 1-4 September, 2003. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier BV. doi: 10.1016/j.fcr.2005.01.010

The historical and future contribution of crop physiology and modelling research to sugarcane production systems

2004

Conference Publication

Farming in an ancient land - Australia's journey towards sustainable agriculture

Keating, Brian A. and Harle, K. (2004). Farming in an ancient land - Australia's journey towards sustainable agriculture. ISCO 2004 - 13th International Soil Conservation Organisation Conference, Brisbane, Queensland, July 2004. Brisbane, QLD: Australian Society of Soil Science and International Erosion Control Association (Australasia).

Farming in an ancient land - Australia's journey towards sustainable agriculture

2003

Journal Article

An overview of APSIM, a model designed for farming systems simulation

Keating, BA, Carberry, PS, Hammer, GL, Probert, ME, Robertson, MJ, Holzworth, D, Huth, NI, Hargreaves, JNG, Meinke, H, Hochman, Z, McLean, G, Verburg, K, Snow, V, Dimes, JP, Silburn, M, Wang, E, Brown, S, Bristow, KL, Asseng, S, Chapman, S, McCown, RL, Freebairn, DM and Smith, CJ (2003). An overview of APSIM, a model designed for farming systems simulation. European Journal of Agronomy, 18 (3-4), 267-288. doi: 10.1016/S1161-0301(02)00108-9

An overview of APSIM, a model designed for farming systems simulation

2002

Conference Publication

Use of modelling to explore the water balance of dryland farming systems in the Murray-Darling Basin, Australia

Keating, B.A., Gaydon, D., Huth, N.I., Probert, M.E., Verburg, K., Smith, C.J. and Bond, W. (2002). Use of modelling to explore the water balance of dryland farming systems in the Murray-Darling Basin, Australia. 2nd International Symposium on Modeling Cropping Systems, Florence, Italy, 16-18 July, 2001. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier BV. doi: 10.1016/s1161-0301(02)00102-8

Use of modelling to explore the water balance of dryland farming systems in the Murray-Darling Basin, Australia

2002

Book Chapter

The Co-Evolution of the Agricultural Production Systems Simulator (APSIM) and Its Use in Australian dryland Cropping Research and Farm Management Intervention

McCown, R., Keating, B., Carberry, P., Hochman, Z. and Hargreaves, D. (2002). The Co-Evolution of the Agricultural Production Systems Simulator (APSIM) and Its Use in Australian dryland Cropping Research and Farm Management Intervention. Agricultural System Models in Field Research and Technology Transfer. (pp. 1-27) Boca Raton, FL United States: CRC Press. doi: 10.1201/9781420032413.ch8

The Co-Evolution of the Agricultural Production Systems Simulator (APSIM) and Its Use in Australian dryland Cropping Research and Farm Management Intervention

2001

Journal Article

Advances in farming systems analysis and intervention

Keating, B. A. and McCown, R. L. (2001). Advances in farming systems analysis and intervention. Agricultural Systems, 70 (2-3), 555-579. doi: 10.1016/s0308-521x(01)00059-2

Advances in farming systems analysis and intervention

2001

Journal Article

Potential deep drainage under wheat crops in a Mediterranean climate. I. Temporal and spatial variability

Asseng, S., Fillery, I. R. P., Dunin, F. X., Keating, B. A. and Meinke, H. (2001). Potential deep drainage under wheat crops in a Mediterranean climate. I. Temporal and spatial variability. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research, 52 (1), 45-56. doi: 10.1071/ar99186

Potential deep drainage under wheat crops in a Mediterranean climate. I. Temporal and spatial variability

2001

Journal Article

Potential deep drainage under wheat crops in a Mediterranean climate. II. Management opportunities to control drainage

Asseng, S., Dunin, F. X., Fillery, I. R. P., Tennant, D. and Keating, B. A. (2001). Potential deep drainage under wheat crops in a Mediterranean climate. II. Management opportunities to control drainage. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research, 52 (1), 57-66. doi: 10.1071/ar99187

Potential deep drainage under wheat crops in a Mediterranean climate. II. Management opportunities to control drainage

2000

Journal Article

Modelling sugarcane production systems - II: Analysis of system performance and methodology issues

Lisson, S. N., Robertson, M. J., Keating, B. A. and Muchow, R. C. (2000). Modelling sugarcane production systems - II: Analysis of system performance and methodology issues. Field Crops Research, 68 (1), 31-48. doi: 10.1016/S0378-4290(00)00108-8

Modelling sugarcane production systems - II: Analysis of system performance and methodology issues

2000

Other Outputs

A revolution in land use. Emerging land use systems to address dryland salinity in the Murray-Darling Basin

Stirzaker, R., Lefroy, T., Keating, B. A. and Williams, J. (2000). A revolution in land use. Emerging land use systems to address dryland salinity in the Murray-Darling Basin. Dickson, ACT, Australia: CSIRO.

A revolution in land use. Emerging land use systems to address dryland salinity in the Murray-Darling Basin

2000

Conference Publication

What soil constraints should be included in crop and forest models?

Probert, M. E. and Keating, B. A. (2000). What soil constraints should be included in crop and forest models?. Conference on Food and Forestry: Global Change and Global Challenges, Reading, United Kingdom, September 1999. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier BV. doi: 10.1016/s0167-8809(00)00231-0

What soil constraints should be included in crop and forest models?

1999

Journal Article

Modelling sugarcane production systems I. Development and performance of the sugarcane module

Keating, B. A., Robertson, M. J., Muchow, R. C. and Huth, N. I. (1999). Modelling sugarcane production systems I. Development and performance of the sugarcane module. Field Crops Research, 61 (3), 253-271. doi: 10.1016/s0378-4290(98)00167-1

Modelling sugarcane production systems I. Development and performance of the sugarcane module

1999

Journal Article

Can agricultural management emulate natural ecosystems in recharge control in south eastern Australia?

Dunin, F. X., Williams, J., Verburg, K. and Keating, B. A. (1999). Can agricultural management emulate natural ecosystems in recharge control in south eastern Australia?. Agroforestry Systems, 45 (1-3), 343-364. doi: 10.1023/A:1006271805222

Can agricultural management emulate natural ecosystems in recharge control in south eastern Australia?

1999

Conference Publication

Monitoring nitrogen at the mill to guide N fertilisation practice on farm

Keating, B. A., Kingston, G., Wood, A. W., Berding, N. and Muchow, R. C. (1999). Monitoring nitrogen at the mill to guide N fertilisation practice on farm. Australian Society of Sugar Cane Technologists,

Monitoring nitrogen at the mill to guide N fertilisation practice on farm

1998

Journal Article

Assessing exceptional drought with a cropping systems simulator: a case study for grain production in northeast Australia

Keating, B. A. and Meinke, H. (1998). Assessing exceptional drought with a cropping systems simulator: a case study for grain production in northeast Australia. Agricultural Systems, 57 (3), 315-332. doi: 10.1016/s0308-521x(98)00021-3

Assessing exceptional drought with a cropping systems simulator: a case study for grain production in northeast Australia

1998

Journal Article

Performance of the APSIM-wheat model in Western Australia

Asseng, S., Keating, B. A., Fillery, I. R. P., Gregory, P. J., Bowden, J. W., Turner, N. C., Palta, J. A. and Abrecht, D. G. (1998). Performance of the APSIM-wheat model in Western Australia. Field Crops Research, 57 (2), 163-179. doi: 10.1016/s0378-4290(97)00117-2

Performance of the APSIM-wheat model in Western Australia

1998

Journal Article

APSIM's water and nitrogen modules and simulation of the dynamics of water and nitrogen in fallow systems

Probert, M. E., Dimes, J. P., Keating, B. A., Dalal, R. C. and Strong, W. M. (1998). APSIM's water and nitrogen modules and simulation of the dynamics of water and nitrogen in fallow systems. Agricultural Systems, 56 (1), 1-28. doi: 10.1016/S0308-521X(97)00028-0

APSIM's water and nitrogen modules and simulation of the dynamics of water and nitrogen in fallow systems

Supervision

Availability

Adjunct Professor Brian Keating is:
Available for supervision

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