
Overview
Background
Professor Sagadevan Mundree is a world-leading expert in agricultural biotechnology, leading research and teams focused on making crops that are more resilient to environmental stresses such as drought and salinity, and value-addition to deliver nutritious products. He focuses on transdisciplinary solutions for challenges facing vulnerable populations in food scarcity and the effects of climate change on food quality and food production. He also integrates concepts of the circular economy to develop sustainable food production approaches. In collaboration with governments, industry, and Indigenous communities, Prof Mundree is creating innovative ways to solve global food challenges.
Availability
- Professor Sagadevan Mundree is:
- Available for supervision
Qualifications
- Doctor of Philosophy of Plant Cell and Molecular Biology, Auburn University
Research impacts
Professor Sagadevan Mundree is a world-leading expert in agricultural biotechnology leading research and teams focused on making crops that are more resilient to environmental stresses such as drought and salinity, and value-addition to deliver nutritious products. As a 4th generation South African of Indian origin, he was the first generation to have had the opportunity to receive a complete primary and secondary school education. Hence, he has been determined to use this opportunity to maintain a strong focus on transdisciplinary solutions for challenges facing vulnerable populations in food scarcity and the effects of climate change on food quality and food production.
Prof Mundree is a broker of sorts, not only personally conducting the field-leading research needed to optimise crop production, but bringing together people who collectively can transform the way agricultural practices are designed and used. For instance, he was instrumental in developing a strategic partnership with the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) (a leading US Department of Energy (DOE) National Laboratory), which resulted in knowledge sharing and knowledge creation in plant biotechnology, bioenergy (leading to renewable fuels) and synthetic biology. His joint appointment with PNNL (the first held by a foreign national) reflects the esteem his North American colleagues hold him in and one that he has used to create further opportunities for impactful projects, such as the development of a climate-smart multi-purpose crop that is a feedstock for food and energy.
He has enabled strategic partnerships as well between Life Sciences Queensland and the renowned Canadian University of Manitoba Richardson Center for Food Technology and Research. This partnership led to joint projects around the practical, scalable use of native foods, such as the Kakadu plum, and sharing knowledge about how Indigenous plants can be used to change the narrative on crop types and environmentally sustainable and resilient food production. This led to a collaboration with a local Indigenous company in Queensland to farm native rice at commercial scale.
Prof Mundree also believes in including consumers in science and technology translation. For example, he worked with year 9 Food Studies students from Kelvin Grove State College (the largest public school in Australia), to encourage recipe experimentation using 'pulse' flours. Consequently, he engineered, in collaboration with a local food manufacturer, Majans Pty Ltd, commercially viable chickpea and mungbean products, that are now being commercialised and will be available nationally on supermarket shelves.
How the concepts of the circular economy can be used to develop sustainable food production approaches is also a passion of Prof Mundree’s. He has led large-scale, multi-stakeholder projects that have been designed to not only produce high quality, high yield crops, under sub-optimal environmental conditions, but use the agricultural waste to create value. An example of this is his work producing graphene-like carbon from waste from rice husks and straw. These high value waste products have been demonstrated as an efficient filter for water purification and for use in batteries.
Prof Mundree is a Fulbright Scholar, and a winner of the BIOAfrica President’s Award in recognition of his leadership in developing research, development and commercialisation programs for the African biotechnology sector.
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Works
Search Professor Sagadevan Mundree’s works on UQ eSpace
2004
Journal Article
Isolation and characterisation of a novel dehydration-induced Grp94 homologue from the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa
Walford, S. A., Thomson, J. A., Farrant, J. M. and Mundree, S. G. (2004). Isolation and characterisation of a novel dehydration-induced Grp94 homologue from the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa. South African Journal of Botany, 70 (5), 741-750. doi: 10.1016/S0254-6299(15)30175-7
2003
Journal Article
An ultrastructural study using anhydrous fixation of Eragrostis nindensis, a resurrection grass with both desiccation-tolerant and -sensitive tissues
Vander Willigen, Clare, Pammenter, Norman W., Jaffer, Mohamed A., Mundree, Sagadevan G. and Farrant, Jill M. (2003). An ultrastructural study using anhydrous fixation of Eragrostis nindensis, a resurrection grass with both desiccation-tolerant and -sensitive tissues. Functional Plant Biology, 30 (3), 281-290. doi: 10.1071/FP02221
2003
Journal Article
Molecular characterization of XVSAP1, a stress-responsive gene from the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa Baker
Garwe, Dahlia, Thomson, Jennifer A. and Mundree, Sagadevan G. (2003). Molecular characterization of XVSAP1, a stress-responsive gene from the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa Baker. Journal of Experimental Botany, 54 (381), 191-201. doi: 10.1093/jxb/erg013
2002
Journal Article
Physiological and molecular insights into drought tolerance
Mundree, Sagadevan G., Baker, Bienyameen, Mowla, Shaheen, Peters, Shaun, Marais, Saberi, Vander Willigen, Clare, Govender, Kershini, Maredza, Alice, Muyanga, Samson, Farrant, Jill M. and Thomson, Jennifer A. (2002). Physiological and molecular insights into drought tolerance. African Journal of Biotechnology, 1 (2), 1-19.
2002
Journal Article
A novel stress-inducible antioxidant enzyme identified from the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa baker
Mowla, Shaheen B., Thomson, Jennifer A., Farrant, Jill M. and Mundree, Sagadevan G. (2002). A novel stress-inducible antioxidant enzyme identified from the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa baker. Planta, 215 (5), 716-726. doi: 10.1007/s00425-002-0819-0
2001
Conference Publication
Some physiological comparisons between the resurrection grass, Eragrostis nindensis, and the related desiccation-sensitive species, E. curvula
Vander Willigen, Clare, Pammenter, N. W., Mundree, Sagadevan and Farrant, Jill (2001). Some physiological comparisons between the resurrection grass, Eragrostis nindensis, and the related desiccation-sensitive species, E. curvula. doi: 10.1023/A:1014425619913
2001
Journal Article
Molecular characterization of XVT8, a stress-responsive gene from the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa baker
Ndima, Tozama, Farrant, Jill, Thomson, Jennifer and Mundree, Sagadevan (2001). Molecular characterization of XVT8, a stress-responsive gene from the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa baker. Plant Growth Regulation, 35 (2) 338326, 137-145. doi: 10.1023/A:1014433821730
2000
Journal Article
An aldose reductase homolog from the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa baker
Mundree, Sagadevan G., Whittaker, Anne, Thomson, Jennifer A. and Farrant, Jill M. (2000). An aldose reductase homolog from the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa baker. Planta, 211 (5), 693-700. doi: 10.1007/s004250000331
1993
Journal Article
Relationship between morphological and physiological responses to waterlogging and salinity in Sporobolus virginicus (L.) Kunth
Naidoo, G. and Mundree, S. G. (1993). Relationship between morphological and physiological responses to waterlogging and salinity in Sporobolus virginicus (L.) Kunth. Oecologia, 93 (3), 360-366. doi: 10.1007/BF00317879
Funding
Current funding
Supervision
Availability
- Professor Sagadevan Mundree is:
- Available for supervision
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