Corey Bradshaw is the Matthew Flinders Professor Global Ecology at Flinders University where he leads the Global Ecology Laboratory and heads the Flinders Modelling Node of the Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage (2017–2024) and the Centre of Excellence for Indigenous and Environmental Histories and Futures (2024–2031). Previously, he was the Sir Hubert Wilkins Chair of Climate Change at the University of Adelaide and an Australian Research Council (ARC) Level 3 Future Fellow, with former positions at the South Australian Research and Development Institute, Charles Darwin University, and the University of Tasmania. Corey has completed three tertiary degrees in ecology (BSc, MSc, PhD) from universities in Canada and New Zealand, and a Certificate in Veterinary Conservation Medicine from Murdoch University.

Corey has published over 320 peer-reviewed scientific articles, 12 book chapters and 3 books, including The Effective Scientist (Cambridge University Press) and Killing the Koala and Poisoning the Prairie (Chicago University Press). He is highly cited, with 32,811 citations to date, and an h-index of 87. He is co-Head of the Ecology Section of Faculty Opinions and Fellow of the Royal Society of South Australia. He was a finalist for the South Australian Scientist of the Year 2022, and was awarded the 2017 Verco Medal from the Royal Society of South Australia, a 2017 Rockefeller Foundation ‘Bellagio’ Writer’s Fellowship, the 2010 Australian Ecology Research Award from the Ecological Society of Australia, the 2010 Scopus Young Researcher of the Year, the 2009 HG Andrewartha Medal, and a 2008 Young Tall Poppy Science Award. He is regularly featured in Australian and international media for his research. His blog, ConservationBytes.com, has been visited over 2.7 million times.

bio: www.flinders.edu.au/people/corey.bradshaw

publications: scholar.google.com/citations?user=1sO0O3wAAAAJ&hl=en

blog: ConservationBytes.com