Associate Professor Andrea Griffin
Associate Professor in Wildlife Conservation Sciences, Conservation Science Research Group, School of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Newcastle
See Associate Professor Griffin’s full research profile here.
Bio
Associate Professor Andrea Griffin is a zoologist with core expertise in animal behaviour. Her research interests lie in understanding how animals respond and adjust to environmental change and in finding ways of applying this knowledge to better manage and conserve species.
She pioneered the use of associative learning to prepare captive-bred endangered marsupials for reintroduction and has demonstrated that invasive birds learn to recognise people who trap them and are becoming more cryptic in areas where they are heavily trapped.
She is trained in biology, animal behaviour and ecology at the Universities of Lausanne, Geneva and Zurich in Switzerland and completed her PhD at Macquarie University followed by a Swiss National Post-doctoral Fellowship at McGill University in Canada. She joined the University of Newcastle in 2005 as an Australian Research Council post-doctoral fellow and earned a lectureship in 2009. She is currently an Associate Professor in the School of Environmental Science where she co-leads a large group of student researchers in conservation science and teaches animal behaviour and conservation biology to final-year undergraduate students.
Visit the Conservation Science Research Group page for more information.
Research outputs linked to policy change and decision-making
Current academic employment and positions
Major prizes, medals and honours