Biology wins big in Marsden

Staff in the School of Biological Sciences have received five of the 13 grants awarded to Victoria this year in the latest round of Marsden Fund grants, confirming the School’s standing as a world-class centre for biological science research and the research leader in New Zealand in this field.

The School of Biological Sciences is a big winner in the latest round of Marsden Fund grants.

Staff in the School have received five of the 13 grants awarded to Victoria this year, confirming the School’s standing as a world-class centre for biological science research and the research leader in New Zealand in this field.

This builds on endorsement of Victoria’s strength in the field earlier this week, when postdoctoral academic Dr Shaun Wilkinson, also from Victoria’s School of Biological Sciences, received a Rutherford Foundation Trust Award for his research on the effects of climate change on coral reefs. The award provides more than $150,000 in funding over the next two years.

Victoria’s Vice-Provost (Research) Professor Kate McGrath says both are outstanding results in an area where Victoria has a sustained track record of success.

Overall, Victoria received Marsden funding of more than $8 million, which goes towards leading-edge projects in the Faculty of Science (five grants to the School of Biological Sciences, one to the Antarctic Research Centre and one to the University’s world-leading Ferrier Research Institute), the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (four grants) and the Faculty of Engineering (2 grants).

Marsden funding has also been awarded to a researcher from the Malaghan Institute of Medical Research, which is based at Victoria’s Kelburn campus and is a key partner of the University.

Victoria received 10 Standard grants from the Marsden fund and three Fast-Start grants, which help to support researchers in the early stages of their career.

Professor McGrath says the University is particularly proud of recipients who have received multiple Marsden funding over the years, notably Associate Professor Jeff Shima and Professor Mengjie Zhang who have each been awarded their fourth Marsden grant.

“Marsden funding recognises excellence in leading-edge research. To receive multiple Marsden Fund grants is an outstanding achievement.”

Associate Professor Shima’s research investigates the role parental investment, the timing of birth and ongoing development play in an organism’s reproductive fitness. His new research focuses on coral reef fish, and explores the ecological and evolutionary drivers of parent and offspring decision-making, to better-understand the life-history strategies which shape the diversity of life on earth.

Professor Zhang is researching the challenging problem of Flexible Job Shop Scheduling. In this case, using an algorithm-based methodology known as genetic programming to automatically evolve working rules so as to allocate jobs to machines and determine the order of the allocated jobs to each machine for optimising manufacturing. His focus is on dynamic scenarios where the requirements of particular jobs are not known in advance, which more readily reflects real-world systems.

“These grants are a critical part of our diverse research portfolio,” says Professor McGrath. “Given the component of international assessment in the Marsden process, our success gives us assurance that our research is of the highest calibre.”

Victoria has received $32 million from Marsden Grants in the last three years, making it the third highest recipient of grants and funding in New Zealand during that period.

The Marsden Fund is administered by the Royal Society of New Zealand on behalf of the Government.

More information on Marsden Fund recipients can be found at here.