Melanie Massaro

Professoriate

Associate Professor Melanie Massaro

PhD University of Otago, New Zealand. MSc Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada. BSc Ernst-Moritz-Arndt University in Greifswald, Germany

Associate Professor in Ecology/Ornithology
Albury / Wodonga
Building 760 Room 111

A fascination with birds has seen Melanie live and work around the world. Melanie is an Associate Professor at Charles Sturt University, where she teaches subjects in ornithology, conservation and ecology to university students. She has been studying birds since her early twenties, when she completed an Undergraduate Degree in Biology in Germany. She then moved to Newfoundland, Canada, where she studied seabirds for her MSc Degree. During her studies in Newfoundland, she got a first opportunity to visit Antarctica in 1998. It was the diversity and abundance of seabirds in the Southern Hemisphere that led her to enrol into a PhD program at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand. For her doctoral research she studied Yellow-eyed and Snares penguins. After having lived in New Zealand for almost 13 years, she moved to Australia in 2013 to take up an academic position at Charles Sturt University. Melanie’s research has ranged from studying penguins in the Antarctic to robins, honeyeaters and parrots in New Zealand and Australia. She regularly travels to Nepal, where she teaches environmental science students about wildlife conservation and management.

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Melanie’s primary goal as a teacher is to share her fascination for biology with others, both within and beyond the university. To this effect, she uses a variety of dynamic teaching strategies to impart the fundamental information, maximize class participation and generate curiosity and excitement about the natural world. As a mentor and supervisor, Melanie helps students to work collaboratively and retain a broad perspective of their subjects. She usually teaches conservation biology, avian biology and behavioural ecology as part of the Bachelor of Environmental Science Degree and Graduate Diploma/Certificate in Ornithology. She also leads the international program to Nepal which aims at teaching CSU students about the sustainable use of natural resources and the influence of human traditions and religions on conservation practices.

Melanie is an ecologist and conservation biologist. Her main research aim is to bridge the gap between the scientific knowledge gained through research and the application of this knowledge to solve conservation problems. Over the past 10 years, Melanie’s research has focused on the conservation of threatened island birds, the ecology, evolution and disease detection in seabirds, and the effects of feral ungulates on terrestrial and wetland ecosystems. Melanie has been successful in receiving grants for her research from various organizations, including the Australian Research Council (ARC), the Hermon Slade Foundation, the Australia and Pacific Science Foundation and WIRES. She is also an Associate Editor of the journal Austral Ecology.