Archive for: Samoa

Dr Seeseei Molimau-Samasoni

Manager, Plants & Postharvest Technologies Division, Scientific Research Organisation of Samoa
Adjunct Associate Professor, Postharvest Horticulture, University of Sunshine Coast;

Member: Australian Centre for Pacific Islands Research, University of Sunshine Coast;

Fellow: Meryl Williams Fellowship (ACIAR)
Yes. I am willing to supervise students in the areas of Pacific/tropical postharvest horticulture and natural products.
Dr. Seeseei Molimau-Samasoni ‘s research interests/expertise are as follows:

Postharvest technologies of tropical fruit and produce, research into market access of Samoan/Pacific produce, value chains

Plant natural products, soil microbiota & genome mining, antimicrobial bioactivity, genome-wide screens, chemical genetics, identification of drug mechanism of action

Pacific student development
None

Dr Bree Wilson

Research fellow (Plant pathology, biofertlisers, biological control)
Dr Bree Wilson works at the Centre for Crop Health, University of Southern Queensland (UniSQ). She is an Adjunct at the Australian Centre for Pacific Islands Research, University of Sunshine Coast (UniSC).
Yes. Bree is able to supervise PhD or MSc students in the areas of insect biological control, plant pathology, mycorrhizal fungi and other microbial related studies
Papua New Guinea (PNG), 7 years
Fiji, 2 years
Bree has supervised 5 PhDs to completion and 4 MSc to completion in the areas of insect biological control, plant pathology, mycorrhizal fungi and plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPB). She has supervised a students from several different countries including Australia, Papua New Guinea, Nepal, Cambodia and Fiji.

I enjoy supervising higher degree by research students (HDR students), and watching them become experts in their chosen fields.

Dr Siaka Diarra

Associate Professor
Dr Siakka Diarra has the following qualifications:
PhD Animal Science (Monogastric Nutrition) ATBU Bauchi, Nigeria 2008
Postgraduate Diploma in Education NTI, Kaduna, Nigeria 2006
M.Sc. Animal Science University of Maiduguri, Nigeria 2002
B.Sc. Animal Husbandry IPR/IFRA, Katibougou, Mali 1986
Topics of interest:
Animal nutrition
Livestock production systems
• Teaching Undergraduate and Postgraduate courses in Animal Science
• Developed the Postgraduate Diploma in Animal Science
• Supervising Masters and PhD students in Animal Science
• Collaborating with SROS, MAF Samoa, Pacific regional institutions

Dr Sarah Burkhart

Senior Lecturer, Nutrition & Dietetics, School of Health and Behavioural Sciences
Dr Sarah Burkhart is a Senior Lecturer in Nutrition and Dietetics in the School of Health and Behavioural Sciences, and the Australian Centre for Pacific Islands Research at UniSC. Sarah’s research uses a food systems lens to explore food security and food choice in the Pacific Islands. Working with Pacific partners, academics and stakeholders, Sarah is interested in nutrition education and food provision in Pacific Island school settings and understanding determinants of food security across Pacific Island food systems, with a focus on food environments and consumer behaviour/food choice.

Sarah is currently leading projects that aim to develop a food and nutrition resource toolkit for Pacific Island teachers, to develop an Overview of Food and Nutrition Security in the Pacific Islands Report, and to adapt a NOVA screener for use in the Pacific Islands. She is also part of a team scoping the potential for local agriculture in food provision in Pacific Island schools. Other current and recent projects have focused on the role of diets, food systems and policy in the prevention of obesity and non-communicable diseases in Fiji, the current state and capacity for school food and nutrition education programmes across 14 Pacific Island countries, food environments in Samoa, nutrition impacts of climate change in Fiji, the impact of Covid-19 on food systems and food choice, dietary assessment methods and food literacy in the Pacific Islands region.

Sarah is a co-founder and current chair of the Pacific School Food Network, a group that advocates for and supports school food activities throughout the Pacific Islands region to eliminate hunger and improve food security.

Sarah teaches into several courses across the Bachelor of Nutrition and the Bachelor of Dietetics, with a focus on improving the student experience and readiness for practice using blended learning and the flipped classroom approach. Sarah’s scholarship of learning and teaching interests include the integration of a food systems approach and sustainability within Nutrition and Dietetic curricula, the use of blended learning strategies and the flipped classroom approach. Sarah is also an advocate for involving students in overseas learning and research experiences and has travelled with, and supervised UniSC students undertaking projects in Samoa and the Solomon Islands.

Sarah is a Registered Nutritionist with the Nutrition Society of Australia (NSA). She is also a member of the Society for Nutrition Education and Behavior (SNEB) and is currently Chair for the SNEB Division for International Nutrition Education and Chair-elect for the SNEB Sustainable Food Systems Division.
Yes, would depend on workload at the time.
Topics of interest:
School food and nutrition environments in the Pacific Islands
Food environments in the Pacific Islands
Food choice in the Pacific Islands
Currently or have recently collaborated on research that includes; Cook Islands, Fiji, FSM, Kiribati, Palau, Marshall Islands, Niue, Nauru, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tokelau, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu.

Collaborating partners include FAO-UN, SPC, Ministries of Education/Health/Agriculture, Global Child Nutrition Foundation, National and Regional Universities, Pacific School Food Network, DFAT, The Alliance for Bioversity International and CIAT.

Dr Tiago Alves Correa Carvalho da Silva

Postdoctoral Research Fellow – School of Environmental and Rural Science
Dr Tiago da Silva is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the School of Environmental and Rural Science. He earned a Bachelor of Agronomic Engineering from University of São Paulo and subsequently a PhD in Animal Science from the University of Queensland. Since his undergraduate degree, he has worked in numerous research projects in Australia, New Zealand and Brazil on a diverse variety of topics related to ruminants and pasture production.
Yes, 2 more.
Topics of interest:
Effect of creep-feeding on performance of lambs
Effect of early weaning on reproductive performance of small ruminants
Fiji – Ministry of Agriculture, Fiji National University & University of South Pacific
Samoa – Ministry of Agriculture & University of South Pacific

Prof Phil Brown

Professor of Horticultural Science
Prof Phil Brown is Professor of Horticultural Science and Director of the Institute for Future Farming Systems at CQUniversity. Over the past 25 years, he has led research teams delivering new knowledge and better production practices for the horticultural industry both in Australia and in neighbouring Pacific Island countries. His research approach is to develop improved horticultural industry agronomic and post-harvest practices based on sound scientific knowledge. This approach has been applied in over 40 large industry supported research grants and consultancy contracts, including projects in PNG, Fiji Samoa and Tonga. Phil is a past President of the Australian Society for Horticultural Science and has been an invited speaker at conferences in Asia, Europe and North America.
Yes (2)
Topics of interest:
Crop agronomy/physiology topics, preferably with an agtech or protected cropping systems component.
PNG: Research Leader on ACIAR funded project HORT/2014/097 Supporting commercial sweetpotato production and marketing in the PNG highlands, and collaborating research on project ASEM/2006/023 Re-Commercialisation of the PNG Pyrethrum Industry to Improve the Harvested Yields in Australia. Collaboration with staff at NARI and FPDA. Successful supervision of one PNG Masters student.
Fiji, Samoa, Tonga: Research Leader on ACIAR funded project HORT/2014/080 Integrating protected cropping systems into high value vegetable value chains in the Pacific and Australia. Collaboration with staff at SPC, Fiji MoA and Tonga MAFFF. Successful supervision of two Masters students.

Prof Patrick Nunn

Professor of Geography; Director, Sustainability Research Centre
After his BSc in Geography and Geology from the University of London King’s College, Prof Patrick Nunn went on to undertake a PhD on Quaternary landscape evolution at University College London. After completing this and holding various short-term appointments in British universities, Patrick was appointed to a Lectureship in Geography at the University of the South Pacific, an international university serving 12 Pacific Island nations, based at its main teaching campus in Suva, Fiji. Thinking he would complete his three-year contract there before returning to the UK, Patrick in fact spent 25 years there, being appointed to a Personal Chair (Professor of Oceanic Geoscience) in 1997 and then in 2009 becoming Pro Vice-Chancellor (Research and International). Patrick left the University of the South Pacific in 2010 to become Head of the School of Behavioural, Cognitive and Social Sciences at the University of New England, a position he held until joining the University of the Sunshine Coast as Professor of Geography in March 2014.

Patrick’s main research interests for the past 30 years have focused on the Pacific Basin (both islands and the surrounding continents) and, as befits a true geographer, have been in a number of distinct areas. His early work on the Quaternary geology and tectonics of many islands and island groups in Fiji, Samoa, Tonga and Vanuatu still represents the latest word on many of these issues today. In response to an invitation from the Fiji Museum, he began a collaboration that lasted more than a decade and involved Patrick directing a number of excavations in Fiji, notably the seven-year programme along the Rove Peninsula in southwest Viti Levu Island that involved the discovery of what is still likely to be Fiji’s first settlement at Bourewa, established perhaps 3100 years ago. Firmly believing in the importance of community awareness, Patrick has ensured that the results of his research have been returned to the people of the land in ways that they can understand its nature and importance, something helped in the case of Fiji by his fluency in the Fijian language and his familiarity with cultural protocols.
One of Patrick’s current research interests focuses on ancient understandings of coastal-environmental change and how these have been culturally filtered and encoded in narrative and myth. This research was laid out in his books, Vanished Islands and Hidden Continents of the Pacific (University of Hawaii, 2009) and The Edge of Memory (Bloomsbury, 2018). His new book, out last year from Bloomsbury, is Worlds in Shadow: Submerged Lands in Science, Memory and Myth.
The other main interest of Patrick at present is focused on climate change issues in the Pacific Islands, understanding past and (likely) future human-climate interactions and their implications for coastal livelihoods. This work has seen the publication of several books including Oceanic Islands (Blackwell, 1994) and Climate, Environment and Society in the Pacific (Elsevier, 2007) and more than 320 peer-reviewed publications. A long involvement with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) led to Patrick sharing its 2007 Nobel Peace Prize; Patrick was a lead author on the chapter about ‘Sea Level Change’ in the IPCC’s 5th Assessment Report and is currently a lead author on the chapter about ‘Small Islands’ for its 6th Assessment.
Yes, up to 4.
I am interested in supervising Pacific Island students at PhD level working on
• Heritage issues, including tangible heritage (like stonework structures including artificial islands) and intangible heritage (including oral traditions).
•Climate change challenges, including (a) traditional and local knowledge for coping with climate variability and (b) coastal settlement relocation.
•Livelihood sustainability, including autonomous community adaptation, peripherality, and anticipatory adaptive pathway development.
• Traditional and local knowledge in the Pacific Islands – use in future climate change adaptation
• Past community relocations in the Pacific: lessons learned for the future
• Veiqanivivili: Investigating the Only Known Shell-Midden Island in the Western Pacific Islands
Water security in relocated Pacific Island coastal communities
Has conducted research in most Pacific Island Countries, especially Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Kiribati, Palau, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu.

Taught for 25 years at the University of the South Pacific, currently Adjunct Professor in Pacific Studies there and Adjunct Professor at Solomon Islands National University, with both of which he has close and ongoing links.

Dr Simon Quigley

Research Fellow – Livestock and Animal Science
Dr Simon Quigley grew up on mixed crop-livestock farms in New South Wales, Australia. He completed a B. Ag. Sci. at The University of Queensland and a PhD at The University of Adelaide. His research focuses on beef cattle, sheep and goat nutrition and production systems, and ranges from feeding and grazing studies through to the use of molecular techniques to better understand animal metabolism. He is passionate about developing research capacity and improving the livelihoods of smallholder livestock farmers in developing countries, and has been involved in research in Indonesia, Timor Leste, Myanmar, Thailand and Vanuatu.
Yes, 2 as Principal Supervisor, and 2 as Co-Supervisor
Topics of interest:
Ruminant production and feeding systems (cattle, goats, sheep)
Ruminant metabolism and gene expression
Climate resilience in livestock systems (methane, carbon)
Use of technology in farm planning and animal management
ACIAR funded research with smallholder cattle farmers in Vanuatu, in collaboration with Department of Industry, Vanuatu Agriculture Research and Technical Centre, and Department of Livestock.

Regional description of beef cattle industries in Fiji, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga and Vanuatu.

Associate Professor Rowena Maguire

Associate Professor, Law School, Queensland University of Technology
Dr Rowena Maguire is an Associate Professor within the School of Law and Centre for Justice at QUT. She is the research leader of the Environmental and Social Governance Research Group. Rowena holds a visiting fellow position at Strathmore Law School, Nairobi, Kenya and was formally a Research Affiliates at the Cambridge Centre for Climate Change Mitigation Research. Rowena’s research is…
Yes – 1 or 2 more students. My school is bringing in a limit of 4 supervisions.
Topics of Interest:
Feminist approaches to agriculture policy
Feminist approaches to climate policy
Gender and agriculture policy
Gender and climate mitigation and adaptation policy
Loss and Damage mechanism
Climate governance and justice in the Pacific
UNFCCC governance
Climate displacement and migration in agriculture sector
Just Transition Policies
Gender and Technology adoption in agriculture
Fiji – ACIAR project work (Talanoa Consulting, MoE and MoA) and PhD supervision of Fijian students studying climate displacement

Samoa – ACIAR project work (SWAG)

Solomon Islands – ACIAR project work (COYES)

Dr Ben MacDonald

Group Leader
Dr Ben Macdonald is developing improved agricultural production systems through the measurement of nutrient and water fluxes within agricultural and natural ecosystems. His research also focuses on the quantification of gaseous exchange between the land surface and the atmosphere and the key processes responsible for emissions from agricultural and natural ecosystems.

Currently Dr Macdonald is leading research projects in Australian cotton production systems with a focus on nitrogen use efficiency and nutrient cycling within root cropping systems of the Pacific Island Countries and Territories.
Topics of interest:
Soil carbon
Soil Health
Water quality
Dr Macdonald has worked in Fiji, Tonga, Samoa, Kiribati and Tuvalu.
Have been Principal Supervisor to 8 PhD students and have Co-Supervised 8 PhD students.