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Erin Roger

Canadian ecologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Erin Roger (born in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) is the biosecurity sector lead at the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA). Previously she was a senior scientist working for the New South Wales Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH) in the area of Citizen Science and Monitoring, Evaluation and Reporting.

Quick Facts Dr Erin Roger, Born ...
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Education

Roger completed her Bachelor of Science with Honours at Acadia University in Nova Scotia Canada in 2002. She graduated from the University of New South Wales in 2010 with a PhD in ecology.[1] Roger's PhD research examined how wildlife populations are impacted by roads and how this impact varies at different spatial scales.

Background

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Roger is an ecologist interested in the science-policy interface and how to facilitate the uptake of scientific research into the policy process. At the OEH and CSIRO she worked in the area of citizen science, developing and guiding citizen science programs to involve the community in data collection and monitoring projects. Her particular interest is exploring if citizen science can benefit environmental monitoring and policymaking.[2]

Previously Roger worked in the climate change impacts and adaptation section within the Office of Environment and Heritage. The section works on both science and policy related projects in order to quantify projected climate impacts for both humans and other biota and assist in the uptake of adaptation actions across government and the private sector.

Roger completed a secondment from OEH where she was employed as a postdoctoral fellow at Macquarie University, working on a National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility (NCCARF) funded project. The aim of the research was to examine the current extent of environmentally suitable habitat for a suite of naturalised, but not yet invasive non-native plants within Australia and to evaluate how projected changes in climate may alter these patterns in the coming decades.[3]

She joined CSIRO in 2019 and then the ALA in 2021. As of February 2025, she is the Biosecurity Sector Lead for the ALA, maintaining her focus on citizen science.[4]

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Research and publications

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Total citations 190 H-index 6

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References

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