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Todd Minchinton
Associate Professor
35.G09
+61 2 4221 5188
tminch@uow.edu.au
Lab: +61 2 4221 3675
Lab: +61 2 4221 4135
Research Interests
Population and community ecology of benthic invertebrates, insects, and plants in coastal terrestrial, marine, and estuarine habitats (rocky reefs, seagrass beds, mangroves, marshes, beaches, dunes, etc.)
Importance of dispersal, habitat selection, and colonisation (i.e., recruitment) to the structure and dynamics of populations and communities
Influence of natural and anthropogenic disturbance on recruitment, population dynamics, and species diversity
Predicting how humans will destroy the planet and developing conservation strategies to avoid this
Representative Publications
Minchinton, T.E. and M.D. Bertness (2003) Disturbance-mediated competition and the spread of Phragmites australis in a coastal marsh. Ecological Applications 13:1400–1416.
Raimondi, P.T., C.M Wilson, R.F. Ambrose, J.M. Engle and T.E. Minchinton (2002) Continued declines of black abalone along the coast of California: are mass mortalities related to El Niño events. Marine Ecology Progress Series 242:143–152.
Minchinton, T.E. (2002) Precipitation during El Niño correlates with increasing spread of Phragmites australis in New England, USA, coastal marshes. Marine Ecology Progress Series 242:305–309.
Minchinton, T.E. (2001) Canopy and substratum heterogeneity influence recruitment of the mangrove Avicennia marina. Journal of Ecology 89:888–902.
Minchinton, T.E. and M. Dalby-Ball (2001) Frugivory by insects on mangrove propagules: effects on the early life history of Avicennia marina. Oecologia 129:243–252.
Minchinton, T.E. (1997) Life on the edge: conspecific attraction and recruitment of populations to disturbed habitats. Oecologia 11:45–52.
Current Students
PhD
Justin Lathlean, Project title: Factors influencing range limits of Marine invertebrates. (Co-supervised with Prof David Ayre).
Tyge Hermansen, Project title: Ecological and genetic tests of the status of the Sea Anemones at the species borders. (Co-supervised with Prof David Ayre).
Suggested Topics for Future Students
I am open to all projects, so students should contact me to discuss their ideas.
Processes controlling local and regional species diversity
Importance of recruitment for population dynamics and species diversity
Importance of species diversity to the invasibility, stability, and productivity of ecosystems
Invasive species in coastal salt marshes
Seed dispersal and recruitment
See Also the Honours Topics Page
Abbreviated CV
Senior Lecturer, University of Wollongong, Australia, 2005– present
Lecturer, University of Wollongong, Australia, 2003 – 2004
Lecturer, University of Adelaide, Australia, 2001 – 2003
Postdoctoral Scholar, University of California at Santa Cruz, USA, 1999 – 2001
Postdoctoral Scholar, Brown University, USA, 1996 – 1998
Postdoctoral Scholar, University of Wollongong, Australia, 1995 – 1996
PhD, Marine Ecology, University of Sydney, Australia, 1996
MSc, Biological Oceanography, Dalhousie University, Canada, 1990
















