THE ERI WELCOMES… Anoop Singh Anoop is from Kanpur in India and holds a Doctoral Degree from AAIDU, Allahabad, India in Botany and a Masters in Environmental Sciences from GBPUAT, Pantnagar, India. He is currently a Post Doctoral Researcher in the Biofuels Research Group, Civil and Environmental Engineering department working on compressed biomethane generated from grass, utilized as a transport biofuel, EPA funded project. He has published 40 papers in National and International journals such as Energy and Fuels, Resources Conservation and Recycling, Environmental Pollution, Chemosphere, etc. Earlier he worked at The Energy and Resources Institute, New Delhi, India; Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi, India; Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India and VBS Purvanchal University, Jaunpur, India. His research interests are utilization of industrial, agricultural and household waste for sustainable and ecofriendly energy production and their life cycle analysis. Burkhardt Flemer Burkhardt is from Berlin, Germany. He completed a diploma in Biotechnology at the Technische Fachhochschule Berlin and prepared his diploma thesis at the Alfred-Wegener-Institute in Bremerhaven. The topic was “Assessing the diverse microbial ecology of sea ice in eastern Antarctica”. Burkhardt has spent some time during his studies working with marine related topics in Australia and Berlin, which is due to his personal interest in marine environments. That is why Burkhardt enjoys diving so much and will soon be found in Irish waters . Burkhardt just became father to a little boy who is now six months old. Together with his family he loves to travel around. Erin O’ Rourke As an Environmental Protection Agency funded student Erin has recently joined Dr. Mark Emmerson’s Biodiversity Group in the ERI and is now at the initial stage of a Ph.D which is to examine “the impacts of long and short term bioenergy crops on the biodiversity and biological pest control potential of ground predators at differing agricultural intensifications in the landscape”. This Ph.D is one part of a larger research group called SIMBIOSYS (Sectoral IMpacts on BIOdiversity and ecoSYStem services). SIMBIOSYS began in April 2008 and involves multi-disciplinary research across three Irish research institutions: Trinity College Dublin (TCD), University College Cork (UCC), & University College Dublin (UCD). Erin is supervised by Dr. Mark Emmerson and Dr. Padraig Whelen, Department of Zoology, Ecology and Plant Science. Created on 23/01/09 Joern Ploennigs Joern studied Electrical Engineering in Dresden, Germany out of family tradition and found it less energetic than the name suggests. Thus, he changed to Applied Computer Science and finished his PhD last year on the topic of quality-oriented network design. He worked in the area of network performance engineering, fault analysis, and component-based design for building automation networks and wireless sensor networks. He is now on a Feodor-Lynen fellowship of the Humboldt-Foundation at UCC working in the Strategic Research Cluster ITOBO for a year. He came to Cork to change his habit of going out to pubs and spend more time with reading and writing, but while the weather supports staying inside his broken heating at home forces him to go out. John Benzie Professor John Benzie gained his BSc HON in Zoology from Aberdeen University (Scotland) in 1978, and his PhD in Genetics from Australian National University in 1986. He joined the Environmental Research Institute as the SIF Professor of Marine Molecular Biodiversity in November 2008. His work has focused on the application of genetics to taxonomic, conservation, ecological and evolutionary problems in terrestrial, freshwater and marine systems and in the development of marine biotechnologies including aquaculture. This research has included fieldwork in Africa, Asia and throughout the Indo-west Pacific region and the Great Barrier Reef including work on a variety of invertebrates and fish. His work in aquaculture has focused on reproduction, genetic improvement and genomics of shrimp and bivalves. He led the aquaculture and molecular genetics programs for the Australian Institute of Marine Science (Australian Federal Government) from 1988-2000; genetic improvement and reproduction programs in the Australian Cooperative Research Centre for Aquaculture 1995-2000; was Professor and Director of the Centre for Marine and Coastal Studies of the University of New South Wales 2000-2003 and Chief Scientist for a multinational shrimp breeding company (Moana Group) 2003-2008. Padraig Whelan Pádraig is a Lecturer in the Department of Zoology, Ecology and Plant Science and is a PI on the EPA-STRIVE funded SIMBIOSYS project on the Sectoral Impacts on Biodiversity. His area of research is on ecology with particular emphasis applied aspects of biodiversity conservation (including alien species biology and management) and has worked in this field in the Galapagos Islands (Ecuador), the eastern Amazon (Brazil) and a number of protected areas in Ireland. He currently supervises postgraduates carrying out research into: biodiversity management in 3 Irish National Parks; sustainable road landscaping practices as an aid to biodiversity conservation using native species; waste water treatment using plants, seagrass (Zostera) communities and soil moisture determination. Padraig also speaks fluent Spanish and have a working knowledge of Portuguese. He has found that other researchers have found his languages to be useful when it comes to developing contacts with other institutions or checking technical stuff - most translators don’t have biology. Zuzana Škrabáková Zuzana is from Slovakia, where she graduated from Slovak Technical University in Bratislava with BSc. from Chemistry and Masters from Chemistry. Her current position is a researcher in PROTEOBIO (Mass Spectrometry Centre for Proteomics and Biotoxin Research) in CIT and her PhD project is based on Mass fragmentation pathways of phycotoxins and food contaminants. Created on 23/01/09