Professor Dayanthi Nugegoda is an ecotoxicologist who has investigated the effects of toxicants and anthropogenic activities and resulting pollution, on native species, and ecosystems, for over 25 years.
She is passionate about diversity and inclusion in Higher Education and an advocate for females in STEMM.
Professor Nugegoda has led the Ecotoxicology Research Group at RMIT University since 2004. She is a lead researcher in the Aquatic Environmental Stress (AQUEST) Research Group at RMIT University.
Her group has developed novel methods to assess monitor and evaluate the effect of toxicants and other environmental stressors on aquatic organisms, and ecosystems including trace metals, pesticides, endocrine disrupting chemicals cyanobacterial toxins; salinisation of freshwater systems, and ocean acidification and plastics on biota from rotifers to seabirds and marine mammals. She has with her collaborators, raised over $10 million research grant income with an associated additional $3.4 million industry support for research in ecotoxicology and environmental biology.
In 2018, she set up the Aquatic Prevention Pollution Partnership at RMIT with a $5 million grant from Melbourne Water. Prof. Nugegoda has trained many Australasian researchers in Ecotoxicology, graduating 36 PhD and 5 MSc research candidates (40 as senior supervisor).; and supervised 12 Postdoctoral Fellows. She now supervises 2 PhD candidates and 2 PostDoctoral Research Fellows on external funding.
Industry experience:
Professor Nugegoda contributed expert opinion on the environmental impacts of Coal Seam Gas and Large Coal Mining as an appointed member (2012-2014) of the Independent Expert Scientific Panel to the Minister of Environment; on pesticides to the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) of Australia, on ecotoxicology to The New South Wales Environment Trust; The Research Councils of Hongkong, South Africa, Norway, France, Croatia and the Netherlands; The OECD Validation Management Group for Ecotoxicity Tests (VMG-eco); The SETAC Global Bioaccumulation Advisory Group and Animal Alternatives Advisory Group and to the Australian Shipowners Association.
In 2015, she served on the Scientific Reference Panel for Onshore Natural Gas and Water for the State of Victoria and was re-appointed to the Science Panel for the Victorian Coastal Council.
In 2017, she was invited by the Lead Scientist of Victoria to join the Scientific Reference Group for Onshore Conventional Gas until 2020.
In 2018, with Vin Pettigrove, she set up the $5 million Aquatic Pollution Prevention Partnership with Melbourne Water to evaluate and minimise pollutants.
Awards:
2020 RMIT Vice Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Research Supervision
2019 RMIT Vice Chancellor’s Award for Research Impact
2011 RMIT Award for Excellence in Teaching – Widening Participation (team award)
2010 College of Science, Engineering Health nominee for the Vice-Chancellors Award for Teaching and Research
2004 RMIT Faculty of Life Sciences Research Supervision Award and RMIT University Certificate of Achievement in Research Supervision
1985/86 Drapers Company/Queen Mary College, Univ. of London Award for Postgraduates
1982-1985 Open Commonwealth Scholarship awarded by the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission of the U.K. 1982-Fulbright-Hayes Graduate Award for study in the U.S.
1977 Scholarship for the Best Results in the First Exam in Natural Sciences, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka
Acknowledgement of Country
RMIT University acknowledges the people of the Woi wurrung and Boon wurrung language groups of the eastern Kulin Nation on whose unceded lands we conduct the business of the University. RMIT University respectfully acknowledges their Ancestors and Elders, past and present. RMIT also acknowledges the Traditional Custodians and their Ancestors of the lands and waters across Australia where we conduct our business - Artwork 'Sentient' by Hollie Johnson, Gunaikurnai and Monero Ngarigo.
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