Dr Andrew Baker
is Senior Lecturer in Ecology and Environmental Science at
Queensland University of Technology (QUT), and Honorary Senior
Research Fellow in Vertebrate Zoology at the Queensland Museum.
Andrew Baker
graduated from QUT with a Bachelor of Applied Science (Hons) in
Biology in 1993, and received his PhD in Evolutionary Biology
(QUT) in 1999.
For more than 2
decades Andrew has undertaken natural history research on
Queensland mammals. In the last 6 years he has discovered 6 new
antechinus species, with two of the four species occurring in
Queensland being endangered.
Andrew Baker is
an educator and conservation biologist, actively teaching more
than 600 university students annually about the importance of
Australian fauna. He
is the recipient of many teaching awards from QUT, has been
nominated by QUT for a National Carrick Award for Teaching
Excellence, and he achieved international recognition for
teaching, being made a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education
Academy (SFHEA). In 2016 Andrew received the Australian Whitely
Medal for outstanding natural history publication.
Andrew Baker has
authored more than 65 scientific publications, and has written
more than 30 popular science articles. His popular publications
and books focus on engendering public understanding of natural
history, especially concerning Queensland and Australian
mammals.
Andrew is a
committee member with the Australian Mammal Society, and member
of the International Union for Conservation of Nature where he
is an expert on Queensland and Australia’s threatened
carnivorous marsupials.
He is co-editor
of the Field Companion to
the Mammals of Australia, Australia’s only species-level
mammal identification key for each state and territory, where he
has contributed many scientific illustrations.
Andrew was
author of the Dasyurid chapter (a family of marsupials native to
Australia and Papua New Guinea) in
Handbook of Mammals of the
World (which won the 2016 Australian Whitely Medal for
outstanding natural history publication), is principal co-author
of both Secret Lives of Carnivorous Marsupials and
Strahan’s Mammals of Australia 4th Ed., and is the author
of a book about the philosophy of science,
Questions of Science: 3rd
Ed.
Andrew’s primary
contribution to the natural history of Queensland lies in
communicating and fostering a deeper appreciation and
understanding of Queensland’s mammal diversity to a large
audience of scientists, amateur naturalists, laypersons and the
general public.