Professor Jes Sammut
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Jes Sammut is the Deputy Dean for External Engagement, leads the UNSW Aquaculture Research Group and is the Deputy Director (International) of the Centre for Marine Science and Innovation. ÌýHe is also an Honorary Research Fellow at ANSTO where he is a chief investigator on an innovative collaborative project using nuclear tools to determine seafood provenance and production methods. Jes works across the biological, physical and social sciences, and leads multidisciplinary teams in the Asia-Pacific that research solutions for aquaculture production problems.ÌýÌýJes and his teams researchÌýinland and coastal aquaculture systems, fish nutrition, aquaculture planning and development, sustainable livelihoods, seafood provenance, oyster nutrition, environmental impact assessment, gender in aquaculture development, social impact assessment and rice-shrimp farming systems. He currently conducts research in Australia, Vietnam and Papua New Guinea, and has previously worked in Indonesia, India, Thailand and the Philippines.
Jes and his team also conduct capacity building in Asia-Pacific countries to strengthen research and development. ÌýJes coordinated several ACIAR-funded projects in Aceh that rebuilt research and technical capacity to support redevelopment of the aquaculture industry that was severely impactedÌýby the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami. He has also established soil and water chemistry laboratories in Indonesia on his other ACIAR projects.ÌýÌýSince 2008, Jes and his team have been building research capacity for fisheries scientists in Papua New Guinea through a series of inland aquaculture projects, funded by ACIAR and the National Fisheries Authority of PNG. ÌýThe research team conducts farmer training and contributes to the National Fisheries Authority's 'Fish for Prisons' and 'Fish For Schools' programs, certificate level training in aquaculture at the Maria Kwin Centre, and various NGO-run programs that assist disadvantaged people.Ìý
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- Publications
- Media
- Grants
- Awards
- Research Activities
- Engagement
- Teaching and Supervision
Professor Sammut has captured over $10 Million in Category 1 funding as Project Leader, and another $3 Million in funding as a Chief Investigator. He is currently developing new large projects as project lead and in partnership with overseas and Australian research agencies. His students have also been awarded AINSE Ltd Residency scholarships and ACIAR-funded John Allwright Fellowships.Ìý
He is currently leading another phase of the Inland Aquaculture Research Program in PNG funded by ACIAR ($2.6 Million).Ìý
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- Risk factors for rice-shrimp farming Ìýin Vietnam
- Inland aquaculture in PNG
- Sustainable livelihoods analysis
- Socioeconomics of aquaculture in Asia
- Brackishwater and marine aquaculture systems
- Fish husbandry and nutritionÌý
- Aquaculture planning and management - mapping, site selection, carrying capacityÌý
- Environmental and Social Impact Assessment
- Research Capacity Building in the Asia-Pacific
- Oyster and lobster production
- Application of nuclear tools to seafood provenance
- Impacts of acid sulfate soils
My Research Supervision
- Joshua Noiney - Improving fingerling production in the highlands of PNG
- Hanbin Yu - Increasing the efficiency ofÌýnuclear approaches toÌýseafood provenance
- Chenxiang Zhang - Nuclear technology approaches in fish nutrition and improving the nutritional profile of farmed fish
- Grace Nye-Butler - Social ecological systems approach to managing marine debris
- Yudong Han - Application of nuclear technology to determine oyster habitat associations
- Claire Luger - Climate change impacts on oysters
- Henni Widyastuti - Isotopic and elemental profiling of intensively and and semi-intensively farmed shrimp to improve provenance determinationÌý
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