Australian Museum's Chief Scientist, Dr Rebecca Johnson, scores top science role at Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History.
Sydney, 18 December, 2019: The Director of the Australian Museum Research Institute (AMRI), Dr Rebecca Johnson, will be leaving the Australian Museum (AM) in early 2020 to take up the prestigious role of Chief Scientist and Associate Director of Science of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History (NMNH) in Washington DC.
Dr Johnson, who has been at the AM for 16 years, five of those as Director of AMRI, received international recognition in 2018 after leading the international team that sequenced the genome of the koala for the first time.
"It is a privilege to be selected as the Chief Scientist and Associate Director of Science at the NMNH - an institution which represents the highest levels of scientific endeavor and achievement," Dr Johnson said.
Director and CEO of the Australian Museum, Kim McKay AO said, the Australian Museum is delighted for Dr Johnson's outstanding success and while it is sad to lose her from the AM team, her contribution to the international museum sector will ensure she continues to collaborate with the AM well into the future.
"Dr Johnson is a talented, energetic and pioneering leader in STEM and was the first woman to be appointed to the position of Director AMRI. She is deservedly respected by her peers in Australia and around the world," McKay added.
One of Australia's foremost experts in Koala conservation genomics, McKay said Dr. Johnson has also played a significant role in informing government policy.
"During her time at the AM, Dr Johnson established the Australian Centre for Wildlife Genomics (ACWG) and has played a critical leadership role in taking the AMRI to a new level by broadening the impact of museum science on an international scale," McKay noted.
During her tenure at the AMRI, Dr Johnson has implemented the following initiatives:
· Developed the strategic vision for the Australian Museum Research Institute (Australian Museum Science strategy 2017-2021);
· Negotiated, for the first time in the history of the Australian Museum, joint curator positions with three Australian universities (in palaeontology, amphibian conservation, ichthyology and archaeology);
· Introduced the concept of 'flagship projects' as a mechanism of capturing the multidisciplinary nature of museum research including:FROG ID, AM ICONS, the Koala Genome Consortium, the AM Expeditions program.
Dr. Johnson plans to take up her new role at the NMNH in March 2020. The Australian Museum has commenced an international search for the next Director of the Australian Museum Research Institute, through Odgers Berndsten.
1 of 2
Dr Rebecca Johnson biography:
Dr Rebecca Johnson is an internationally recognised wildlife forensic scientist and conservation geneticist, whose expertise in applied genetics has established the Australian Museum one of the global leaders in wildlife forensic science. Her work was integral in embedding this discipline in Australia with the goal of using science to understand and assist in the investigation of the illicit trade of wildlife. She also extended this work to the Australian Aviation industry, where scientific analysis is now routinely used for identification of bird strike and other wildlife interactions with aircraft.
Dr Johnson is a leader in mammal genomics and chief investigator of the Koala genome project. The work of this ground-breaking collaboration published in Nature Genetics in 2018 received world-wide attention. Her pioneering work advanced our knowledge of koalas, describing the genomic basis of many unique koala adaptations with direct application for conservation and is incorporated into the NSW Koala Strategy providing practical applications to conserve koalas. Rebecca now co-leads further genome sequencing initiatives to understand and conserve biodiversity in the face of increasingly changing environment.
Rebecca received her Bachelor of Science (Honours) degree from the University of Sydney and her PhD in molecular evolutionary genetics from La Trobe University, Melbourne. Rebecca is an adjunct Professor at the University of Sydney, a conjoint Professor at the University of NSW and spent four months at Kyoto University in 2019 as a visiting Professor.
She is a member of the Australian Academy of Forensic Sciences, a Fellow of the Royal Society of NSW, the president of the Australian and New Zealand Forensic Science Society, NSW Branch and Director of Membership and outreach of the Society for Wildlife Forensic Science.
#