Congratulations to our client BHP and our Biologic Seed team for winning the prestigious Golden Gecko Award for 2025!
Subterranean ecosystems, which exist underground, are known for being highly biodiverse – but also under-sampled and under-sequenced. Our Manager of Molecular Systematics, Dr Joel Huey, has recently contributed to a research paper which provides a roadmap for developing and curating barcode reference libraries for subterranean ecosystems.
More than 240 people came together for the 5th annual Walpole Wilderness Bioblitz, recording over 3500 observation, see what they discovered
Biologic Seed business has invested in a new start-up, Emergence Ecotech, as part of a partnership with the company’s founders and the UWA Centre of Engineering Innovation (CEI)
Learn how we have solved one of the major limitations of land rehabilitation projects; the availability of sufficient quantities of native seeds.
We recently sat down with Dean Main—our newest returning team member—to hear his reflections on coming back to Biologic after nearly five years working client-side.
[Reading Time: 2 minutes] Environmental DNA (eDNA) has almost limitless potential to provide high quality survey and monitoring data for…
At Biologic, we’re proud to have a team who genuinely love exploring all sorts of biomes for all sorts of reasons – and Mark Gresser is no exception. Mark, who has been a Senior Zoologist within our Vertebrate Fauna Team for the past six years, is currently trekking more than 5,000 kilometres across Australia to raise awareness and funds for youth mental health through organisation Batyr.
Whats next after graduation? You might know exactly what you want to do with your degree in environmental science, sustainability or a related field, but there’s also a good chance you’re still working out your next step.
Species identification can rely on multiple methods (dissection, DNA barcoding, shell morphology) but often necessitate euthanasia as shell morphology is not always reliable.
By matching fragments of DNA found in water, soil and air samples, against DNA sequence libraries, we can understand exactly what is living there, even the elusive species which can be hard to see, hear or catch.
A bunch of our amazing colleagues, family and friends gave up part of their weekend to contribute to our third Gidgegannup Carbon Project planting initiative.