Congratulations to all of our 2025 NZAS Award winners
The inaugural Scientific Workers Medal is awarded to the multidisciplinary technical team that supported the Endophyte Discovery Team at the New Zealand Institute for Bioeconomy Science. These technicians have assisted in the development of novel endophyte strains that improve pasture resilience, reduce pest damage, and support animal health, directly addressing the challenges of pasture persistence under New Zealand’s variable climate. Their specialist skills in endophyte isolation, culturing, and understanding chemical and biological effects have formed the backbone of the discovery pipeline. Their meticulous work has ensured the delivery of safe, effective endophyte-grass associations tailored to New Zealand farming systems. Technicians have conducted rigorous field trials across diverse environments, generating critical data that have guided industry confidence in adopting these innovations. Their precision in seed processing and inoculation has enabled high-quality endophyte-infected seed to reach New Zealand farmers, reducing reliance on chemical pesticides and supporting sustainable, productive grazing systems. This work has resulted in increased pasture longevity, reduced environmental impacts, and improved farm profitability nationwide. Their contributions have directly supported industry partnerships and farmer confidence in adopting these technologies, reducing pesticide use and improving livestock systems. This multidisciplinary research program highlights how the expertise and commitment of technicians are essential to delivering impactful, science-based solutions that support sustainable and resilient pastoral agriculture in New Zealand. The team includes Nicola Webb (chemistry/toxicology), Anouck de Bonth (plant and microbial science), Joanne Jensen (entomology), Debbie Hudson (molecular biology), and Russell Croy (animal safety testing).
Dr Tony Conner from the New Zealand Institute for Bioeconomy Science is the 2025 winner of the Marsden Medal. He has contributed a career of outstanding service to primary industry sciences in New Zealand, both as a leading scientist and a leader of science. Throughout his career in the former DSIR, then Plant & Food Research and AgResearch, he focused his attention on the continuum between the fundamental and applied biological sciences, especially the adoption of biotechnology, genetics and genomics. This involved bridging the gap between research results and the transfer of technology to industry for outcomes that impact directly on the New Zealand economy. While much of his own research focused on potatoes, he has worked on a wide range of vegetable, arable, flower and forage species. Tony’s breadth of knowledge across biological sciences propelled him into the global public debate on biotechnology and genetic modification. In this capacity he made a significant contribution to global containment and biosafety assessments of genetically modified crops. For the last decade Tony moved into science management and migrated to leading science rather than being a leading scientist. This involved leading the strategy, infrastructure, capability, and delivery of the research and technology transfer to industry within the Forage Science Group of AgResearch. In this role he championed the redirection and revitalisation of science efforts in forage science for New Zealand’s pastoral sector. Tony was elected a Companion of the Royal Society of New Zealand in 2003, became a Fellow of the New Zealand Institute of Agricultural & Horticultural Science in 2010, and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand in 2011.
Hill Tinsley Medal 2025
This year’s winner of the Hill Tinsley Medal is, Dr Terry Isson, a geochemist whose research is transforming our understanding of how Earth regulates its long-term climate. His work has reshaped the global carbon-silica cycle, revealing that reverse weathering — a process once thought minor — plays a central role in buffering ocean pH, regulating atmospheric CO2, and influencing the stability of Earth’s climate system across mass extinctions and warm periods. Since 2018, Dr Isson has published extensively in leading journals, including Nature, Science, and PNAS, combining geochemical data, climate modeling, and sediment archives to show that the location and intensity of clay formation has shifted over Earth’s history, with profound consequences for climate regulation. He also leads New Zealand’s flagship research programme on enhanced weathering as a carbon dioxide removal strategy. His team is pioneering real-world carbon removal trials and advising government and industry on how to ensure durability of CO2 drawdown in Aotearoa and globally. Dr Isson’s research has not only revived global interest in reverse weathering but also connected deep-time climate feedbacks with modern climate solutions — earning recognition as a scientific leader, mentor, and communicator at the forefront of Earth system science.
Distinguished Professor Philip Hulme, the Deputy Director of the Bioprotection Aotearoa CoRE at Lincoln University, is the 2025 winner of the Shorland medal. He is recognised worldwide for scientific achievements that have significantly progressed global understanding of the causes and consequences of biological invasions, issues critical to the economic and environmental wellbeing of New Zealand. He has had a tremendous impact on the way biosecurity is perceived and implemented internationally, particularly in his assessment of the driving forces of invasions, application of risk assessments, and quantification of environmental impacts. His biosecurity expertise is highly sought-after by the international community, as evidenced by his lead role in the United Nations Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services and numerous EU funded programmes. His extraordinarily high citation statistics have led him to be ranked as a Highly-Cited Researcher in each of the last 11 years placing him consistently in the top 0.1% of scientists worldwide. He has received numerous accolades for his research including the inaugural Lincoln University Global Science Medal, the Royal Society Te Apārangi Hutton Medal, the New Zealand Ecological Society Award for Ecological Excellence, a Miegunyah Distinguished Visiting Fellowship at Melbourne University, as well being elected a Fellow of the Royal Society Te Apārangi in 2013.
Associate Professor Nic Rawlence is the 2025 winner of the Cranwell Medal. He is Director of the Otago Palaeogenetics Laboratory at the University of Otago, where he uses ancient DNA and palaeontology to reconstruct prehistoric Aotearoa New Zealand, how it has changed, and how this information can be used for evidence-based kaitiakitanga and conservation management of taonga species. Nic is also one of New Zealand’s leading science communicators. His articles regularly appear in The Conversation and on his Lost Worlds Vanished Lives SciBlog, and are republished widely. He has given numerous interviews to national and international media, across all forms, about his lab’s research; has appeared in several international documentaries; regularly gives public talks and school visits; and most importantly, has spoken out widely about topical issues in science and conservation, even busting a few myths now and then. The recent media surrounding de-extinction saw his accessible critical commentary appear in hundreds of media outlets worldwide. Nic is also the tertiary representative of the Biology Educators of Aotearoa New Zealand, for whom he writes popular science articles for secondary school students and upskills teachers in the latest biological science. His skills are regularly called upon to train the next generation of passionate science communicators.
© 2024 NZAS | Disclaimer Sitemap |