5.15pm – 5.30pm AEDT, 27 November 2025 ‐ 15 mins
Event Essentials
Monash University
Professor Chris Greening leads the One Health Microbiology group at Monash University’s Biomedicine Discovery Institute. Following a first-class degree in Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry at the University of Oxford (2010), he undertook a doctorate at the University of Otago (2013) investigating the physiological roles of the hydrogenases in mycobacteria. He then gained postdoctoral and lecturing experience at the University of Otago, CSIRO, and Australian National University.
In 2016, he was appointed as a group leader in Monash University’s School of Biological Sciences and completed an environmentally-focused ARC DECRA Fellowship. In 2020, he moved to Monash’s Department of Microbiology to take up a medically-focused NHMRC EL2 Fellowship. Trained in the fields of biochemistry and microbiology, Chris also has experience in genetics, microbial ecology, and molecular evolution, and thrives working across disciplines.
University of Melbourne
Dr Zahra Islam is a microbial ecologist working as a research fellow within the ARC Research Hub for Smart Fertilisers. Her research focuses on understanding plant-soil-microbiome interactions, where she develops high throughput methods to isolate and screen beneficial microbes that can be used in biofertilisers to enhance plant growth, as well as the effects of newly developed smart fertilisers on microbial communities. Her work encompasses multidisciplinary techniques including both culture-dependent and culture-independent methods to understand the nuances of symbiotic as well as pathogenic interactions between soils, plants and their associated microbes.
Her commitment to understanding the role of microorganisms in biogeochemical cycling in different ecosystems has been recently recognised by the awarding of two research grants to look into the hydrogen scavenging capacity of microorganisms in agroecosystems from the University of Melbourne (ECR grant) and the Australian Academy of Sciences (Thomas Davies Research Grant for Marine, Soil and Plant Biology).
Outside of research, Zahra is passionate about scientific communication and outreach, serving on the executive committees for ASM Victoria (2023 to present), MEEM (2021 to present), AusME (2022) and SECAN (2023 to present), as well as authoring media releases in the Microbiologist (Applied Microbiology International), the Conversation, Behind the Paper (ISME J) and the Monash Lens.