Geoff Tracey

John Geoffrey Tracey AM (1930 – 30 July 2004) was an Australian ecologist and botanist whose pioneering research work in partnership with Dr. Leonard Webb AO within the Rainforest Ecology Unit of the CSIRO in the 1950s led to the publication of the first systematic classification of Australian rainforest vegetation in the Journal of Ecology in 1959. By the early 80's, after decades of ongoing research, Tracey and Webb had accumulated a significant corpus of scientific evidence in support of the theory that Australian tropical rainforests had evolved in Gondwana over 100 million years ago and were not, as previously believed, relatively recent arrivals from South East Asia. This evidence, in combination with Tracey and Webb's 1975 publication of a collection of 15 vegetation maps entitled "Vegetation of the Humid Tropical Region of North Queensland", and Tracey's 1982 paper "The Vegetation of the Humid Tropical Region of North Queensland", helped to establish the scientific basis for a number of major conservation campaigns across Queensland and paved the way for the subsequent successful World Heritage nomination of the Wet Tropics of Queensland by Aila Keto in 1988.

Geoff Tracey

AM
Tracey on Atherton Tableland. 1954.
Born
John Geoffrey Tracey

1930
Cairns, Queensland
Died30 July 2004
Yungaburra, Queensland
NationalityAustralian
Alma mater
  • Gatton Agricultural College
  • University of Queensland
Known for
SpouseReinhild Tracey
Awards
  • Member of the Order of Australia (AM) for service to conservation and the environment, particularly tropical forest maintenance and planting in North Queensland, through the organisation Trees for the Evelyn and Atherton Tablelands (1996)
  • Cassowary Award (in conjunction with Len Webb) for Science and Conservation. Wet Tropics Management Authority (2000)

Scientific career
Fields
  • Rainforest Ecology
  • Conservation
  • Rainforest Regeneration
InstitutionsCSIRO
Websitehttps://www.anbg.gov.au/biography/tracey-geoff.html
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