Pauline Ladiges began her career as a plant ecologist, and continued with this work from 1974 to 1983. The next phase of her work was in phylogenetic systematics and historical biogeography. Eucalyptus are found in many different environments across Australia, and have a long and complex evolutionary history. Pauline Ladiges was the first to use advanced methodologies to define the relationships between the major groups of Eucalyptus, particularly by employing these two techniques:
molecular techniques for estimating relationships between and among genera.
The education of students in science at secondary and tertiary levels has been supported by her work throughout her career. At the same time as she was completing her Master of Science at the University of Melbourne, she undertook a Diploma in Education, and served her first year as a bonded teacher in a secondment to a Teacher's College. She has taught and supervised a very large number of postgraduate students throughout her career. As head of the School of Botany at the University of Melbourne she worked to address the deficit of skilled taxonomists in Australia by creating links with an important user of botanical knowledge, the Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne, an initiative acknowledged with a commendation in the inaugural Vice-Chancellor's Knowledge Transfer Awards.
Awards
From
2001: Centenary Medal for service to Australian society and science in the biogeography and ecology of Australian plants
2005: Royal Society of Victoria 2005 Research Medal ; Award for Excellence in Australian Publishing, Single Title Category
2009: Officer of the Order of Australia, for service to the advancement of botanical science and research in the field of taxonomy and plant systematics, and to the conservation of Australian flora and fauna
2011: Nancy T. Burbidge Medal, Australasian Systematic Botany Society
Publications (selected)
Educational texts
Biology: an Australian focus / Pauline Ladiges, University of Melbourne, Barbara Evans, University of British Columbia, Robert Saint, University of Melbourne and Bruce Knox. 4th ed. North Ryde, N.S.W.: McGraw-Hill, 2010
Evans, B. K., Ladiges, P., McKenzie, J., & Sanders, Y.. Heinemann Biology 1. Port Melbourne: Pearson.
Biology two: survival mechanisms, continuity and change / Barbara K. Evans, Pauline Y. Ladiges, John A. McKenzie. Barbara K. Evans. 2nd ed. Reprinted with corrections. Port Melbourne: Heinemann Educational Australia,1995