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Dominic Carrington

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Dominic Carrington
NameDominic Carrington

Dominic Carrington is a scholar and practitioner noted for interdisciplinary contributions bridging environmental science, conservation policy, and biodiversity informatics. His work spans academic research, leadership in non-governmental organizations, and advisory roles to international bodies. Carrington has published on ecosystem services, species monitoring, and data standards influencing practice in conservation and natural resource management.

Early life and education

Carrington was born in the United Kingdom and raised near institutions associated with University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, and Imperial College London, where early exposure to collections at the Natural History Museum and fieldwork in the Lake District informed his interests. He studied at University of Edinburgh for undergraduate coursework before completing a master's degree at University College London and a doctorate at King's College London with doctoral research linked to projects at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and collaborations with BirdLife International. His formative training included placements with the World Wide Fund for Nature and the United Nations Environment Programme.

Career

Carrington's career includes academic appointments, leadership roles in conservation organizations, and consultancy for international agencies. He has held faculty positions connected to University of Manchester, University of Glasgow, and University of Bristol, while serving on the boards of International Union for Conservation of Nature, Conservation International, and regional NGOs allied with The Nature Conservancy. He advised policy initiatives at the European Commission, contributed to assessments for the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, and participated in technical working groups for the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands. Carrington also worked with technology partners including teams at Google, Esri, and Microsoft Research on biodiversity data platforms.

Research and contributions

Carrington's research focuses on biodiversity monitoring, spatial ecology, and standards for environmental data interoperability. He contributed to methodological advances used by projects at Global Environment Facility, World Bank, and multinational conservation programs led by United Nations Development Programme. His work on species distribution modeling intersected with applications in IPBES assessments and case studies in the Amazon Rainforest, Congo Basin, and Southeast Asian rainforests. Carrington played a role in developing data standards adopted by the Global Biodiversity Information Facility and promoted open-data approaches aligned with initiatives at DataONE and GBIF nodes. He collaborated with researchers from Smithsonian Institution, Natural History Museum, London, and Australian Museum on large-scale syntheses of occurrence records, and his applied projects informed protected area design with partners at IUCN commissions and regional bodies such as the African Wildlife Foundation.

Awards and honors

Carrington received fellowships and awards recognizing interdisciplinary impact from organizations including the Royal Society and professional societies tied to Zoological Society of London and the British Ecological Society. He was awarded a named fellowship at St Antony's College, Oxford and received distinctions from the Royal Geographical Society for contributions to spatial conservation planning. International recognitions included honorary appointments with the Smithsonian Institution and a medal from a regional consortium linked to the ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity.

Personal life

Carrington has been involved in community initiatives and outreach connecting academic research with practitioners at Natural England, local conservation trusts, and civic groups in regions such as the Scottish Highlands and the Cotswolds. He has mentored scholars affiliated with Commonwealth Scholarship Commission programs and contributed to public dialogues hosted by media outlets including collaborations with producers at the BBC and lectures at forums such as the Hay Festival. Outside professional work, he maintains interests in field naturalism, curation practices at institutions like Kew Gardens, and participation in citizen science platforms such as iNaturalist.

Publications and selected works

Carrington's publications include peer-reviewed articles, technical reports, and books addressing biodiversity informatics, conservation planning, and ecosystem assessments. Selected works are cited in syntheses by IPBES, programmatic reports for the World Bank, and guidance documents used by UNEP-WCMC. He contributed chapters to edited volumes published by academic presses associated with Cambridge University Press and Oxford University Press, and authored influential papers in journals connected to Nature, Science, and specialist journals associated with the Journal of Applied Ecology and Conservation Biology.

Category:Conservation scientists Category:Biodiversity informatics