 My name is Betty Maulia Bustam. Many people call me Lia. I'm a lecturer at Siah Kuala University in Bada Aceh, Indonesia. My name is Ben Anderson and I'm from Vancouver, British Columbia in Canada. So I did my undergrad at UBC in Vancouver and then I went to the Masters in Edinburgh, Scotland. The reason why I chose UWA and Western Australia particularly is because Western Australia has a lot of unique plants and many endemic orchids. Also, our country in Indonesia has endemic orchid as well. So I'd like really to develop the protocols for endemic orchids, the protocols that can be implemented to our tissue culture and micro propagation laboratory back in Indonesia. So my research involves looking at the systematics and evolution of a group of grass species in the arid zone in WA. And the species is spin effects and my PhD has involved a lot of field work which has been awesome for me because I really enjoy getting out in the field and it's also involved looking at herbarium material and extracting DNA in the lab here, sequencing it here. But we're hoping to sort of expand that to next generation sequencing in the near future. So I chose UWA because I was interested in the flora here. I've always been sort of drawn to this sort of world biodiversity hotspot and I'm interested in grasses and there was a project on grasses at UWA and I applied for it and got in. I chose UWA because UWA is a part of group 8 university in Australia. So not only UWA has international reputation but the School of Plant Biology well known internationally. As far as where I'm going to go after this, I'm not too sure at this point but I do want to stay in academia researching grasses and plants and my dream job is to be out there collecting the wild coming back, building phylogenies, extracting DNA, that kind of thing. So soon after I finish my study, I will resume my job in my university and continue to develop our micro-population and TISU culture laboratory.