On line 7 of page 61 of the book a guide to quantum groups, a Poisson bracket is defined on $\mathbb{C}[GL_n]$ for every classical $r$-matrix as follows.
Let $V$ be a vector space with a basis $v_1, \ldots, v_n$, and $r \in \mathfrak{g} \otimes \mathfrak{g}$ is a skew-symmetric classical $r$-matrix. Suppose that \begin{align} r(v_i \otimes v_j) = \sum_{k,l} r_{ij}^{(kl)} v_k \otimes v_l, \end{align} for some $r_{ij}^{(kl)} \in \mathbb{C}$.
Define \begin{align} \{c_{i j}, c_{kl}\} = \sum_{s,s'} r_{s',s}^{(j l)} c_{ks} c_{i s'} - \sum_{s, s' } r_{ik}^{(s' s)} c_{s' j} c_{s l}, \ i,j,k,l = 1,2, \ldots, n. \quad (1) \end{align} Here $c_{ij}$ are natural coordinates on $\mathbb{C}[GL_n]$. By using classical $r$-matrix \begin{align} \sum_{s} (r_{sj}^{(s_3s_4)} r_{ik}^{(ss_2)} - r_{sk}^{(s_3s_2)} r_{ij}^{(ss_4)} + r_{is}^{(s_3s_4)} r_{jk}^{(ss_2)} - r_{sk}^{(s_4s_2)} r_{ij}^{(s_3s)} + r_{is}^{(s_3s_2)} r_{jk}^{(s_4s)} - r_{js}^{(s_4s_2)} r_{ik}^{(s_3s)}) =0 \end{align} and \begin{align} r_{ij}^{(kl)} = - r_{ji}^{(lk)}, \end{align} we can show that the bracket defined by (1) is Poisson. Is it possible to modify (1) such that it is a super Poisson bracket on $\mathbb{C}[GL(m|n)]$? Thank you very much.