Plant Gum Exudates of the World: Sources, Distributions, Properties, and Applications is the most extensive collection of plant gum exudates in print, containing information on both well …
Roads and traffic reduce landscape connectivity and increase rates of mortality for many species of wildlife. Species that glide from tree to tree may be strongly affected by roads and …
Gliding mammals occur worldwide and many are subject to increasing levels of habitat fragmentation. Knowledge of their ability to cross tree-gaps by gliding is quite poor. We …
Human activities, particularly agriculture, have transformed much of the world's terrestrial environment. Within these anthropogenic landscapes, a variety of relictual and semi-natural …
AF Bennett - Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria, 2016 - CSIRO Publishing
Eucalypts—gums, stringybarks, box, ironbarks and mallees—are key elements of ecosystems occupied by much of Australia's distinctive and unique wildlife. Individual …
RL Goldingay, DJ Sharpe, MDJ Dobson - Australian Mammalogy, 2010 - CSIRO Publishing
The home-range area of animals may vary geographically and in response to habitat quality. We investigated the size of squirrel glider (Petaurus norfolcensis) home ranges near …
Context. Nectar is a temporally variable food resource. However, because few studies describe the population dynamics of nectar-feeding non-flying mammals, it is unclear how …
Context Urbanisation is recognised as a primary cause of biodiversity loss. Roads are an inherent element of this, creating partial or complete barriers to animal movement. Urban …
G Brearley, C McAlpine, S Bell, A Bradley - Journal of Zoology, 2011 - Wiley Online Library
Conservation biology and landscape ecology are increasingly concerned with the effects of urbanization on wildlife, including the influences of habitat edges. This is particularly …