Rights‐of‐way: a potential conservation resource

MM Gardiner, CB Riley, R Bommarco… - Frontiers in Ecology …, 2018 - Wiley Online Library
Rights‐of‐way (ROW) that enable the transport of humans, goods, and energy (eg roads
and road verges, railways and embankments, and power lines and the corridors they …

[图书][B] Plant gum exudates of the world: sources, distribution, properties, and applications

A Nussinovitch - 2009 - taylorfrancis.com
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 …

Large gaps in canopy reduce road crossing by a gliding mammal

R van der Ree, S Cesarini, P Sunnucks, JL Moore… - Ecology and …, 2010 - JSTOR
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 performance and its relevance to gap crossing by the squirrel glider (Petaurus norfolcensis)

RL Goldingay, BD Taylor - Australian Journal of Zoology, 2009 - CSIRO Publishing
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 …

The Value of Countryside Elements in the Conservation of a Threatened Arboreal Marsupial Petaurus norfolcensis in Agricultural Landscapes of South-Eastern …

MJ Crane, DB Lindenmayer, RB Cunningham - PLoS One, 2014 - journals.plos.org
Human activities, particularly agriculture, have transformed much of the world's terrestrial
environment. Within these anthropogenic landscapes, a variety of relictual and semi-natural …

Eucalypts, wildlife and nature conservation: from individual trees to landscape patterns

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 …

Variation in the home-range size of the squirrel glider (Petaurus norfolcensis)

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 …

Population ecology of the nectar-feeding squirrel glider (Petaurus norfolcensis) in remnant forest in subtropical Australia

DJ Sharpe, RL Goldingay - Wildlife Research, 2010 - CSIRO Publishing
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 …

Facilitated movement over major roads is required to minimise extinction risk in an urban metapopulation of a gliding mammal

BD Taylor, RL Goldingay - Wildlife Research, 2012 - CSIRO Publishing
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 …

Squirrel glider home ranges near urban edges in eastern Australia

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 …