All Stories

  1. Did Curiosity kill the cat? The impacts of aerial baiting and Felixer® deployment on feral cat populations on Three Hummock Island, Tasmania
  2. Evaluating drone-mounted thermal infrared sensors for macropod monitoring in Tasmania
  3. Automated detection of macropods in Tasmania using drone surveys and convolutional neural networks (CNNs)
  4. Edge-of-range camera-trap records of Superb Lyrebird (Menura novaehollandiae) in western and central-north Tasmania (2018–2025)
  5. Uncooling the Planet: Rewilding for Function in a Post Pleistocene Climate
  6. Beta-Diversity Beyond Bias: A Scalable Framework for Reliable Diversity Analysis from Citizen Science Data
  7. Interacting disturbances reshape bird assemblages via divergent community trajectories across southeastern Australia
  8. A mechanistic model of endotherm hibernation applied to the endangered mountain pygmy possum under climate change
  9. A Reproducible, Data‐Driven Approach to Mapping Species Distributions Using Presence‐Only Data and Biogeographic Templates
  10. Survival analysis of wildlife cameras on roads exposed to theft
  11. A general relationship between carrying capacity and extinction risk
  12. Late Pleistocene faunal community patterns disrupted by Holocene human impacts
  13. Recommendation: Uncooling the planet: Rewilding for function in a post-Pleistocene climate — R0/PR4
  14. Epidemiological Dynamics of a Visually Apparent Disease: Camera Trapping and Machine‐Learning Applied to Rumpwear in the Common Brushtail Possum
  15. A general relationship between carrying capacity and extinction risk
  16. MEWC: A user-friendly AI workflow for customised wildlife-image classification
  17. Author response of: MEWC: A user-friendly AI workflow for customised wildlife-image classification. Round#1
  18. Late Pleistocene to Holocene mammal faunal change on a small Landbridge Island in Bass Strait, South-Eastern Australia, and its implications for future reintroductions
  19. Carcass use by mesoscavengers varied across modified landscapes in the absence of top carnivores
  20. Late Pleistocene faunal community patterns disrupted by Holocene human impacts
  21. A pattern‐oriented simulation for forecasting species spread through time and space: a case study on an ecosystem engineer on the move
  22. Large‐scale and long‐term wildlife research and monitoring using camera traps: a continental synthesis
  23. A Geological Imprint on Plant Biodiversity: Eastern Australia's Cenozoic Volcanic Flora
  24. Camouflage or Coincidence? Investigating the Effects of Spatial and Temporal Environmental Features on Feral Cat Morphology in Tasmania
  25. Southeast Asian biodiversity is a fifth lower in deforested versus intact forests
  26. Survival analysis of wildlife cameras exposed to theft
  27. Seasonal and depth-dependent thermoregulatory benefits of burrows for wombats – The largest burrowing marsupials
  28. Are Australia’s volcanic-forests “biogeographic continental islands”?
  29. Here kitty-kitty: lure choice for predator attraction in a temperate environment
  30. Shedding light on predator detections: evaluating the impact of camera-trap flash type for feral cat monitoring through in-field observations
  31. Evaluating the behavioural responses of wildlife and domestic animals to drones: a Tasmanian case study     
  32. Measuring the human-dimension of outdoor recreation and its impacts on terrestrial wildlife
  33. The future of Southeast Asia's biodiversity: A crisis with a hopeful alternative
  34. Camouflage or Coincidence? Investigating the Effects of Spatial and Temporal Environmental Features on Feral Cat Morphology in Tasmania
  35. A non-invasive approach to measuring body dimensions of wildlife with camera-traps: a felid field trial.
  36. A pattern-oriented simulation for forecasting species spread through time and space: A case study on an ecosystem engineer on the move
  37. A non‐invasive approach to measuring body dimensions of wildlife with camera traps: A felid field trial
  38. A new OSL dose model to account for post-depositional mixing of sediments
  39. Wildlife Conservation on Private Land: A Social-Ecological Systems Study
  40. Decision: What is extinction research? — R0/PR3
  41. Wildlife conservation on private land: a social-ecological systems study
  42. A non-invasive approach to measuring body dimensions of wildlife with camera-traps: a felid field trial
  43. What is extinction research?
  44. What passes through the extinction filter? Historical and contemporary patterns of vulnerability of the most extinction-prone bird family (Aves: Rallidae)
  45. A user-friendly AI workflow for customised wildlife-image classification
  46. The Tasmanian Thylacine Sighting Record Database (TTSRD): 1,223 quality-rated and geo-located Thylacine observations from 1910 to 2019
  47. Tree species richness and evenness affect forest biomass differently across biogeographic regions
  48. Recommendation: What passes through the extinction filter? Historical and contemporary patterns of vulnerability of the most extinction-prone bird family (Aves: Rallidae) — R1/PR5
  49. Projecting the dynamics of invading deer with pattern‐oriented modelling to support management decision‐making
  50. Association between land use, land cover, plant genera, and pollinator abundance in mixed-use landscapes
  51. Evaluating behavioural responses of macropods to drones
  52. Land use change drives major loss of Southeast Asian biodiversity
  53. A fast re‐sampling method for using reliability ratings of sightings with extinction‐date estimators: Reply
  54. Transience of public attention in conservation science
  55. A new OSL dose model to account for post-depositional mixing of sediments
  56. Resolving when (and where) the Thylacine went extinct
  57. A secure future? Human urban and agricultural land use benefits a flightless island-endemic rail despite climate change
  58. A novel, data-driven approach to derive spatially coherent extent of occurrence maps for biogeographic studies
  59. Host, environment, and anthropogenic factors drive landscape dynamics of an environmentally transmitted pathogen: Sarcoptic mange in the bare‐nosed wombat
  60. Modelling of fossil and contemporary data suggest the Broad‐toothed rat (Mastacomys fuscus) currently occupies a small part of its available climatic niche: Implications of paleontological data for conservation of a threatened species
  61. Pesticides reduce tropical amphibian and reptile diversity in agricultural landscapes in Indonesia
  62. Cross validation for model selection: A review with examples from ecology
  63. Extinction of the Tasmanian emu and opportunities for rewilding
  64. Landscape functional connectivity for butterflies under different scenarios of land-use, land-cover, and climate change in Australia
  65. Extinction: A synthesis of disciplines for theoretical and practical advances
  66. Dominant carnivore loss benefits native avian and invasive mammalian scavengers
  67. Range and extinction dynamics of the steppe bison in Siberia: A pattern‐oriented modelling approach
  68. Climate change without extinction: Tasmania's small-mammal communities persisted through the Last Glacial Maximum–Holocene transition
  69. Predicted impacts of climate change and extreme temperature events on the future distribution of fruit bat species in Australia
  70. Signs of Rumpwear in the Common Ringtail Possum, Pseudocheirus peregrinus
  71. Societal extinction of species
  72. Predicting spatial and seasonal patterns of wildlife–vehicle collisions in high-risk areas
  73. Population demography of the Tasmanian short-beaked echidna (
  74. Landscape functional connectivity for butterflies under different scenarios of land-use, land-cover, and climate change in Australia
  75. Investigating Avian Behaviour Using Opportunistic Camera-Trap Imagery Reveals an Untapped Data Source
  76. Dynamics and predicted distribution of an irrupting ‘sleeper’ population: fallow deer in Tasmania
  77. Too hot for the devil? Did climate change cause the mid‐Holocene extinction of the Tasmanian devil Sarcophilus harrisii from mainland Australia?
  78. Spatial pattern analysis of line‐segment data in ecology
  79. Cover Image
  80. Evaluating scat surveys as a tool for population and community assessments
  81. Value-added diagnostics for the assessment and validation of integrated assessment models
  82. Process‐explicit models reveal pathway to extinction for woolly mammoth using pattern‐oriented validation
  83. poems: R package for simulating species' range dynamics using pattern‐oriented validation
  84. Dominant carnivore loss benefits native avian and invasive mammalian scavengers
  85. Parsimonious model selection using information theory: a modified selection rule
  86. Robust, data-driven bioregionalizations emerge from diversity concordance
  87. Characterizing the spatio-temporal threats, conservation hotspots and conservation gaps for the most extinction-prone bird family (Aves: Rallidae)
  88. Factors affecting success of conservation translocations of terrestrial vertebrates: A global systematic review
  89. Hot, unpredictable weather interacts with land use to restrict the distribution of the Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo
  90. Roadkill islands: Carnivore extinction shifts seasonal use of roadside carrion by generalist avian scavenger
  91. The Patterns and Causes of Dermatitis in Terrestrial and Semi-Aquatic Mammalian Wildlife
  92. Dynamics and predicted distribution of an irrupting ‘sleeper’ population: fallow deer in Tasmania
  93. Predicted the impacts of climate change and extreme-weather events on the future distribution of fruit bats in Australia
  94. Hot, unpredictable weather interacts with land use to restrict the distribution of the Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo
  95. Accidents alter animal fitness landscapes
  96. Quantifying 25 years of disease‐caused declines in Tasmanian devil populations: host density drives spatial pathogen spread
  97. Roadkill islands: carnivore extinction shifts seasonal use of roadside carrion by generalist avian scavenger
  98. Process-explicit models reveal pathway to extinction for woolly mammoth using pattern-oriented validation
  99. Lessons from a century of conservation translocations
  100. Association between land use, land cover, plant genera, and pollinator abundance in mixed-use landscapes
  101. Characterising the spatio-temporal threats, conservation hotspots, and conservation gaps for the most extinction-prone bird family (Aves: Rallidae)
  102. Predicting spatial and seasonal patterns of wildlife-vehicle collisions in high-risk areas
  103. Resolving when (and where) the Thylacine went extinct
  104. Spatial pattern analysis of line-segment data in ecology
  105. Training future generations to deliver evidence‐based conservation and ecosystem management
  106. Roughing it: terrain is crucial in identifying novel translocation sites for the vulnerable brush-tailed rock-wallaby (Petrogale pencillata)
  107. Compromised Ecosystem Services From Urban Aerial Microbiomes: A Review of Impacts on Human Immune Function
  108. Urbanisation reduces the abundance and diversity of airborne microbes - but what does that mean for our health? A systematic review
  109. Identifying island safe havens to prevent the extinction of the World’s largest lizard from global warming
  110. Drivers of increasing global crop production: A decomposition analysis
  111. Using paleo-archives to safeguard biodiversity under climate change
  112. Protected-area planning in the Brazilian Amazon should prioritize additionality and permanence, not leakage mitigation
  113. Trophic rewilding of native extirpated predators on Bass Strait Islands could benefit woodland birds
  114. iEcology: Harnessing Large Online Resources to Generate Ecological Insights
  115. A validated ensemble method for multinomial land-cover classification
  116. Ecosystem-Based Tsunami Mitigation for Tropical Biodiversity Hotspots
  117. Urban-associated diseases: Candidate diseases, environmental risk factors, and a path forward
  118. Bioregionalization approaches for conservation: methods, biases, and their implications for Australian biodiversity
  119. A flexible tool to prioritize areas for conservation combining landscape units, measures of biodiversity, and threats
  120. A fast re‐sampling method for using reliability ratings of sightings with extinction‐date estimators
  121. Ravens exploit wildlife roadkill and agricultural landscapes but do not affect songbird assemblages
  122. The Australian National Rabbit Database: 50 yr of population monitoring of an invasive species
  123. Importance of the Local Environment on Nutrient Cycling and Litter Decomposition in a Tall Eucalypt Forest
  124. First, do no harm: A systematic review of deforestation spillovers from protected areas
  125. Habitat suitability, live abundance and their link to road mortality of Tasmanian wildlife
  126. Forecasting future global food demand: A systematic review and meta-analysis of model complexity
  127. Economic Feasibility of Energy Supply by Small Modular Nuclear Reactors on Small Islands: Case Studies of Jeju, Tasmania and Tenerife
  128. Astro‐ecology? Shifting the interdisciplinary collaboration paradigm
  129. Deficiencies in estimating the extinction date of the thylacine with mixed certainty data
  130. Impact of intense disturbance on the structure and composition of wet-eucalypt forests: A case study from the Tasmanian 2016 wildfires
  131. Disentangling synergistic disease dynamics: Implications for the viral biocontrol of rabbits
  132. Improving performance and transferability of small mammal species distribution models
  133. Nature’s untold stories: an overview on the availability and type of on-line data on long-term biodiversity monitoring
  134. Analyzing linear spatial features in ecology
  135. At the crossroads: An uncertain future facing the electricity-generation sector in South Korea
  136. Silver Buckshot or Bullet: Is a Future “Energy Mix” Necessary?
  137. A nuclear- to-gas transition in South Korea: Is it environmentally friendly or economically viable?
  138. Economic and environmental costs of replacing nuclear fission with solar and wind energy in Sweden
  139. What is the evidence for planetary tipping points?
  140. A practical method for creating a digital topographic surface for ecological plots using ground-based measurements
  141. How complex should models be? Comparing correlative and mechanistic range dynamics models
  142. Burden of proof: A comprehensive review of the feasibility of 100% renewable-electricity systems
  143. Missing the wood for the trees? New ideas on defining forests and forest degradation
  144. Dangerous Ideas in Zoology: Plenary Session 1
  145. PaleoView: a tool for generating continuous climate projections spanning the last 21 000 years at regional and global scales
  146. Biodiversity losses and conservation responses in the Anthropocene
  147. Look Down to See What’s Up: A Systematic Overview of Treefall Dynamics in Forests
  148. Closing the Cycle: How South Australia and Asia Can Benefit from Re-inventing Used Nuclear Fuel Management
  149. How much can nuclear energy do about global warming?
  150. Pattern, process, inference and prediction in extinction biology
  151. Nuclear energy and bio energy carbon capture and storage, keys for obtaining 1.5°C mean surface temperature limit
  152. Innovations and limits in methods of forecasting global environmental change
  153. Extinction debt from climate change for frogs in the wet tropics
  154. Predicting and mitigating future biodiversity loss using long-term ecological proxies
  155. Emigration is costly, but immigration has benefits in human-altered landscapes
  156. Sensitivity Analysis of Range Dynamics Models (SARDM): Quantifying the influence of parameter uncertainty on forecasts of extinction risk from global change
  157. A comprehensive database of quality-rated fossil ages for Sahul’s Quaternary vertebrates
  158. Egress! How technophilia can reinforce biophilia to improve ecological restoration
  159. Targeting season and age for optimizing control of invasive rabbits
  160. Implications of Australia's Population Policy for Future Greenhouse Gas Emissions Targets
  161. An efficient protocol for the global sensitivity analysis of stochastic ecological models
  162. How to Rank Journals
  163. What caused extinction of the Pleistocene megafauna of Sahul?
  164. Climate change not to blame for late Quaternary megafauna extinctions in Australia
  165. Tick exposure and extreme climate events impact survival and threaten the persistence of a long-lived lizard
  166. Obliquity-driven expansion of North Atlantic sea ice during the last glacial
  167. Fire frequency is relatively more important than fire size — A reply to Russell-Smith et al
  168. Criteria for assessing the quality of Middle Pleistocene to Holocene vertebrate fossil ages
  169. Hot topics in biodiversity and climate change research
  170. Environmental and health impacts of a policy to phase out nuclear power in Sweden
  171. Abrupt warming events drove Late Pleistocene Holarctic megafaunal turnover
  172. Geographic variation in the ecological effects of extinction of Australia's Pleistocene megafauna
  173. Fire frequency matters more than fire size: Testing the pyrodiversity–biodiversity paradigm for at-risk small mammals in an Australian tropical savanna
  174. Fire impacts recruitment more than survival of small-mammals in a tropical savanna
  175. Potential for Worldwide Displacement of Fossil-Fuel Electricity by Nuclear Energy in Three Decades Based on Extrapolation of Regional Deployment Data
  176. Energy research within the UNFCCC: a proposal to guard against ongoing climate-deadlock†
  177. Local and global pyrogeographic evidence that indigenous fire management creates pyrodiversity
  178. The case for a near-term commercial demonstration of the Integral Fast Reactor
  179. Global zero-carbon energy pathways using viable mixes of nuclear and renewables
  180. Uncertainties in dating constrain model choice for inferring extinction time from fossil records
  181. Using dung fungi to interpret decline and extinction of megaherbivores: problems and solutions
  182. Reply to O’Neill et al. and O’Sullivan: Fertility reduction will help, but only in the long term
  183. Timing and severity of immunizing diseases in rabbits is controlled by seasonal matching of host and pathogen dynamics
  184. Beyond wind: furthering development of clean energy in South Australia
  185. Forest resilience and tipping points at different spatio-temporal scales: approaches and challenges
  186. Why nuclear energy is essential to reduce anthropogenic greenhouse gas emission rates
  187. Evidence for a broad-scale decline in giant Australian cuttlefish (Sepia apama) abundance from non-targeted survey data
  188. Ecological and economic benefits to cattle rangelands of restoring an apex predator
  189. Modelling range dynamics under global change: which framework and why?
  190. Key role for nuclear energy in global biodiversity conservation
  191. Nuclear power can reduce emissions and maintain a strong economy: Rating Australia’s optimal future electricity-generation mix by technologies and policies
  192. Why nuclear energy is sustainable and has to be part of the energy mix
  193. South Korean energy scenarios show how nuclear power can reduce future energy and environmental costs
  194. Human population reduction is not a quick fix for environmental problems
  195. Empirical tests of harvest-induced body-size evolution along a geographic gradient in Australian macropods
  196. Better forecasts of range dynamics using genetic data
  197. 50/500 rules need upward revision to 100/1000 – Response to Franklin et al.
  198. Predictors of contraction and expansion of area of occupancy for British birds
  199. How interactions between animal movement and landscape processes modify local range dynamics and extinction risk
  200. Forecasts of habitat suitability improve habitat corridor efficacy in rapidly changing environments
  201. Clarity and Precision of Language Are a Necessary Route in Ecology
  202. The influence of non-climate predictors at local and landscape resolutions depends on the autecology of the species
  203. Spatial Climate Patterns Explain Negligible Variation in Strength of Compensatory Density Feedbacks in Birds and Mammals
  204. An ecological regime shift resulting from disrupted predator–prey interactions in Holocene Australia
  205. Effects of prey metapopulation structure on the viability of black‐footed ferrets in plague‐impacted landscapes: a metamodelling approach
  206. Ecology Needs a Convention of Nomenclature
  207. Rapid deforestation threatens mid-elevational endemic birds but climate change is most important at higher elevations
  208. Genetics in conservation management: Revised recommendations for the 50/500 rules, Red List criteria and population viability analyses
  209. Effect of fire on small mammals: a systematic review
  210. Erratum: Corrigendum: Primary forests are irreplaceable for sustaining tropical biodiversity
  211. The Ecological Footprint Remains a Misleading Metric of Global Sustainability
  212. Does the Shoe Fit? Real versus Imagined Ecological Footprints
  213. Tracking shifting range margins using geographical centroids of metapopulations weighted by population density
  214. Rapid megafaunal extinction following human arrival throughout the New World
  215. Population dynamics can be more important than physiological limits for determining range shifts under climate change
  216. Changes in autumn arrival of long-distance migratory birds in Southeast Asia
  217. Lack of chronological support for stepwise prehuman extinctions of Australian megafauna
  218. Adapted conservation measures are required to save the Iberian lynx in a changing climate
  219. Rainfall and temperature variation does not explain arid species diversity in outback Australia
  220. Does the terrestrial biosphere have planetary tipping points?
  221. Tools for integrating range change, extinction risk and climate change information into conservation management
  222. Conservation management and sustainable harvest quotas are sensitive to choice of climate modelling approach for two marine gastropods
  223. Brave new green world – Consequences of a carbon economy for the conservation of Australian biodiversity
  224. Evaluating options for the future energy mix of Japan after the Fukushima nuclear crisis
  225. 50/500 rule and minimum viable populations: response to Jamieson and Allendorf
  226. Evaluating options for sustainable energy mixes in South Korea using scenario analysis
  227. Using climate variables to predict small mammal occurrence in hot, dry environments
  228. Climate-Induced Elevational Range Shifts and Increase in Plant Species Richness in a Himalayan Biodiversity Epicentre
  229. Scale dependency of metapopulation models used to predict climate change impacts on small mammals
  230. Using plant distributions to predict the current and future range of a rare lizard
  231. No need for disease: testing extinction hypotheses for the thylacine using multi-species metamodels
  232. Predicting the Distribution of Commercially Important Invertebrate Stocks under Future Climate
  233. Ecologically realistic estimates of maximum population growth using informed Bayesian priors
  234. Long-Term Field Data and Climate-Habitat Models Show That Orangutan Persistence Depends on Effective Forest Management and Greenhouse Gas Mitigation
  235. 5 Land use Changes Imperil South-East Asian Biodiversity
  236. Strength of density feedback in census data increases from slow to fast life histories
  237. Strange bedfellows? Techno-fixes to solve the big conservation issues in southern Asia
  238. Decoupling of component and ensemble density feedbacks in birds and mammals
  239. Managing the long-term persistence of a rare cockatoo under climate change
  240. Nuclear waste: Use fast reactors to burn plutonium
  241. Long-term breeding phenology shift in royal penguins
  242. Managed relocation as an adaptation strategy for mitigating climate change threats to the persistence of an endangered lizard
  243. Density dependence: an ecological Tower of Babel
  244. Booming during a bust: Asynchronous population responses of arid zone lizards to climatic variables
  245. Genetic structure of introduced swamp buffalo subpopulations in tropical Australia
  246. The Aftermath of Megafaunal Extinction: Ecosystem Transformation in Pleistocene Australia
  247. Could nuclear fission energy, etc., solve the greenhouse problem? The affirmative case
  248. European rabbit survival and recruitment are linked to epidemiological and environmental conditions in their exotic range
  249. Robust estimates of extinction time in the geological record
  250. Plant extinction risk under climate change: are forecast range shifts alone a good indicator of species vulnerability to global warming?
  251. Strengthening forecasts of climate change impacts with multi-model ensemble averaged projections using MAGICC/SCENGEN 5.3
  252. Quaternary Extinctions and Their Link to Climate Change
  253. Conserving imperiled species: a comparison of the IUCN Red List and U.S. Endangered Species Act
  254. Minimum viable population size: not magic, but necessary
  255. Climate Change Biology . By Lee Hannah. Academic Press. Amsterdam and Boston (Massachusetts): Elsevier. $59.95 (paper). xii + 402 p.; ill.; index. ISBN: 978‐0‐12‐374182‐0. 2011.
  256. Multi-model climate projections for biodiversity risk assessments
  257. Experimental comparison of aerial larvicides and habitat modification for controlling disease-carrying Aedes vigilax mosquitoes
  258. Better SAFE than sorry
  259. Novel coupling of individual-based epidemiological and demographic models predicts realistic dynamics of tuberculosis in alien buffalo
  260. Twenty Landmark Papers in Biodiversity Conservation
  261. Model-based adaptive spatial sampling for occurrence map construction
  262. Primary forests are irreplaceable for sustaining tropical biodiversity
  263. The tropical frontier in avian climate impact research
  264. Geographic range determinants of two commercially important marine molluscs
  265. Homage to an Avant-Garde Conservation Leader, Navjot Sodhi
  266. Specialist resources are key to improving small mammal distribution models
  267. Extinctions: consider all species
  268. Global Climate Change: Convergence of Disciplines. By Arnold J. Bloom. Sunderland (Massachusetts): Sinauer Associates. $59.95 (paper). x + 398 p.; ill.; index. ISBN: 978‐0‐87893‐027‐2. 2011.
  269. Reconstructing the dynamics of ancient human populations from radiocarbon dates: 10 000 years of population growth in Australia
  270. The SAFE index: using a threshold population target to measure relative species threat
  271. An aggregative response of the tropical Australian magpie goose (Anseranas semipalmata) to seasonal floodplains
  272. How carbon pricing changes the relative competitiveness of low-carbon baseload generating technologies
  273. Fertility partially drives the relative success of two introduced bovines (Bubalus bubalis and Bos javanicus) in the Australian tropics
  274. Climate change, Variability and Conservation impacts in Australia.
  275. The use of Australian bioregions as spatial units of analysis to explore relationships between climate and songbird diversity
  276. Nuclear power: yes or no?
  277. Endemic predators, invasive prey and native diversity
  278. Relative need for conservation assessments of vascular plant species among ecoregions
  279. Limited evidence for the demographic Allee effect from numerous species across taxa
  280. Finding needles (or ants) in haystacks: predicting locations of invasive organisms to inform eradication and containment
  281. Wetland conservation and sustainable use under global change: a tropical Australian case study using magpie geese
  282. Decline and likely extinction of a northern Australian native rodent, the Brush-tailed Rabbit-rat Conilurus penicillatus
  283. The theta-logistic is unreliable for modelling most census data
  284. Deforestation and Avian Extinction on Tropical Landbridge Islands
  285. Turning back the clock on the extinction of megafauna in Australia
  286. Effects of Land-Use Change on Community Composition of Tropical Amphibians and Reptiles in Sulawesi, Indonesia
  287. And Then There Were None?
  288. Spatially explicit spreadsheet modelling for optimising the efficiency of reducing invasive animal density
  289. Satellite telemetry and seasonal movements of Magpie Geese ( Anseranas semipalmata ) in tropical northern Australia
  290. Pragmatic population viability targets in a rapidly changing world
  291. The conservation biologist's toolbox – principles for the design and analysis of conservation studies
  292. Ancient DNA reveals late survival of mammoth and horse in interior Alaska
  293. Finding needles (or ants) in haystacks: Bayesian prediction of locations of invasive organisms to inform eradication and containment programs
  294. Putative extinction of two sawfish species in Mexico and the United States
  295. Conservation value of cacao agroforestry for amphibians and reptiles in South-East Asia: combining correlative models with follow-up field experiments
  296. Quantifying the Drivers of Larval Density Patterns in Two Tropical Mosquito Species to Maximize Control Efficiency
  297. Integrating bioclimate with population models to improve forecasts of species extinctions under climate change
  298. Survival estimation in a long-lived monitor lizard: radio-tracking of Varanus mertensi
  299. Climate Change Enhances the Potential Impact of Infectious Disease and Harvest on Tropical Waterfowl
  300. The state and conservation of Southeast Asian biodiversity
  301. Tropical turmoil: a biodiversity tragedy in progress
  302. Tropical Conservation Biology: response to Lugo's tendentious review
  303. Flooding Policy Makers with Evidence to Save Forests
  304. Dynamics of range margins for metapopulations under climate change
  305. Predicting the Timing and Magnitude of Tropical Mosquito Population Peaks for Maximizing Control Efficiency
  306. How will climate change affect plant–herbivore interactions? A tropical waterbird case study
  307. Global warming tugs at trophic interactions
  308. A Meta-Analysis of the Impact of Anthropogenic Forest Disturbance on Southeast Asia's Biotas
  309. Methods for Determining Viability of Wildlife Populations in Large Landscapes
  310. The state and conservation of Southeast Asian biodiversity
  311. Why tropical island endemics are acutely susceptible to global change
  312. ENDOGENOUS AND EXOGENOUS FACTORS CONTROLLING TEMPORAL ABUNDANCE PATTERNS OF TROPICAL MOSQUITOES
  313. Experimental evidence for density-dependent responses to mortality of snake-necked turtles
  314. Shifting trends: detecting environmentally mediated regulation in long-lived marine vertebrates using time-series data
  315. Extinction risk scales better to generations than to years
  316. Synergies among extinction drivers under global change
  317. Decline in whale shark size and abundance at Ningaloo Reef over the past decade: The world’s largest fish is getting smaller
  318. ECOLOGICAL-ECONOMIC MODELS OF SUSTAINABLE HARVEST FOR AN ENDANGERED BUT EXOTIC MEGAHERBIVORE IN NORTHERN AUSTRALIA
  319. How to monitor elusive lizards: comparison of capture–recapture methods on giant day geckos (Gekkonidae, Phelsuma madagascariensis grandis) in the Masoala rainforest exhibit, Zurich Zoo
  320. Threat or invasive status in legumes is related to opposite extremes of the same ecological and life-history attributes
  321. The Allure of the Few
  322. Importance of endogenous feedback controlling the long-term abundance of tropical mosquito species
  323. Fragile Southeast Asian biotas
  324. Measuring the Meltdown: Drivers of Global Amphibian Extinction and Decline
  325. Synergies between climate change, extinctions and invasive vertebrates
  326. Why tropical island endemics are acutely susceptible to global change
  327. Kyoto: doing our best is no longer enough
  328. Global evidence that deforestation amplifies flood risk and severity in the developing world
  329. Demographic response of snake-necked turtles correlates with indigenous harvest and feral pig predation in tropical northern Australia
  330. Monitoring Contrasting Land Management in the Savanna Landscapes of Northern Australia
  331. Minimum viable population size: A meta-analysis of 30 years of published estimates
  332. Modelling to forestall extinction of Australian tropical birds
  333. Correlates of extinction proneness in tropical angiosperms
  334. Artificial nest predation rates vary among habitats in the Australian monsoon tropics
  335. Indigenous harvest, exotic pig predation and local persistence of a long-lived vertebrate: managing a tropical freshwater turtle for sustainability and conservation
  336. Low genetic diversity in the bottlenecked population of endangered non-native banteng in northern Australia
  337. Multiscale modelling of the drivers of rainforest boundary dynamics in Kakadu National Park, northern Australia
  338. Land management affects grass biomass in the Eucalyptus tetrodonta savannas of monsoonal Australia
  339. Dangers of Sensationalizing Conservation Biology
  340. Marine extinctions revisited
  341. Can Morphometrics Predict Sex in Varanids?
  342. Would the Australian megafauna have become extinct if humans had never colonised the continent? Comments on “A review of the evidence for a human role in the extinction of Australian megafauna and an alternative explanation” by S. Wroe and J. Field
  343. Revisiting Chamberlin: Multiple Working Hypotheses for the 21st Century
  344. Current and future threats from non-indigenous animal species in northern Australia: a spotlight on World Heritage Area Kakadu National Park
  345. Feral pig predation threatens the indigenous harvest and local persistence of snake-necked turtles in northern Australia
  346. Realistic levels of inbreeding depression strongly affect extinction risk in wild populations
  347. Postcards from the past: charting the landscape-scale conversion of tropical Australian savanna to closed forest during the 20th century
  348. Rarity bites
  349. Threat and response: A decade of decline in a regionally endangered rainforest palm affected by fire and introduced animals
  350. Environmental and allometric drivers of tree growth rates in a north Australian savanna
  351. Managing an Endangered Asian Bovid in an Australian National Park: The Role and Limitations of Ecological-Economic Models in Decision-Making
  352. INCORPORATING KNOWN SOURCES OF UNCERTAINTY TO DETERMINE PRECAUTIONARY HARVESTS OF SALTWATER CROCODILES
  353. Growth and survival of two north Australian relictual tree species, Allosyncarpia ternata (Myrtaceae) and Callitris intratropica (Cupressaceae)
  354. STRENGTH OF EVIDENCE FOR DENSITY DEPENDENCE IN ABUNDANCE TIME SERIES OF 1198 SPECIES
  355. Letters to the editor about the contents of past issues and comment on topics of current concern toFrontiersreaders
  356. Unreported yet massive deforestation driving loss of endemic biodiversity in Indian Himalaya
  357. Momentum Drives the Crash: Mass Extinction in the Tropics1
  358. Is there a Pleistocene archaeological site at Cuddie Springs?
  359. Minimum viable population sizes and global extinction risk are unrelated
  360. Conservation Value of Non-Native Banteng in Northern Australia
  361. Southeast Asian birds in peril
  362. Short overlap of humans and megafauna in Pleistocene Australia
  363. Selective hunting of juveniles as a cause of the imperceptible overkill of the Australian Pleistocene megafauna
  364. Southeast Asian birds in peril
  365. Is the Carpentarian Rock-rat Zyzomys palatalis critically endangered?
  366. Short overlap of humans and megafauna in Pleistocene Australia
  367. Body size and growth in tropical small mammals: examining variation using non-linear mixed effects models
  368. Response to Hau : Beyond Singapore: Hong Kong and Asian biodiversity
  369. Persistence of lowland rainforest birds in a recently logged area in central Java
  370. Beyond Singapore: Hong Kong and Asian biodiversity
  371. One equation fits overkill: why allometry underpins both prehistoric and modern body size-biased extinctions
  372. Disease and the devil: density-dependent epidemiological processes explain historical population fluctuations in the Tasmanian devil
  373. Sustainable harvest regimes for magpie geese ( Anseranas semipalmata ) under spatial and temporal heterogeneity
  374. Plausible bounds for maximum rate of increase in magpie geese ( Anseranas semipalmata ): implications for harvest
  375. Southeast Asian biodiversity: an impending disaster
  376. Ecological Correlates of Extinction Proneness in Tropical Butterflies
  377. Correlations among Extinction Risks Assessed by Different Systems of Threatened Species Categorization
  378. Population Ecology: First Principles
  379. The carrying capacity of ecosystems
  380. Most species are not driven to extinction before genetic factors impact them
  381. Large Estimates of Minimum Viable Population Sizes
  382. Comparing predictions of extinction risk using models and subjective judgement
  383. Large Estimates of Minimum Viable Population Sizes
  384. Does Inbreeding and Loss of Genetic Diversity Decrease Disease Resistance?
  385. What are the best correlates of predicted extinction risk?
  386. Co-Extinctions of Tropical Butterflies and their Hostplants
  387. The uncertain blitzkrieg of Pleistocene megafauna
  388. Australasian bird invasions: accidents of history?
  389. Co-Extinctions of Tropical Butterflies and their Hostplants1
  390. Does foraging mode influence life history traits? A comparative study of growth, maturation and survival of two species of sympatric snakes from south‐eastern Australia
  391. Undesirable aliens: factors determining the distribution of three invasive bird species in Singapore
  392. Abundance and Projected Control of Invasive House Crows in Singapore
  393. Estimates of minimum viable population sizes for vertebrates and factors influencing those estimates
  394. Demographic sensitivity and persistence of the threatened white- and orange-bellied frogs of Western Australia
  395. Catastrophic extinctions follow deforestation in Singapore
  396. Determinants of survival for the northern brown bandicoot under a landscape-scale fire experiment
  397. Book Review: 2
  398. Explaining the Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions: Models, chronologies, and assumptions
  399. Roost Characteristics of Invasive Mynas in Singapore
  400. Modelling strategies for the management of the critically endangered Carpentarian rock-rat (Zyzomys palatalis) of northern Australia
  401. Modelling strategies for the management of the critically endangered Carpentarian rock-rat (Zyzomys palatalis) of northern Australia
  402. Nest site selection of the house crow (Corvus splendens), an urban invasive bird species in Singapore and implications for its management
  403. Collectors endanger Australia's most threatened snake, the broad-headed snake Hoplocephalus bungaroides
  404. Critiques of PVA Ask the Wrong Questions: Throwing the Heuristic Baby Out with the Numerical Bath Water
  405. What makes a species vulnerable to extinction? Comparative life‐history traits of two sympatric snakes
  406. Contribution of Inbreeding to Extinction Risk in Threatened Species
  407. Population viability analyses on a cycling population: a cautionary tale
  408. Pessimistic and Optimistic Bias in Population Viability Analysis
  409. Predictive accuracy of population viability analysis in conservation biology
  410. Differences and Congruencies between PVA Packages: the Importance of Sex Ratio for Predictions of Extinction Risk
  411. Comparison of the population viability analysis packages GAPPS, INMAT, RAMAS and VORTEX for the whooping crane (Grus americana)
  412. Comparison of the population viability analysis packages GAPPS, INMAT, RAMAS and VORTEX for the whooping crane (Grus americana)
  413. Examining threats faced by island birds: a population viability analysis on the Capricorn silvereye using long-term data
  414. Does population viability analysis software predict the behaviour of real populations? A retrospective study on the Lord Howe Island woodhen Tricholimnas sylvestris (Sclater)
  415. How secure is the Lord Howe Island Woodhen? A population viability analysis using VORTEX
  416. V.1 Causes and Consequences of Species Extinctions