All Stories

  1. A contact-based social network of lizards is defined by low genetic relatedness among strongly connected individuals
  2. Trypanosomes of Australian mammals: A review
  3. A review of factors influencing the stress response in Australian marsupials
  4. Temporal and spatial dynamics of trypanosomes infecting the brush-tailed bettong (Bettongia penicillata): a cautionary note of disease-induced population decline
  5. Networks and the ecology of parasite transmission: A framework for wildlife parasitology
  6. Testing the robustness of transmission network models to predict ectoparasite loads. One lizard, two ticks and four years
  7. The response of a sleepy lizard social network to altered ecological conditions
  8. Patterns of Nesting Migrations in the Tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus), A Colonially Nesting Island Reptile
  9. Morphological polymorphism of Trypanosoma copemani and description of the genetically diverse T. vegrandis sp. nov. from the critically endangered Australian potoroid, the brush-tailed bettong (Bettongia penicillata (Gray, 1837))
  10. Lovers and fighters in sleepy lizard land: where do aggressive males fit in a social network?
  11. Using social networks to deduce whether residents or dispersers spread parasites in a lizard population
  12. ECOLOGY AND DYNAMICS OF THE BLOOD PARASITE, HEPATOZOON TUATARAE (APICOMPLEXA), IN TUATARA (SPHENODON PUNCTATUS) ON STEPHENS ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND
  13. Social network structure and parasite infection patterns in a territorial reptile, the tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus)
  14. Developmental stages and molecular phylogeny of Hepatozoon tuatarae, a parasite infecting the New Zealand tuatara, Sphenodon punctatus and the tick, Amblyomma sphenodonti
  15. Unravelling causality from correlations: revealing the impacts of endemic ectoparasites on a protected species (tuatara)
  16. Seasonal monogamy and multiple paternity in a wild population of a territorial reptile (tuatara)
  17. Network structure and parasite transmission in a group living lizard, the gidgee skink, Egernia stokesii
  18. Associations between blood parasite infection and a microsatellite DNA allele in an Australian scincid lizard (Egernia stokesii)
  19. Transmission mode and distribution of parasites among groups of the social lizard Egernia stokesii