Register      Login
Australian Mammalogy Australian Mammalogy Society
Journal of the Australian Mammal Society

Articles citing this paper

Bait preference for remote camera trap studies of the endangered northern quoll (Dasyurus hallucatus)

Caitlin Austin A B E , Katherine Tuft C , Daniel Ramp B , Teigan Cremona A D and Jonathan K. Webb A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A School of Life Sciences, University of Technology Sydney, PO Box 123, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia.

B The Centre for Compassionate Conservation, University of Technology Sydney, PO Box 123, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia.

C Mornington Wildlife Sanctuary, Australian Wildlife Conservancy, Derby, WA 6728, Australia.

D Research Institute of Environment and Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT 0909, Australia.

E Corresponding author. Email: caitlin.m.austin@student.uts.edu.au

Australian Mammalogy 39(1) 72-77 https://doi.org/10.1071/AM15053
Submitted: 17 December 2015  Accepted: 20 July 2016   Published: 31 August 2016



17 articles found in Crossref database.

Assessing the effectiveness of attractants to increase camera trap detections of North American mammals
Buyaskas Michael, Evans Bryn E., Mortelliti Alessio
Mammalian Biology. 2020 100(1). p.91
Which bait should I use? Insights from a camera trap study in a highly diverse cerrado forest
Sebastián-González Esther, Morales-Reyes Zebensui, Naves-Alegre Lara, Durá Alemañ Carlos Javier, Gonçalves Lima Leilda, Machado Lima Lourival, Sánchez-Zapata José Antonio
European Journal of Wildlife Research. 2020 66(6).
Taking the bait: The influence of attractants and microhabitat on detections of fauna by remote‐sensing cameras
Rendall Anthony R., White John G., Cooke Raylene, Whisson Desley A., Schneider Thomas, Beilharz Lisa, Poelsma Eleanor, Ryeland Julia, Weston Michael A.
Ecological Management & Restoration. 2021 22(1). p.72
Remote sensor camera traps provide the first density estimate for the largest natural population of the numbat (Myrmecobius fasciatus)
Thorn Sian, Maxwell Marika, Ward Colin, Wayne Adrian, Robinson Natasha
Wildlife Research. 2022 49(6). p.529
The importance of species-specific survey designs: prey camera trap surveys significantly underestimate the detectability of endangered spotted-tailed quolls
Henderson T., Fancourt B. A., Ballard G., Goldingay Ross
Australian Mammalogy. 2022 44(3). p.380
Topographic ruggedness and rainfall mediate geographic range contraction of a threatened marsupial predator
Moore Harry A., Dunlop Judy A., Valentine Leonie E., Woinarski John C. Z., Ritchie Euan G., Watson David M., Nimmo Dale G., Santini Luca
Diversity and Distributions. 2019 25(12). p.1818
Detection and density estimation for a cryptic species
Owens Giselle, Gracanin Ana, Potts Joanne, Young Catherine M., Heinsohn Robert, Gibbons Philip, Stojanovic Dejan
Austral Ecology. 2024 49(2).
Turning ghosts into dragons: improving camera monitoring outcomes for a cryptic low-density Komodo dragon population in eastern Indonesia
Purwandana Deni, Ariefiandy Achmad, Azmi Muhammad, Nasu Sanggar A., Sahudin , Dos Andreas A., Jessop Tim S.
Wildlife Research. 2021 49(4). p.295
Bangers and cash: Baiting efficiency in a heterogeneous population
Indigo Naomi, Smith James, Webb Jonathan K., Phillips Ben L.
Wildlife Society Bulletin. 2019 43(4). p.669
The influence of bait and camera type on detection of a spectrum of medium-sized Australian mammals
Goldingay Ross L., Vernes Karl
Australian Mammalogy. 2024 46(2).
Spot the difference: optimising camera trap use to detect and identify individuals of a medium-sized carnivorous marsupial
Taylor Melissa C., Wayne Adrian F., Armstrong Nicola J., Calver Michael C., Bryant Kate A., Goldingay Ross
Australian Mammalogy. 2024 46(2).
Improving mesocarnivore detectability with lures in camera-trapping studies
Ferreras Pablo, Díaz-Ruiz Francisco, Monterroso Pedro
Wildlife Research. 2018 45(6). p.505
Optimising camera trap surveys for the Carpentarian Pseudantechinus (Pseudantechinus mimulus) in northwest Queensland
Barnes Jarrad C., Sanders Mark G., Burnett Scott E.
Austral Ecology. 2023 48(2). p.233
First you get the money, then you get the power: Comparing the cost and power of monitoring programs to detect changes in occupancy of a threatened marsupial predator
Moore Harry A., Dunlop Judy A., Geyle Hayley M., Greenwood Leanne, Nimmo Dale G.
Conservation Science and Practice. 2023 5(2).
How quoll-ified are northern and spotted-tailed quoll detection dogs?
Jamieson La Toya J., Hancock Amanda L., Baxter Greg S., Murray Peter J.
Wildlife Research. 2021 48(4). p.376
Camera traps are an effective method for identifying individuals and determining the sex of spotted-tailed quolls (Dasyurus maculatus gracilis)
Rowland Jesse, Hoskin Conrad J., Burnett Scott
Australian Mammalogy. 2020 42(3). p.349
Can conditioned taste aversion be deployed at a landscape level to mitigate the impact of invasive cane toads on northern quolls?
Indigo Naomi L., Kelly Ella, Smith James, Webb Jonathan K., Phillips Ben L., Schulte-Hostedde Albrecht
Wildlife Research. 2023 50(12). p.1046

Committee on Publication Ethics


Abstract Export Citation