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Table of Contents

Wildlife Research Wildlife Research
Volume 35 Number 8 2008


The use of hollow-bearing trees by vertebrate fauna in wet and dry Eucalyptus obliqua forest, Tasmania 

Amelia Koch, Sarah Munks and Don Driscoll

pp. 727-746

Abstract 
| PDF (683 KB) - $25.00     


Visible Implant Alphanumeric tags as an alternative to toe-clipping for marking amphibians – a case study 

Geoffrey W. Heard, Michael P. Scroggie and Brian Malone

pp. 747-759

Abstract 
| PDF (396 KB) - $25.00     


Links between riparian characteristics and the abundance of common wombat (Vombatus ursinus) burrows in an agricultural landscape 

Philip Borchard, John McIlroy and Clare McArthur

pp. 760-767

Abstract 
| PDF (264 KB) - $25.00     


A comparison of the effectiveness of bat detectors and harp traps for surveying bats in an urban landscape 

C. L. Hourigan, Carla P. Catterall, Darryl Jones and Martin Rhodes

pp. 768-774

Abstract 
| PDF (311 KB) - $25.00     


Changes in immunity to rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus, and in abundance and rates of increase of wild rabbits in Mackenzie Basin, New Zealand 

John P. Parkes, Brent Glentworth and Graham Sullivan

pp. 775-779

Abstract 
| PDF (506 KB) - $25.00     


Portable PIT detector as a new tool for non-disruptively locating individually tagged amphibians in the field: a case study with Pyrenean brook salamanders (Calotriton asper) 

J. Cucherousset, P. Marty, L. Pelozuelo and J.-M. Roussel

pp. 780-787

Abstract 
| PDF (204 KB) - $25.00     


Optimising methods for monitoring programs: Olympic marmots as a case study 

Julia Witczuk, Stanislaw Pagacz and L. Scott Mills

pp. 788-797

Abstract 
| PDF (402 KB) - $25.00       | Accessory Publication (78 KB)


Distribution of a recolonising species may not reflect habitat suitability alone: the case of the Eurasian otter (Lutra lutra) in southern Italy 

Luigi Remonti, Claudio Prigioni, Alessandro Balestrieri, Silvia Sgrosso and Giuseppe Priore

pp. 798-805

Abstract 
| PDF (435 KB) - $25.00     


Bait acceptance by house mice: an island field trial 

Ross M. Wanless, Penny Fisher, John Cooper, John Parkes, Peter G. Ryan and Martin Slabber

pp. 806-811

Abstract 
| PDF (230 KB) - $25.00     


An evaluation of genetic analyses, skull morphology and visual appearance for assessing dingo purity: implications for dingo conservation 

Amanda E. Elledge, Lee R. Allen, Britt-Louise Carlsson, Alan N. Wilton and Luke K.-P. Leung

pp. 812-820

Abstract 
| PDF (477 KB) - $25.00     


Effects of site, time, weather and light on urban bat activity and richness: considerations for survey effort 

Annette T. Scanlon and Sophie Petit

pp. 821-834

Abstract 
| PDF (660 KB) - $25.00     


Habitat selection by European badgers at multiple spatial scales in Portuguese Mediterranean ecosystems 

Maria J. Santos and Paul Beier

pp. 835-843

Abstract 
| PDF (276 KB) - $25.00     


  
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 Impact Factor
The 2008 impact factor for Wildlife Research is 1.111.

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To celebrate 50 years of Wildlife Research we have selected some of our most significant papers for readers to freely access online.

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All volumes of CSIRO Wildlife Research are online and available to subscribers of Wildlife Research.

 


 
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