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Australian Journal of Zoology Australian Journal of Zoology Society
Evolutionary, molecular and comparative zoology

Articles citing this paper

The on-Host Temperature Environment for 2 Australian Reptile Ticks

NB Chilton and CM Bull
40(6) pp.583 - 592


11 articles found in Crossref database.

Field observations of extended locomotor activity at sub‐optimal body temperatures in a diurnal heliothermic lizard (Tiliqua rugosa)
Kerr Gregory D., Bull C. Michael
Journal of Zoology. 2004 264(2). p.179
Climate warming drives a temperate-zone lizard to its upper thermal limits, restricting activity, and increasing energetic costs
Doucette Lisa I., Duncan Richard P., Osborne William S., Evans Murray, Georges Arthur, Gruber Bernd, Sarre Stephen D.
Scientific Reports. 2023 13(1).
Differences in the life cycles of two species of reptile tick: Implications for species distributions
Chilton Neil B.
International Journal for Parasitology. 1994 24(6). p.791
Microhabitat choice and its role in determining the distribution of the reptile tick Amblyomma vikirri
DUFFIELD G. A., BULL C. M.
Australian Journal of Ecology. 1996 21(3). p.255
Under the weather?—The direct effects of climate warming on a threatened desert lizard are mediated by their activity phase and burrow system
Moore Danae, Stow Adam, Kearney Michael Ray, van de Pol Martijn
Journal of Animal Ecology. 2018 87(3). p.660
Circadian rhythms of locomotor activity and temperature selection in sleepy lizards, Tiliqua rugosa
Ellis David J., Firth Bruce T., Belan Ingrid
Journal of Comparative Physiology A. 2007 193(7). p.695
Interactions between climate, host refuge use, and tick population dynamics
Kerr Gregory D., Bull C. Michael
Parasitology Research. 2006 99(3). p.214
Temporal and spatial dynamics of a parapatric boundary between two Australian reptile ticks
Bull C. Michael, Burzacott Dale
Molecular Ecology. 2001 10(3). p.639
Effect of delayed mating and prolonged engorgement on the reproductive fitness of female Amblyomma limbatum (Acari: Ixodidae) in marginal population areas
Chilton Neil B., Andrews Ross H., Bull C. Michael
Oecologia. 1993 94(1). p.67
Field tests of a general ectotherm niche model show how water can limit lizard activity and distribution
Kearney Michael R., Munns Suzanne L., Moore Danae, Malishev Matthew, Bull C. Michael
Ecological Monographs. 2018 88(4). p.672
Reproductive interactions between two Australian reptile tick species
Bull C. M., Burzacott D.
Experimental and Applied Acarology. 1994 18(9). p.555

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