The European rabbit, Oryctolagus cuniculus, was introduced to Australia in 1859 and quickly became a significant vertebrate pest species in the country across a wide distribution. In arid and semi-arid environments, rabbit populations exist as metapopulations - undergoing frequent extinction recolonisation cycles. Previous studies identified population genetic structuring at the regional level between arid and semi-arid environments, and habitat heterogeneity was suggested as a possible causal factor. For the most part, rabbit behaviour has been overlooked as a factor that could contribute to explaining population genetic structure in arid and semi-arid environments. \ud \ud \ud \ud This study utilised a combination of genetic sampling tec...
Dispersal influences the genetic and demographic structure of wildlife populations. In addition, pat...
Context: European rabbits evolved in Spain and Portugal and are adapted to winter-rainfall Mediterra...
Population units that merit separate management and are of conservation concern have been called evo...
The extent of genetic structuring of a population results from a balance of forces producing local g...
In this study, the pattern of movement of young male and female rabbits and the genetic structures p...
The well documented historical translocations of the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) offer a...
The Iberian Peninsula is the only region in the world where the two existing subspecies of the Europ...
he European rabbit, Oryctolagus cuniculus, is threatened within its native range, yet it is a highly...
The Iberian Peninsula is the only region in the world where the two existing subspecies of the Europ...
The climatic oscillations that have occurred in the last few million years have strongly affected sp...
Context. European rabbits have a great impact on native vegetation and small vertebrates in Australi...
Context: European rabbits have a great impact on native vegetation and small vertebrates in Australi...
Context. European rabbits have a great impact on native vegetation and small vertebrates in Australi...
This research arose from concern over declining success rates of rabbit poisoning operations in Cent...
<div><p>Over thousands of years humans changed the genetic and phenotypic composition of several org...
Dispersal influences the genetic and demographic structure of wildlife populations. In addition, pat...
Context: European rabbits evolved in Spain and Portugal and are adapted to winter-rainfall Mediterra...
Population units that merit separate management and are of conservation concern have been called evo...
The extent of genetic structuring of a population results from a balance of forces producing local g...
In this study, the pattern of movement of young male and female rabbits and the genetic structures p...
The well documented historical translocations of the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) offer a...
The Iberian Peninsula is the only region in the world where the two existing subspecies of the Europ...
he European rabbit, Oryctolagus cuniculus, is threatened within its native range, yet it is a highly...
The Iberian Peninsula is the only region in the world where the two existing subspecies of the Europ...
The climatic oscillations that have occurred in the last few million years have strongly affected sp...
Context. European rabbits have a great impact on native vegetation and small vertebrates in Australi...
Context: European rabbits have a great impact on native vegetation and small vertebrates in Australi...
Context. European rabbits have a great impact on native vegetation and small vertebrates in Australi...
This research arose from concern over declining success rates of rabbit poisoning operations in Cent...
<div><p>Over thousands of years humans changed the genetic and phenotypic composition of several org...
Dispersal influences the genetic and demographic structure of wildlife populations. In addition, pat...
Context: European rabbits evolved in Spain and Portugal and are adapted to winter-rainfall Mediterra...
Population units that merit separate management and are of conservation concern have been called evo...