The northern bettong, Bettongia tropica, is an endangered species of Potoroidae with a restricted distribution in the wet tropics of north Queensland, Australia. The species is only found within a thin strip of sclerophyll forest along the western margin of rainforest. This tight association with rainforest boundaries is predicted to have resulted in population isolation as rainforest contracted during the Pleistocene, though some have proposed that the northern bettong was not present in the wet tropics until the late Pleistocene. The dispersal ability of the species, and of the family, is not known. This study examined gene flow among populations within areas of continuous habitat complemented by a broader analysis of phylogeography. Indi...
The southern brown bandicoot (Isoodon obesulus) has undergone significant range contractions since E...
We examine the effects of historical climate change on vertebrate differentiation in tropical rainfo...
Many endangered species worldwide are found in remnant populations, often within fragmented landscap...
The three surviving ‘brush-tailed’ bettong species—Bettongia gaimardi (Tasmania), B. tropica (Queens...
Major prehistoric forces, such as the climatic shifts of the Pleistocene, can remain visible in a sp...
Subspecific status has often been used as a surrogate for conservation unit, but does not always ref...
<div><p>Major prehistoric forces, such as the climatic shifts of the Pleistocene, can remain visible...
Mesic southeastern Australia represents the continent's ancestral biome and is highly biodiverse, ye...
Fine-scale genetic structure was investigated in three regional populations of the long-nosed potoro...
MtDNA sequencing was used to investigate the genetic population structure of Litoria pearsoniana, a ...
Geographic patterns of genetic variation are strongly influenced by historical changes in species ha...
Historical population contraction and expansion events associated with Pleistocene climate change ar...
The gliding petaurids are small sized arboreal and nocturnal marsupials restricted to Australia and ...
Many species of herbivorous mammals declined to extinction following European settlement of inland A...
Major prehistoric forces, such as the climatic shifts of the Pleistocene, can remain visible in a sp...
The southern brown bandicoot (Isoodon obesulus) has undergone significant range contractions since E...
We examine the effects of historical climate change on vertebrate differentiation in tropical rainfo...
Many endangered species worldwide are found in remnant populations, often within fragmented landscap...
The three surviving ‘brush-tailed’ bettong species—Bettongia gaimardi (Tasmania), B. tropica (Queens...
Major prehistoric forces, such as the climatic shifts of the Pleistocene, can remain visible in a sp...
Subspecific status has often been used as a surrogate for conservation unit, but does not always ref...
<div><p>Major prehistoric forces, such as the climatic shifts of the Pleistocene, can remain visible...
Mesic southeastern Australia represents the continent's ancestral biome and is highly biodiverse, ye...
Fine-scale genetic structure was investigated in three regional populations of the long-nosed potoro...
MtDNA sequencing was used to investigate the genetic population structure of Litoria pearsoniana, a ...
Geographic patterns of genetic variation are strongly influenced by historical changes in species ha...
Historical population contraction and expansion events associated with Pleistocene climate change ar...
The gliding petaurids are small sized arboreal and nocturnal marsupials restricted to Australia and ...
Many species of herbivorous mammals declined to extinction following European settlement of inland A...
Major prehistoric forces, such as the climatic shifts of the Pleistocene, can remain visible in a sp...
The southern brown bandicoot (Isoodon obesulus) has undergone significant range contractions since E...
We examine the effects of historical climate change on vertebrate differentiation in tropical rainfo...
Many endangered species worldwide are found in remnant populations, often within fragmented landscap...