Many Australian marsupial species require active population management to ensure their survival in the wild. Such management should be based on a sound understanding of species biology. This thesis explores how knowledge of reproduction and genetics can be applied to the management of three Australian marsupial species faced with contrasting management scenarios. The ‘vulnerable’ greater bilby is the sole remaining desert bandicoot in Australia. They are a secretive, solitary species whose mating system is unclear. This research examined temporal changes in genetic diversity within two captive breeding programs utilising different management strategies. Using seven microsatellite loci, this study found the regular translocation of...
Translocation is an important tool for the conservation of species that have suffered severe range r...
The tammar wallaby (Notamacropus eugenii) is one of the most intensively studied of all macropodids ...
Conservation programs for threatened species are greatly benefiting from genetic data, for their pow...
As carnivorous marsupials, quolls are keystone species crucial to ecosystem health. Although opportu...
Dispersal, the movement of individuals or gametes, is one of the most important life history traits ...
The value of genetic management is increasingly recognised in natural resource management particular...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences, Dept. of Biological...
Little genetic research has been undertaken on mammals across the vast expanse of the arid biome in ...
The environment an animal inhabits directs the inheritance of traits that improve fitness, with gene...
The tammar wallaby (Notamacropus eugenii) is one of the most intensively studied of all macropodids ...
Many endangered species worldwide are found in remnant populations, often within fragmented landscap...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats to the world’s biodiversity. Throughout Australia, ...
The quolls are among the largest of the remaining carnivorous marsupials in the Australasian region,...
"November 2001".Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences, Dep...
Island populations are an interesting dichotomy in conservation biology. On the one hand, they can b...
Translocation is an important tool for the conservation of species that have suffered severe range r...
The tammar wallaby (Notamacropus eugenii) is one of the most intensively studied of all macropodids ...
Conservation programs for threatened species are greatly benefiting from genetic data, for their pow...
As carnivorous marsupials, quolls are keystone species crucial to ecosystem health. Although opportu...
Dispersal, the movement of individuals or gametes, is one of the most important life history traits ...
The value of genetic management is increasingly recognised in natural resource management particular...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences, Dept. of Biological...
Little genetic research has been undertaken on mammals across the vast expanse of the arid biome in ...
The environment an animal inhabits directs the inheritance of traits that improve fitness, with gene...
The tammar wallaby (Notamacropus eugenii) is one of the most intensively studied of all macropodids ...
Many endangered species worldwide are found in remnant populations, often within fragmented landscap...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats to the world’s biodiversity. Throughout Australia, ...
The quolls are among the largest of the remaining carnivorous marsupials in the Australasian region,...
"November 2001".Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences, Dep...
Island populations are an interesting dichotomy in conservation biology. On the one hand, they can b...
Translocation is an important tool for the conservation of species that have suffered severe range r...
The tammar wallaby (Notamacropus eugenii) is one of the most intensively studied of all macropodids ...
Conservation programs for threatened species are greatly benefiting from genetic data, for their pow...