Invasive and over-abundant predators pose a major threat to biodiversity and often benefit from human activities. Effective management requires understanding predator use of human-modified habitats (including resource subsidies and disturbed environments), and individual variation within populations. We investigated selection for human-modified habitats by invasive red foxes, Vulpes vulpes, within two predominantly forested Australian landscapes. We predicted that foxes would select for human-modified habitats in their range locations and fine-scale movements, but that selection would vary between individuals. We GPS-tracked 19 foxes for 17-166 days; ranges covered 33 to >2500 ha. Approximately half the foxes selected for human-modified hab...
Habitat loss and invasive predators increasingly threaten global biodiversity. Here we use a landsca...
Factors affecting the foraging of mobile native fauna in highly fragmented urban landscapes have sel...
Fragmentation of native habitats is now a ubiquitous phenomenon affecting wildlife at various scales...
Invasive and over-abundant predators pose a major threat to biodiversity and often benefit from huma...
Introduced predators have been implicated in the decline and extinction of many species worldwide, a...
Global human land alteration poses an immense threat to natural ecosystems with consequences to wild...
Predation and fire shape the structure and function of ecosystems globally. However, studies explori...
The red fox (Vulpes vulpes) is one of the most adaptable carnivorans, thriving in cities across the ...
Adult body size, mass and condition predict reproductive success and survival, and hence fitness, in...
<div><p>Predation and fire shape the structure and function of ecosystems globally. However, studies...
Trophic interactions and disturbance events can shape the structure and function of ecosystems. Howe...
Human activity, particularly the moving of species around the planet, has profoundly changed many of...
Urbanisation poses a major threat to biodiversity, often resulting in the local decline or extinctio...
Fragmentation of native habitats is now a ubiquitous phenomenon affecting wildlife at various scales...
Abstract Introduced mammalian predators are drivers of species decline and extinction globally. The ...
Habitat loss and invasive predators increasingly threaten global biodiversity. Here we use a landsca...
Factors affecting the foraging of mobile native fauna in highly fragmented urban landscapes have sel...
Fragmentation of native habitats is now a ubiquitous phenomenon affecting wildlife at various scales...
Invasive and over-abundant predators pose a major threat to biodiversity and often benefit from huma...
Introduced predators have been implicated in the decline and extinction of many species worldwide, a...
Global human land alteration poses an immense threat to natural ecosystems with consequences to wild...
Predation and fire shape the structure and function of ecosystems globally. However, studies explori...
The red fox (Vulpes vulpes) is one of the most adaptable carnivorans, thriving in cities across the ...
Adult body size, mass and condition predict reproductive success and survival, and hence fitness, in...
<div><p>Predation and fire shape the structure and function of ecosystems globally. However, studies...
Trophic interactions and disturbance events can shape the structure and function of ecosystems. Howe...
Human activity, particularly the moving of species around the planet, has profoundly changed many of...
Urbanisation poses a major threat to biodiversity, often resulting in the local decline or extinctio...
Fragmentation of native habitats is now a ubiquitous phenomenon affecting wildlife at various scales...
Abstract Introduced mammalian predators are drivers of species decline and extinction globally. The ...
Habitat loss and invasive predators increasingly threaten global biodiversity. Here we use a landsca...
Factors affecting the foraging of mobile native fauna in highly fragmented urban landscapes have sel...
Fragmentation of native habitats is now a ubiquitous phenomenon affecting wildlife at various scales...