Aim To provide, through a large‐scale long‐term field study, an empirical evaluation of the extent to which revegetated patches act as refuges for woodland bird species in the face of enhanced abundance of a native despotic species in a highly fragmented landscape. Location South‐west slopes, New South Wales, Australia. Methods Birds were surveyed using point counts over a 9‐year period. Colonization/extinction dynamics of local bird populations were modelled using multiple‐season occupancy models. Results We show how the spread of the noisy miner (Manorina melanocephala), an indirect effect of habitat loss and fragmentation, is now the main driver of bird distribution patterns, affecting 65% of the studied species, including 1...
Habitat loss due to land conversion for agriculture is a leading cause of global biodiversity loss a...
Vegetation restoration is a globally important form of management intervention designed to both reme...
Aim: To determine the factors influencing the distribution of birds in remnants in a fragmented a...
Aim: To provide, through a large-scale long-term field study, an empirical evaluation of the extent ...
Agricultural intensification over the last 50 years has been a major cause of global biodiversity de...
Large reserves have potential to provide important refugia for fragmentation-sensitive species as th...
Interspecific aggression by the noisy miner (Manorina melanocephala), a highly despotic species, is ...
Overabundant native species are a growing problem globally, in part due to anthropogenic landscape m...
Overabundant native animals cause a variety of human–wildlife conflicts that can require management ...
Interspecific aggression by the noisy miner (Manorina melanocephala), a highly despotic species, is ...
We explored the effects of a purported 'reverse keystone species', the Noisy Miner (Manorina melanoc...
The clearing and modification of native vegetation is recognised as one of the greatest threats to b...
Transformation of intact vegetation into new kinds and configurations of human-modified habitats is ...
Over the past few decades, declines in bird population densities have been recorded in agricultural ...
The composition of many eastern Australian woodland and forest bird assemblages is controlled by a s...
Habitat loss due to land conversion for agriculture is a leading cause of global biodiversity loss a...
Vegetation restoration is a globally important form of management intervention designed to both reme...
Aim: To determine the factors influencing the distribution of birds in remnants in a fragmented a...
Aim: To provide, through a large-scale long-term field study, an empirical evaluation of the extent ...
Agricultural intensification over the last 50 years has been a major cause of global biodiversity de...
Large reserves have potential to provide important refugia for fragmentation-sensitive species as th...
Interspecific aggression by the noisy miner (Manorina melanocephala), a highly despotic species, is ...
Overabundant native species are a growing problem globally, in part due to anthropogenic landscape m...
Overabundant native animals cause a variety of human–wildlife conflicts that can require management ...
Interspecific aggression by the noisy miner (Manorina melanocephala), a highly despotic species, is ...
We explored the effects of a purported 'reverse keystone species', the Noisy Miner (Manorina melanoc...
The clearing and modification of native vegetation is recognised as one of the greatest threats to b...
Transformation of intact vegetation into new kinds and configurations of human-modified habitats is ...
Over the past few decades, declines in bird population densities have been recorded in agricultural ...
The composition of many eastern Australian woodland and forest bird assemblages is controlled by a s...
Habitat loss due to land conversion for agriculture is a leading cause of global biodiversity loss a...
Vegetation restoration is a globally important form of management intervention designed to both reme...
Aim: To determine the factors influencing the distribution of birds in remnants in a fragmented a...