The woylie Bettongia penicillata is a small (1 kg) kangaroo-like marsupial that digs to obtain the fruiting bodies of fungi. The number of woylies in a 60 ha area of sclerophyll woodland in south-western Australia was estimated using mark-recapture at 3 month intervals over 3 successive years. The number of new diggings by woylies, determined at the same intervals, allowed an assessment of the rate of digging per individual. This varied three-fold from 38 to 114 diggings per individual per night, with no consistent seasonality. On average, each woylie displaced 4.8 tonnes of soil annually
1. Despite once being described as common, digging mammal species have been lost from the Australian...
The aim of this study was to investigate how landscape disturbance associated with roads, agricultur...
Abstract. Phytophthora cinnamomi has major effects on floristics and structure in native sclerophyll...
Until recently the potoroid rat kangaroo Bettongia penicillata (the woylie), once common and abundan...
Mammals that forage for food by biopedturbation can alter the biotic and abiotic characteristics of ...
Bioturbation is an important ecosystem process, and the loss of native digging mammals due to introd...
The eastern bettong (Bettongia gaimardi), a medium-sized digging marsupial, was reintroduced to a pr...
In the wheatbelt region of Western Australia, brush-tailed bettongs or woylies, Bettongia penicillat...
Dry sclerophyll woodlands in south-western Australia are refugia for remnant populations of woyliesB...
One of the few commonly occuring species of digging marsupial in south-western Australia is the subs...
Animals that forage for food or dig burrows by biopedturbation can alter the biotic and abiotic char...
Mammals that move or manipulate soil for food or to create shelter can completely change the biotic ...
Many small- and medium-sized mammals dig for their food. This activity potentially affects soil cond...
Mycophagous bioturbators provide ecosystem services that can be important for the resilience and res...
<div><p>The aim of this study was to investigate how landscape disturbance associated with roads, ag...
1. Despite once being described as common, digging mammal species have been lost from the Australian...
The aim of this study was to investigate how landscape disturbance associated with roads, agricultur...
Abstract. Phytophthora cinnamomi has major effects on floristics and structure in native sclerophyll...
Until recently the potoroid rat kangaroo Bettongia penicillata (the woylie), once common and abundan...
Mammals that forage for food by biopedturbation can alter the biotic and abiotic characteristics of ...
Bioturbation is an important ecosystem process, and the loss of native digging mammals due to introd...
The eastern bettong (Bettongia gaimardi), a medium-sized digging marsupial, was reintroduced to a pr...
In the wheatbelt region of Western Australia, brush-tailed bettongs or woylies, Bettongia penicillat...
Dry sclerophyll woodlands in south-western Australia are refugia for remnant populations of woyliesB...
One of the few commonly occuring species of digging marsupial in south-western Australia is the subs...
Animals that forage for food or dig burrows by biopedturbation can alter the biotic and abiotic char...
Mammals that move or manipulate soil for food or to create shelter can completely change the biotic ...
Many small- and medium-sized mammals dig for their food. This activity potentially affects soil cond...
Mycophagous bioturbators provide ecosystem services that can be important for the resilience and res...
<div><p>The aim of this study was to investigate how landscape disturbance associated with roads, ag...
1. Despite once being described as common, digging mammal species have been lost from the Australian...
The aim of this study was to investigate how landscape disturbance associated with roads, agricultur...
Abstract. Phytophthora cinnamomi has major effects on floristics and structure in native sclerophyll...