We review the literature on the ecology and conservation of Australian urban birds and report the results of the first Australian study on the relationship between avifauna and habitat variation in exurbia, which is the low-density zone of development on the outer margins of a city. The Australian urban avifauna has synanthropes found widely elsewhere. It also has a large number of native species, some of which are globally threatened. The distribution of species in Australian urban areas relates better to their niche characteristics than their nativity or exoticness and better to very local variations in habitat type than to environmental variation at the landscape scale, which is often masked by the vegetation thickening associated with s...
As urban areas expand throughout the world, they have a number of negative impacts on native wildli...
Cities, while being the most anthropogenic of landscapes, often incorporate modified remnants of ori...
Rapid urbanisation is altering biodiversity patterns worldwide. Previous studies have shown that urb...
We review the literature on the ecology and conservation of Australian urban birds and report the re...
Urbanisation is a leading cause of biodiversity loss and habitat fragmentation internationally, and ...
Throughout eastern Australia, fragmentation and modification of eucalypt woodlands are causing decli...
Abstract The extent to which native species utilize urban environments depends on species responses ...
Throughout eastern Australia, fragmentation and modification of eucalypt woodlands are causing decli...
The relationships between vegetation and bird communities within an urban landscape are synthetised,...
Urban remnant vegetation, especially where it occurs in public parks, allows for relatively easy acc...
Urban remnant vegetation, especially where it occurs in public parks, allows for relatively easy acc...
The urban landscape encompasses a broad spectrum of variable environments ranging from remnant patch...
While urban areas are increasingly recognized as having potential value for biodiversity conservatio...
Urbanisation is a rapidly growing phenomenon that is affecting global biodiversity, but the integrat...
Urban development either eliminates, or severely fragments, native vegetation, and therefore alters ...
As urban areas expand throughout the world, they have a number of negative impacts on native wildli...
Cities, while being the most anthropogenic of landscapes, often incorporate modified remnants of ori...
Rapid urbanisation is altering biodiversity patterns worldwide. Previous studies have shown that urb...
We review the literature on the ecology and conservation of Australian urban birds and report the re...
Urbanisation is a leading cause of biodiversity loss and habitat fragmentation internationally, and ...
Throughout eastern Australia, fragmentation and modification of eucalypt woodlands are causing decli...
Abstract The extent to which native species utilize urban environments depends on species responses ...
Throughout eastern Australia, fragmentation and modification of eucalypt woodlands are causing decli...
The relationships between vegetation and bird communities within an urban landscape are synthetised,...
Urban remnant vegetation, especially where it occurs in public parks, allows for relatively easy acc...
Urban remnant vegetation, especially where it occurs in public parks, allows for relatively easy acc...
The urban landscape encompasses a broad spectrum of variable environments ranging from remnant patch...
While urban areas are increasingly recognized as having potential value for biodiversity conservatio...
Urbanisation is a rapidly growing phenomenon that is affecting global biodiversity, but the integrat...
Urban development either eliminates, or severely fragments, native vegetation, and therefore alters ...
As urban areas expand throughout the world, they have a number of negative impacts on native wildli...
Cities, while being the most anthropogenic of landscapes, often incorporate modified remnants of ori...
Rapid urbanisation is altering biodiversity patterns worldwide. Previous studies have shown that urb...