The expansion of urban areas and associated loss of natural areas due to development are greatly contributing to global biodiversity loss. Furthermore, development produces direct harm to wildlife and their habitat. In New Zealand, lizards and their habitat are legally protected and damage due to development of a natural area must be avoided or mitigated whenever possible. Mitigation translocations, the intentional relocation of individuals from the site to be developed to a receptor site, have become commonly used to meet legal obligations; however, mitigation translocations do not guarantee survival of individuals or population success at the receptor site. I aimed to evaluate the success of a mitigation translocation case study, proactiv...
Ecological restoration often involves revegetation. I have investigated the impact of revegetation o...
Translocation science has made considerable progress over the last two decades; however, reptile tra...
Land-use change (e.g., urbanization) has been identified as the leading driver of global biodiversit...
Worldwide, human development is leading to the expansion and intensification of land use, with incre...
<p>There is growing concern about mitigation-driven translocations that move animals from anthropoge...
In our current era, the Anthropocene, species are disappearing at an unprecedented rate due to the i...
Globally, biodiversity is in crisis. One contributing factor is the rapid urbanisation of the world’...
Summary: Agricultural intensification is a major cause of reptile and amphibian decline world-wide, ...
Translocation of threatened reptile species to pest-free offshore islands is one of the most importa...
The rate of biodiversity loss is not slowing despite global commitments. Conservation translocations...
The translocation of reptiles from development sites is a frequent but controversial intervention to...
[Abstract]: The biodiversity of the Condamine Catchment is constantly under threat from various sour...
Monitoring tools are integral for the conservation and management of lizards in New Zealand, providi...
Summary: Worldwide, efforts to restore habitat quality are rarely matched by efforts to evaluate the...
Urban revegetation programmes are an important contribution to the biodiversity of our landscape env...
Ecological restoration often involves revegetation. I have investigated the impact of revegetation o...
Translocation science has made considerable progress over the last two decades; however, reptile tra...
Land-use change (e.g., urbanization) has been identified as the leading driver of global biodiversit...
Worldwide, human development is leading to the expansion and intensification of land use, with incre...
<p>There is growing concern about mitigation-driven translocations that move animals from anthropoge...
In our current era, the Anthropocene, species are disappearing at an unprecedented rate due to the i...
Globally, biodiversity is in crisis. One contributing factor is the rapid urbanisation of the world’...
Summary: Agricultural intensification is a major cause of reptile and amphibian decline world-wide, ...
Translocation of threatened reptile species to pest-free offshore islands is one of the most importa...
The rate of biodiversity loss is not slowing despite global commitments. Conservation translocations...
The translocation of reptiles from development sites is a frequent but controversial intervention to...
[Abstract]: The biodiversity of the Condamine Catchment is constantly under threat from various sour...
Monitoring tools are integral for the conservation and management of lizards in New Zealand, providi...
Summary: Worldwide, efforts to restore habitat quality are rarely matched by efforts to evaluate the...
Urban revegetation programmes are an important contribution to the biodiversity of our landscape env...
Ecological restoration often involves revegetation. I have investigated the impact of revegetation o...
Translocation science has made considerable progress over the last two decades; however, reptile tra...
Land-use change (e.g., urbanization) has been identified as the leading driver of global biodiversit...