Objective To describe the influence of the dingo (Canis lupus dingo) on the past, present and future distributions of sheep in Australia. Design The role of the dingo in the rise and fall of sheep numbers is reviewed, revised data are provided on the present distribution and density of sheep and dingoes, and historical patterns of sheep distribution are used to explore the future of rangeland sheep grazing. Results Dingoes are a critical causal factor in the distribution of sheep at the national, regional and local levels. Dingo predation contributed substantially to the historical contraction of the sheep industry to its present-day distribution, which is almost exclusively confined to areas within fenced dingo exclusion zones. Dingo popul...
The density of red kangaroos in the sheep country of the north-west corner of New South Wales is muc...
Understanding the ecological roles of apex predators remains an important field of study. The influe...
Conflict between humans and wildlife impacts both biodiversity and humans. I explored Australian din...
Objective To describe the influence of the dingo (Canis lupus dingo) on the past, present and future...
The traditional method of dingo control on sheep properties in Western Australia relied on labour-in...
Predation and competition are two primary forces limiting the extent to which sheep can be grazed in...
The traditional method of dingo control on sheep properties in Western Australia relied on labor-int...
Past research on dingoes Canis lupus dingo indicated that ‘pure’ populations were threatened by hybr...
Since 1975, a long-term study of dingoes in the Fortescue River area of northern Western Australia h...
The aim of dingo control is to protect livestock, not to eliminate dingos from Australia\u27s vast i...
Competing concerns between conservation and sheep-growing interests in South Australia over problems...
Understanding the causes of faunal declines is important for preserving Australia’s threatened fauna...
The need to conserve terrestrial apex predators is internationally recognized because most of these ...
The dingo (Canis lupus dingo and hybrids) is the top mammalian predator on the Australian mainland a...
Context. The reintroduction of dingoes into sheep-grazing areas south-east of the dingo barrier fenc...
The density of red kangaroos in the sheep country of the north-west corner of New South Wales is muc...
Understanding the ecological roles of apex predators remains an important field of study. The influe...
Conflict between humans and wildlife impacts both biodiversity and humans. I explored Australian din...
Objective To describe the influence of the dingo (Canis lupus dingo) on the past, present and future...
The traditional method of dingo control on sheep properties in Western Australia relied on labour-in...
Predation and competition are two primary forces limiting the extent to which sheep can be grazed in...
The traditional method of dingo control on sheep properties in Western Australia relied on labor-int...
Past research on dingoes Canis lupus dingo indicated that ‘pure’ populations were threatened by hybr...
Since 1975, a long-term study of dingoes in the Fortescue River area of northern Western Australia h...
The aim of dingo control is to protect livestock, not to eliminate dingos from Australia\u27s vast i...
Competing concerns between conservation and sheep-growing interests in South Australia over problems...
Understanding the causes of faunal declines is important for preserving Australia’s threatened fauna...
The need to conserve terrestrial apex predators is internationally recognized because most of these ...
The dingo (Canis lupus dingo and hybrids) is the top mammalian predator on the Australian mainland a...
Context. The reintroduction of dingoes into sheep-grazing areas south-east of the dingo barrier fenc...
The density of red kangaroos in the sheep country of the north-west corner of New South Wales is muc...
Understanding the ecological roles of apex predators remains an important field of study. The influe...
Conflict between humans and wildlife impacts both biodiversity and humans. I explored Australian din...