All Stories

  1. Systematic review and meta-analysis of studies testing the efficacy of shark-bite mitigation
  2. Disproportionate climate burden of rising temperatures on low birth weight in Pakistan
  3. Predicting Continental-Scale Soil Mercury Concentrations in Australia to Refine Global Frameworks
  4. Balancing High Densities and Conservation Targets to Optimise Koala Management Strategies
  5. Wildlife Diversity in Global Team Sport Branding
  6. Trait-space disparity in fish communities spanning 380 million years from the Late Devonian to present
  7. Impact of climate change on diarrhoea risk in low- and middle-income countries
  8. A 150,000-year lacustrine record of the Indo-Australian monsoon from northern Australia
  9. The genetic diversity of Indonesian cattle has been shaped by multiple introductions and adaptive introgression
  10. Conservation Arks: Genomic Erosion and Inbreeding in an Abundant Island Population of Koalas
  11. Climate change policies fail to protect child health
  12. Professional sport organizations as potential champions of biodiversity conservation
  13. Typology of the ecological impacts of biological invasions
  14. Author Correction: Restoration cannot be scaled up globally to save reefs from loss and degradation
  15. A Guide for Developing Demo‐Genetic Models to Simulate Genetic Rescue
  16. Restoration cannot be scaled up globally to save reefs from loss and degradation
  17. Cool‐season environmental water delivery increases extinction risk for chytrid‐infected amphibians
  18. Genomic erosion and inbreeding in an abundant island population of koalas
  19. Underestimating the risks of overpopulation endangers the health and lives of future children
  20. Testing the Dispersal-Origin-Status-Impact (DOSI) scheme to prioritise non-native and translocated species management
  21. Impact of climate change on diarrhoea risk in low- and middle-income countries
  22. Stochastic population models to identify optimal and cost‐effective harvest strategies for feral pig eradication
  23. Balancing overpopulation and conservation targets to optimize koala management strategies
  24. Differential predation patterns of free‐ranging cats among continents
  25. Large size of the Australian Indigenous population prior to its massive decline following European invasion
  26. A Late Devonian coelacanth reconfigures actinistian phylogeny, disparity, and evolutionary dynamics
  27. Small populations of Palaeolithic humans in Cyprus hunted endemic megafauna to extinction
  28. Projected loss of brown macroalgae and seagrasses with global environmental change
  29. How to map biomes: Quantitative comparison and review of biome‐mapping methods
  30. Prioritising non-native and translocated species for management using the Dispersal-Origin-Status-Impact (DOSI) scheme
  31. Damage costs from invasive species exceed management expenditure in nations experiencing lower economic activity
  32. Environmental conditions associated with initial northern expansion of anatomically modern humans
  33. Demographic models predict end-Pleistocene arrival and rapid expansion of pre-agropastoralist humans in Cyprus
  34. Developing demo-genetic models to simulate genetic rescue
  35. How climate change degrades child health: A systematic review and meta-analysis
  36. Heinrich events drove major intensification of the Indo-Australian monsoon over the last 150,000 years
  37. Taming the terminological tempest in invasion science
  38. Net benefit of smaller human populations to environmental integrity and individual health and wellbeing
  39. Benefits do not balance costs of biological invasions
  40. Late Pleistocene emergence of an anthropogenic fire regime in Australia’s tropical savannahs
  41. Modelling the sustainable harvest of wild populations for the conservation of a threatened amphibian
  42. Component and ensemble density feedbacks decoupled by density-independent processes
  43. Mechanisms of hunting native megafauna to extinction by Palaeolithic humans on Cyprus
  44. Sea level rise drowned a vast habitable area of north-western Australia driving long-term cultural change
  45. Stochastic metapopulation dynamics of a threatened amphibian to improve water delivery
  46. Shifts in the incidence of shark bites and efficacy of beach-focussed mitigation in Australia
  47. Forest mosaics, not savanna corridors, dominated in Southeast Asia during the Last Glacial Maximum
  48. Demographic models predict end-Pleistocene arrival and rapid expansion of pre-agropastoralist humans in Cyprus
  49. Global economic costs of alien birds
  50. Net benefit of smaller human populations to environmental integrity and individual health and well-being
  51. Recent advances in availability and synthesis of the economic costs of biological invasions
  52. Estimating the energetic cost of whale shark tourism
  53. Time-travelling pathogens and their risk to ecological communities
  54. Predicting predator–prey interactions in terrestrial endotherms using random forest
  55. Estimating co‐extinction threats in terrestrial ecosystems
  56. Thermal aerial culling for the control of vertebrate pest populations
  57. Unveiling the hidden economic toll of biological invasions in the European Union
  58. Differential developmental rates and demographics in Red Kangaroo (Osphranter rufus) populations separated by the dingo barrier fence
  59. Aerial culling invasive alien deer with shotguns improves efficiency and welfare outcomes
  60. Logistic‐growth models measuring density feedback are sensitive to population declines, but not fluctuating carrying capacity
  61. Stochastic population models to identify optimal and cost-effective harvest strategies for feral pig eradication
  62. Directionally supervised cellular automaton for the initial peopling of Sahul
  63. Lower infant mortality, higher household size, and more access to contraception reduce fertility in low- and middle-income nations
  64. Aerial culling feral fallow deer with shotguns improves efficiency and welfare outcomes
  65. Modeling the effects of water regulation on the population viability of a threatened amphibian
  66. Coextinctions dominate future vertebrate losses from climate and land use change
  67. Fatty acid profiles of more than 470 marine species from the Southern Hemisphere
  68. Long-range electric deterrents not as effective as personal deterrents for reducing risk of shark bite
  69. Predicting predator-prey interactions in terrestrial endotherms using random forest
  70. Author Correction: High and rising economic costs of biological invasions worldwide
  71. The Australian Shark-Incident Database for quantifying temporal and spatial patterns of shark-human conflict
  72. Stochastic population projections in Sahul refine the human-refugia hypothesis for early Last Glacial Maximum
  73. Directionally supervised cellular automaton for the initial peopling of Sahul
  74. Principles for scientists working at the river science‐policy interface
  75. Zoonotic Diseases and Our Troubled Relationship With Nature
  76. Dismantling the poachernomics of the illegal wildlife trade
  77. Lower infant mortality and access to contraception reduce fertility in low- and middle-income nations
  78. Sahul's megafauna were vulnerable to plant‐community changes due to their position in the trophic network
  79. Spatially explicit analyses of environmental and health data to determine past, emerging and future threats to child health
  80. Response: Commentary: Underestimating the Challenges of Avoiding a Ghastly Future
  81. Density-independent processes decouple component and ensemble density feedbacks
  82. A fairer way to compare researchers at any career stage and in any discipline using open-access citation data
  83. Detailed assessment of the reported economic costs of invasive species in Australia
  84. Ten principles for achieving scientific impact with integrity in policy and management
  85. Predicting targets and costs for feral‐cat reduction on large islands using stochastic population models
  86. Addendum: FosSahul 2.0, an updated database for the Late Quaternary fossil records of Sahul
  87. Stochastic models support rapid peopling of Late Pleistocene Sahul
  88. Landscape rules predict optimal superhighways for the first peopling of Sahul
  89. Forecasting the effects of water regulation on the population viability of a threatened amphibian
  90. High and rising economic costs of biological invasions worldwide
  91. Relative demographic susceptibility does not explain the extinction chronology of Sahul’s megafauna
  92. Predicting potential future reduction in shark bites on people
  93. Natural and anthropogenic climate variability shape assemblages of range‐extending coral‐reef fishes
  94. Consequences of recreational hunting for biodiversity conservation and livelihoods
  95. Sahul’s megafauna were vulnerable to plant-community changes due to their position in the trophic network
  96. Underestimating the Challenges of Avoiding a Ghastly Future
  97. Opposing life stage‐specific effects of ocean warming at source and sink populations of range‐shifting coral‐reef fishes
  98. Grand Challenges in Global Biodiversity Threats
  99. A fairer way to compare researchers at any career stage and in any discipline using open-access citation data
  100. Relative demographic susceptibility does not explain the extinction chronology of Sahul’s megafauna
  101. Dietary generalism accelerates arrival and persistence of coral‐reef fishes in their novel ranges under climate change
  102. Combining agent-based, trait-based and demographic approaches to model coral-community dynamics
  103. Manipulating water for amphibian conservation
  104. Predicting targets and costs for feral-cat reduction on large islands using stochastic population models
  105. Processes controlling programmed cell death of root velamen radicum in an epiphytic orchid
  106. A spatially explicit and mechanistic model for exploring coral reef dynamics
  107. Tipping elements and amplified polar warming during the Last Interglacial
  108. Variation in Stem Xylem Traits is Related to Differentiation of Upper Limits of Tree Species along an Elevational Gradient
  109. Climate-human interaction associated with southeast Australian megafauna extinction patterns
  110. FosSahul 2.0, an updated database for the Late Quaternary fossil records of Sahul
  111. Informing CITES Parties: Strengthening science‐based decision‐making when listing marine species
  112. Testing the socioeconomic and environmental determinants of better child-health outcomes in Africa: a cross-sectional study among nations
  113. Climate‐driven shifts in the distribution of koala‐browse species from the Last Interglacial to the near future
  114. Socio-economic predictors of environmental performance among African nations
  115. Early human settlement of Sahul was not an accident
  116. Minimum founding populations for the first peopling of Sahul
  117. Opportunities to improve the future of South Australia’s terrestrial biodiversity
  118. Increased population size of fish in a lowland river following restoration of structural habitat
  119. Taxonomic status of the Australian dingo: the case for Canis dingo Meyer, 1793
  120. Statistical Language Backs Conservatism in Climate-Change Assessments
  121. Comparative population genomics confirms little population structure in two commercially targeted carcharhinid sharks
  122. Co-extinctions annihilate planetary life during extreme environmental change
  123. Distribution models predict large contractions of habitat-forming seaweeds in response to ocean warming
  124. Effectiveness of five personal shark-bite deterrents for surfers
  125. Revised European Union renewable-energy policies erode nature protection
  126. Reply to ‘Questionable survey methods generate a questionable list of recommended articles’
  127. Predicting sustainable shark harvests when stock assessments are lacking
  128. Previous exposure to myxoma virus reduces survival of European rabbits during outbreaks of rabbit haemorrhagic disease
  129. Gender bias when assessing recommended ecology articles
  130. Offshore Energy and Marine Spatial Planning
  131. The future of marine spatial planning
  132. Predicting sustainable shark harvests when stock assessments are lacking
  133. Evidence of sensory-driven behavior in the Ediacaran organism Parvancorina: Implications and autecological interpretations
  134. High-quality fossil dates support a synchronous, Late Holocene extinction of devils and thylacines in mainland Australia
  135. Gender-biased perceptions of important ecology articles
  136. 100 articles every ecologist should read
  137. Burden of proof: A comprehensive review of the feasibility of 100% renewable-electricity systems
  138. Dispersal‐driven homogenization of wetland vegetation revealed from local contributions to β‐diversity
  139. Dangerous Ideas in Zoology: Plenary Session 1
  140. Future extinction risk of wetland plants is higher from individual patch loss than total area reduction
  141. Highly localized replenishment of coral reef fish populations near nursery habitats
  142. Species decline under nitrogen fertilization increases community-level competence of fungal diseases
  143. Massive yet grossly underestimated global costs of invasive insects
  144. Vertebral chemistry demonstrates movement and population structure of bronze whaler
  145. A comprehensive database of quality-rated fossil ages for Sahul’s Quaternary vertebrates
  146. Trophy Hunting Does and Will Support Biodiversity: A Reply to Ripple et al.
  147. Warming and fertilization alter the dilution effect of host diversity on disease severity
  148. Synergistic roles of climate warming and human occupation in Patagonian megafaunal extinctions during the Last Deglaciation
  149. Diversity patterns of seasonal wetland plant communities mainly driven by rare terrestrial species
  150. Implications of Australia's Population Policy for Future Greenhouse Gas Emissions Targets
  151. How to find fossils
  152. An efficient protocol for the global sensitivity analysis of stochastic ecological models
  153. How to Rank Journals
  154. What caused extinction of the Pleistocene megafauna of Sahul?
  155. Humans and seasonal climate variability threaten large-bodied coral reef fish with small ranges
  156. Banning Trophy Hunting Will Exacerbate Biodiversity Loss
  157. Climate change not to blame for late Quaternary megafauna extinctions in Australia
  158. Reef shark movements relative to a coastal marine protected area
  159. Obliquity-driven expansion of North Atlantic sea ice during the last glacial
  160. Criteria for assessing the quality of Middle Pleistocene to Holocene vertebrate fossil ages
  161. National emphasis on high-level protection reduces risk of biodiversity decline in tropical forest reserves
  162. Abrupt warming events drove Late Pleistocene Holarctic megafaunal turnover
  163. Fine-scale benthic biodiversity patterns inferred from image processing
  164. Species Distribution Models of Tropical Deep-Sea Snappers
  165. Global estimates of boreal forest carbon stocks and flux
  166. Global zero-carbon energy pathways using viable mixes of nuclear and renewables
  167. Uncertainties in dating constrain model choice for inferring extinction time from fossil records
  168. FORUM: Dingoes can help conserve wildlife and our methods can tell
  169. Reply to O’Neill et al. and O’Sullivan: Fertility reduction will help, but only in the long term
  170. Beyond wind: furthering development of clean energy in South Australia
  171. Killing the Koala and Poisoning the Prairie
  172. Explaining maximum variation in productivity requires phylogenetic diversity and single functional traits
  173. Ecological and economic benefits to cattle rangelands of restoring an apex predator
  174. Key role for nuclear energy in global biodiversity conservation
  175. Nuclear power can reduce emissions and maintain a strong economy: Rating Australia’s optimal future electricity-generation mix by technologies and policies
  176. South Korean energy scenarios show how nuclear power can reduce future energy and environmental costs
  177. Human population reduction is not a quick fix for environmental problems
  178. Population trends of New Zealand fur seals in the Rakiura region based on long-term population surveys and traditional ecological knowledge
  179. Ecological connectivity or Barrier Fence? Critical choices on the agricultural margins of Western Australia
  180. 50/500 rules need upward revision to 100/1000 – Response to Franklin et al.
  181. Generalizing the use of geographical weights in biodiversity modelling
  182. Efficiency of electrofishing in turbid lowland rivers: implications for measuring temporal change in fish populations
  183. Predictors of contraction and expansion of area of occupancy for British birds
  184. Distribution models for koalas in South Australia using citizen science‐collected data
  185. Clarity and Precision of Language Are a Necessary Route in Ecology
  186. Misconceptions about analyses of Australian seaweed collections
  187. Eye on the Taiga: Removing Global Policy Impediments to Safeguard the Boreal Forest
  188. Spatial Climate Patterns Explain Negligible Variation in Strength of Compensatory Density Feedbacks in Birds and Mammals
  189. An ecological regime shift resulting from disrupted predator–prey interactions in Holocene Australia
  190. Ecology Needs a Convention of Nomenclature
  191. Identifying Rising Stars in Biology: A Response to Bruna
  192. Genetics in conservation management: Revised recommendations for the 50/500 rules, Red List criteria and population viability analyses
  193. Predicting current and future global distributions of whale sharks
  194. Strong but opposing  -diversity-stability relationships in coral reef fish communities
  195. Inter-ocean asynchrony in whale shark occurrence patterns
  196. Continental-Scale Governance and the Hastening of Loss of Australia's Biodiversity
  197. The Curious Country
  198. Limited genetic structure among broad-scale regions for two commercially harvested, tropical deep-water snappers in New Caledonia
  199. Rapid megafaunal extinction following human arrival throughout the New World
  200. Predicting Publication Success for Biologists
  201. Near-Complete Extinction of Native Small Mammal Fauna 25 Years After Forest Fragmentation
  202. Population dynamics can be more important than physiological limits for determining range shifts under climate change
  203. Restricted movements of juvenile rays in the lagoon of Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia – evidence for the existence of a nursery
  204. More analytical bite in estimating targets for shark harvest
  205. Lack of chronological support for stepwise prehuman extinctions of Australian megafauna
  206. Conservation management and sustainable harvest quotas are sensitive to choice of climate modelling approach for two marine gastropods
  207. Brave new green world – Consequences of a carbon economy for the conservation of Australian biodiversity
  208. Evaluating options for the future energy mix of Japan after the Fukushima nuclear crisis
  209. 50/500 rule and minimum viable populations: response to Jamieson and Allendorf
  210. Evaluating options for sustainable energy mixes in South Korea using scenario analysis
  211. Spatial and temporal predictions of inter-decadal trends in Indian Ocean whale sharks
  212. Sequencing ancient calcified dental plaque shows changes in oral microbiota with dietary shifts of the Neolithic and Industrial revolutions
  213. Inferred global connectivity of whale shark Rhincodon typus populations
  214. No need for disease: testing extinction hypotheses for the thylacine using multi-species metamodels
  215. Population biology and vulnerability to fishing of deep-water Eteline snappers
  216. Exogenous and endogenous determinants of spatial aggregation patterns in Tibetan Plateau meadow vegetation
  217. Ecologically realistic estimates of maximum population growth using informed Bayesian priors
  218. Accuracy of species identification by fisheries observers in a north Australian shark fishery
  219. Heat-seeking sharks: support for behavioural thermoregulation in reef sharks
  220. Depletion of deep marine food patches forces divers to give up early
  221. Changes in size distributions of commercially exploited sharks over 25 years in northern Australia using a Bayesian approach
  222. Averting biodiversity collapse in tropical forest protected areas
  223. Strength of density feedback in census data increases from slow to fast life histories
  224. Strange bedfellows? Techno-fixes to solve the big conservation issues in southern Asia
  225. Decoupling of component and ensemble density feedbacks in birds and mammals
  226. A tropical perspective on conserving the boreal ‘lung of the planet’
  227. Long-term breeding phenology shift in royal penguins
  228. Identification of Rays through DNA Barcoding: An Application for Ecologists
  229. Density dependence: an ecological Tower of Babel
  230. Inferring the invasion history of coral berry Ardisia crenata from China to the USA using molecular markers
  231. iREDD hedges against avoided deforestation's unholy trinity of leakage, permanence and additionality
  232. Multi‐scale marine biodiversity patterns inferred efficiently from habitat image processing
  233. Genetic structure of introduced swamp buffalo subpopulations in tropical Australia
  234. Robust estimates of extinction time in the geological record
  235. Little left to lose: deforestation and forest degradation in Australia since European colonization
  236. Reintroduction success of threatened Australian trout cod (Maccullochella macquariensis) based on growth and reproduction
  237. Minimum viable population size: not magic, but necessary
  238. Trophic ecology of reef sharks determined using stable isotopes and telemetry
  239. Experimental comparison of aerial larvicides and habitat modification for controlling disease-carrying Aedes vigilax mosquitoes
  240. Seaweed Communities in Retreat from Ocean Warming
  241. Better SAFE than sorry
  242. Novel coupling of individual-based epidemiological and demographic models predicts realistic dynamics of tuberculosis in alien buffalo
  243. Ocean‐scale prediction of whale shark distribution
  244. Twenty Landmark Papers in Biodiversity Conservation
  245. Primary forests are irreplaceable for sustaining tropical biodiversity
  246. Decoding fingerprints: elemental composition of vertebrae correlates to age-related habitat use in two morphologically similar sharks
  247. Homage to an Avant-Garde Conservation Leader, Navjot Sodhi
  248. Similar life history traits in bull (Carcharhinus leucas) and pig-eye (C. amboinensis) sharks
  249. Compensatory density feedback of Oncomelania hupensis populations in two different environmental settings in China
  250. Effectiveness of Biological Surrogates for Predicting Patterns of Marine Biodiversity: A Global Meta-Analysis
  251. In situ measures of foraging success and prey encounter reveal marine habitat‐dependent search strategies
  252. Spatial and temporal movement patterns of a multi-species coastal reef shark aggregation
  253. No place for humans!
  254. The SAFE index: using a threshold population target to measure relative species threat
  255. Diet of juvenile southern elephant seals reappraised by stable isotopes in whiskers
  256. N-dimensional animal energetic niches clarify behavioural options in a variable marine environment
  257. Nautilus at Risk – Estimating Population Size and Demography of Nautilus pompilius
  258. Fertility partially drives the relative success of two introduced bovines (Bubalus bubalis and Bos javanicus) in the Australian tropics
  259. Corrigendum to “To go or not to go with the flow: Environmental influences on whale shark movement patterns” [J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol. 390 (2010) 84–98]
  260. Quantifying movement patterns for shark conservation at remote coral atolls in the Indian Ocean
  261. Turning Pests into Profits: Introduced Buffalo Provide Multiple Benefits to Indigenous People of Northern Australia
  262. Reef size and isolation determine the temporal stability of coral reef fish populations
  263. Exploitation of distant Antarctic waters and close neritic waters by short‐tailed shearwaters breeding in South Australia
  264. Relative need for conservation assessments of vascular plant species among ecoregions
  265. Mechanisms driving change: altered species interactions and ecosystem function through global warming
  266. Limited evidence for the demographic Allee effect from numerous species across taxa
  267. Future habitat loss and the conservation of plant biodiversity
  268. To go or not to go with the flow: Environmental influences on whale shark movement patterns
  269. Selection of diving strategy by Antarctic fur seals depends on where and when foraging takes place
  270. Complexities of coastal shark movements and their implications for management
  271. Wetland conservation and sustainable use under global change: a tropical Australian case study using magpie geese
  272. Evaluating the Relative Environmental Impact of Countries
  273. The theta-logistic is unreliable for modelling most census data
  274. Improving the Performance of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil for Nature Conservation
  275. Environmental and spatial predictors of species richness and abundance in coral reef fishes
  276. Spatially explicit spreadsheet modelling for optimising the efficiency of reducing invasive animal density
  277. Satellite telemetry and seasonal movements of Magpie Geese ( Anseranas semipalmata ) in tropical northern Australia
  278. Pragmatic population viability targets in a rapidly changing world
  279. The conservation biologist's toolbox – principles for the design and analysis of conservation studies
  280. Oceanographic and atmospheric phenomena influence the abundance of whale sharks at Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia
  281. Wash and Spin Cycle Threats to Tropical Biodiversity
  282. Urgent preservation of boreal carbon stocks and biodiversity
  283. Population abundance and apparent survival of the Vulnerable whale shark Rhincodon typus in the Seychelles aggregation
  284. Protein mining the world’s oceans: Australasia as an example of illegal expansion‐and‐displacement fishing
  285. Quantifying the Drivers of Larval Density Patterns in Two Tropical Mosquito Species to Maximize Control Efficiency
  286. Eating Frogs to Extinction
  287. Forest Fragment and Breeding Habitat Characteristics Explain Frog Diversity and Abundance in Singapore
  288. Conversion of Indonesia's peatlands
  289. Blubber fatty acid profiles indicate dietary resource partitioning between adult and juvenile southern elephant seals
  290. Climate Change Enhances the Potential Impact of Infectious Disease and Harvest on Tropical Waterfowl
  291. Convergence of Culture, Ecology, and Ethics: Management of Feral Swamp Buffalo in Northern Australia
  292. Tropical turmoil: a biodiversity tragedy in progress
  293. Tropical Conservation Biology: response to Lugo's tendentious review
  294. Flooding Policy Makers with Evidence to Save Forests
  295. Recent whale shark ( Rhincodon typus) beach strandings in Australia
  296. Predicting the Timing and Magnitude of Tropical Mosquito Population Peaks for Maximizing Control Efficiency
  297. Aerial survey as a tool to estimate whale shark abundance trends
  298. Chapter 4 Susceptibility of Sharks, Rays and Chimaeras to Global Extinction
  299. ENDOGENOUS AND EXOGENOUS FACTORS CONTROLLING TEMPORAL ABUNDANCE PATTERNS OF TROPICAL MOSQUITOES
  300. Shifting trends: detecting environmentally mediated regulation in long-lived marine vertebrates using time-series data
  301. Using biogeographical patterns of endemic land snails to improve conservation planning for limestone karsts
  302. Tracking changes in relative body composition of southern elephant seals using swim speed data
  303. Differential Mobilization of Blubber Fatty Acids in Lactating Weddell Seals: Evidence for Selective Use
  304. Guarding against oversimplifying the fundamental drivers of southern elephant seal population dynamics
  305. Synergies among extinction drivers under global change
  306. A validated approach for supervised dive classification in diving vertebrates
  307. Decline in whale shark size and abundance at Ningaloo Reef over the past decade: The world’s largest fish is getting smaller
  308. ECOLOGICAL-ECONOMIC MODELS OF SUSTAINABLE HARVEST FOR AN ENDANGERED BUT EXOTIC MEGAHERBIVORE IN NORTHERN AUSTRALIA
  309. Threat or invasive status in legumes is related to opposite extremes of the same ecological and life-history attributes
  310. Tracking and data–logging devices attached to elephant seals do not affect individual mass gain or survival
  311. To catch a buffalo: field immobilisation of Asian swamp buffalo using etorphine and xylazine
  312. Importance of endogenous feedback controlling the long-term abundance of tropical mosquito species
  313. Flexible inter-nesting behaviour of generalist olive ridley turtles in Australia
  314. Scarring patterns and relative mortality rates of Indian Ocean whale sharks
  315. Measuring the Meltdown: Drivers of Global Amphibian Extinction and Decline
  316. Scaling laws of marine predator search behaviour
  317. Fine-scale habitat selection of crabeater seals as determined by diving behavior
  318. Fecundity
  319. Fecundity
  320. Swimming in the deep end of the gene pool: global population structure of an oceanic giant
  321. Feast or famine: evidence for mixed capital–income breeding strategies in Weddell seals
  322. Having your water and drinking it too: resource limitation modifies density regulation
  323. Global evidence that deforestation amplifies flood risk and severity in the developing world
  324. Temporal variation in the vertical stratification of blubber fatty acids alters diet predictions for lactating Weddell seals
  325. Allometric scaling of lung volume and its consequences for marine turtle diving performance
  326. Minimum viable population size: A meta-analysis of 30 years of published estimates
  327. Why do Argos satellite tags deployed on marine animals stop transmitting?
  328. Biophysical correlates of relative abundances of marine megafauna at Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia
  329. Correlates of extinction proneness in tropical angiosperms
  330. Low genetic diversity in the bottlenecked population of endangered non-native banteng in northern Australia
  331. Lower reproductive success in hybrid fur seal males indicates fitness costs to hybridization
  332. Dangers of Sensationalizing Conservation Biology
  333. Crabeater seal diving behaviour in eastern Antarctica
  334. Complex interplay between intrinsic and extrinsic drivers of long-term survival trends in southern elephant seals
  335. Behavioral Inference of Diving Metabolic Rate in Free‐Ranging Leatherback Turtles
  336. MEASUREMENT ERROR CAUSES SCALE-DEPENDENT THRESHOLD EROSION OF BIOLOGICAL SIGNALS IN ANIMAL MOVEMENT DATA
  337. Differential resource allocation strategies in juvenile elephant seals in the highly seasonal Southern Ocean
  338. Spot the match – wildlife photo-identification using information theory
  339. Satellite tracking reveals unusual diving characteristics for a marine reptile, the olive ridley turtle Lepidochelys olivacea
  340. Inferring population trends for the world's largest fish from mark–recapture estimates of survival
  341. Current and future threats from non-indigenous animal species in northern Australia: a spotlight on World Heritage Area Kakadu National Park
  342. Assessing Hot-Iron and Cryo-Branding for Permanently Marking Southern Elephant Seals
  343. Applying the Heat to Research Techniques for Species Conservation
  344. Environmental and allometric drivers of tree growth rates in a north Australian savanna
  345. Managing an Endangered Asian Bovid in an Australian National Park: The Role and Limitations of Ecological-Economic Models in Decision-Making
  346. Age-related shifts in the diet composition of southern elephant seals expand overall foraging niche
  347. Population size and structure of whale sharks Rhincodon typus at Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia
  348. INCORPORATING KNOWN SOURCES OF UNCERTAINTY TO DETERMINE PRECAUTIONARY HARVESTS OF SALTWATER CROCODILES
  349. Rapid development of cleaning behaviour by Torresian crows Corvus orru on non‐native banteng Bos javanicus in northern Australia
  350. STRENGTH OF EVIDENCE FOR DENSITY DEPENDENCE IN ABUNDANCE TIME SERIES OF 1198 SPECIES
  351. Letters to the editor about the contents of past issues and comment on topics of current concern toFrontiersreaders
  352. Influence of maternal mass and condition on energy transfer in Weddell seals
  353. Momentum Drives the Crash: Mass Extinction in the Tropics1
  354. Minimum viable population sizes and global extinction risk are unrelated
  355. Mass Cetacean Strandings—a Plea for Empiricism
  356. Conservation Value of Non-Native Banteng in Northern Australia
  357. Chemical immobilization of adult female Weddell seals with tiletamine and zolazepam: effects of age, condition and stage of lactation
  358. Branding can be justified in vital conservation research
  359. Chemical immobilisation of wild banteng (Bos javanicus) in northern Australia using detomidine, tiletamine and zolazepam
  360. Juvenile Southern Elephant Seals Exhibit Seasonal Differences in Energetic Requirements and Use of Lipids and Protein Stores
  361. Periodic variability in cetacean strandings: links to large-scale climate events
  362. Disease and the devil: density-dependent epidemiological processes explain historical population fluctuations in the Tasmanian devil
  363. Population status, trends and a re‐examination of the hypotheses explaining the recent declines of the southern elephant seal Mirounga leonina
  364. Survival of the fittest technology-problems estimating marine turtle mortality
  365. Temporal changes in the quality of hot-iron brands on elephant seal (Mirounga leonina) pups
  366. Loyalty pays: potential life history consequences of fidelity to marine foraging regions by southern elephant seals
  367. Estimating the rate of quasi-extinction of the Australian grey nurse shark (Carcharias taurus) population using deterministic age- and stage-classified models
  368. Resource partitioning through oceanic segregation of foraging juvenile southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina)
  369. Winter habitat use and foraging behavior of crabeater seals along the Western Antarctic Peninsula
  370. The “capacity to reason” in conservation biology and policy: the southern elephant seal branding controversy
  371. Seasonal use of oceanographic and fisheries management zones by juvenile southern elephant seals ( Mirounga leonina ) from Macquarie Island
  372. Harem choice and breeding experience of female southern elephant seals influence offspring survival
  373. At-sea distribution of female southern elephant seals relative to variation in ocean surface properties
  374. Expectations for population growth at new breeding locations for the vulnerable New Zealand sea lion (Phocarctos hookeri) using a simulation model
  375. Blubber and buoyancy: monitoring the body condition of free-ranging seals using simple dive characteristics
  376. Dispersal of female southern elephant seals and their prey consumption during the austral summer: relevance to management and oceanographic zones
  377. You are what you eat: describing the foraging ecology of southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) using blubber fatty acids
  378. Male-biased sex ratios in New Zealand fur seal pups relative to environmental variation
  379. ESTIMATING SURVIVAL AND CAPTURE PROBABILITY OF FUR SEAL PUPS USING MULTISTATE MARK–RECAPTURE MODELS
  380. Vertical stratification of fatty acids in the blubber of southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina): implications for diet analysis
  381. Remote sensing of Southern Ocean sea surface temperature: implications for marine biophysical models
  382. Do southern elephant seals show density dependence in fecundity?
  383. Effects of age, size and condition of elephant seals ( Mirounga leonina ) on their intravenous anaesthesia with tiletamine and zolazepam
  384. The optimal spatial scale for the analysis of elephant seal foraging as determined by geo-location in relation to sea surface temperatures
  385. Using artificial neural networks to model the suitability of coastline for breeding by New Zealand fur seals (Arctocephalus forsteri)
  386. Foraging ecology of a generalist predator, the female New Zealand fur seal
  387. Summer foraging behaviour of a generalist predator, the New Zealand fur seal ( Arctocephalus forsteri )
  388. Folklore and chimerical numbers: Review of a millennium of interaction between fur seals and humans in the New Zealand region
  389. The winter migration of Adelie penguins breeding in the Ross Sea sector of Antarctica
  390. Modeling Tag Loss in New Zealand Fur Seal Pups
  391. Geographic and temporal variation in the condition of pups of the New Zealand fur seal (Arctocephalus forsteri): evidence for density dependence and differences in the marine environment
  392. Geographic and temporal variation in the condition of pups of the New Zealand fur seal (Arctocephalus forsteri): evidence for density dependence and differences in the marine environment
  393. Clustering of colonies in an expanding population of New Zealand fur seals (Arctocephalus forsteri)
  394. Clustering of colonies in an expanding population of New Zealand fur seals (Arctocephalus forsteri)
  395. Pup density related to terrestrial habitat use by New Zealand fur seals
  396. Seasonal oscillation in shore attendance and transience of New Zealand fur seals
  397. Energetic implications of disturbance caused by petroleum exploration to woodland caribou
  398. New Zealand sea lion predation on New Zealand fur seals
  399. Energetic implications of disturbance caused by petroleum exploration to woodland caribou
  400. Effects of Petroleum Exploration on Woodland Caribou in Northeastern Alberta
  401. Woodland Caribou Relative to Landscape Patterns in Northeastern Alberta
  402. Winter peatland habitat selection by woodland caribou in northeastern Alberta
  403. V.1 Causes and Consequences of Species Extinctions