All Stories

  1. Fencing solves human-wildlife conflict locally but shifts problems elsewhere: A case study using functional connectivity modelling of the African elephant
  2. A global database and “state of the field” review of research into ecosystem engineering by land animals
  3. Feeding ecology of cheetahs in the Maasai Mara, Kenya and the potential for intra- and interspecific competition
  4. Tooth fracture within the African carnivore guild: the influence of intraguild competition and resource availability
  5. Conservation: Don't bank African rhinos in Australia
  6. Large carnivore impacts are context-dependent
  7. Questionable policy for large carnivore hunting
  8. Local vs landscape drivers of primate occupancy in a Brazilian fragmented region
  9. The impact of large terrestrial carnivores on Pleistocene ecosystems
  10. High density, maternal condition, and stress are associated with male-biased sex allocation in a marsupial
  11. Risk perception by endangered European bison Bison bonasus is context (condition) dependent
  12. Time-lags in primate occupancy: a study case using dynamic models
  13. Soil-foraging animals alter the composition and co-occurrence of microbial communities in a desert shrubland
  14. FORUM: Ecologists need robust survey designs, sampling and analytical methods
  15. Effects of reconstruction of a pre-European vertebrate assemblage on ground-dwelling arachnids in arid Australia
  16. Numbat nirvana: conservation ecology of the endangered numbat (Myrmecobius fasciatus) (Marsupialia : Myrmecobiidae) reintroduced to Scotia and Yookamurra Sanctuaries, Australia
  17. Diet and prey preferences of dholes (Cuon alpinus): dietary competition within Asia's apex predator guild
  18. Economic Analysis of Electric Fencing for Mitigating Human-wildlife Conflict in Nepal
  19. An Objective Approach to Determining the Weight Ranges of Prey Preferred by and Accessible to the Five Large African Carnivores
  20. Correction: Prey Preferences of the Snow Leopard (Panthera uncia): Regional Diet Specificity Holds Global Significance for Conservation
  21. Will dingoes really conserve wildlife and can our methods tell?
  22. Prey Preferences of the Snow Leopard (Panthera uncia): Regional Diet Specificity Holds Global Significance for Conservation
  23. Whose backyard? Some precautions in choosing recipient sites for assisted colonisation of Australian plants and animals
  24. Effect of prey mass and selection on predator carrying capacity estimates
  25. Spatial behaviour of yellow-footed rock-wallabies, Petrogale xanthopus, changes in response to active conservation management
  26. Using assisted colonisation to conserve biodiversity and restore ecosystem function under climate change
  27. Prey choice and diet of wolves related to ungulate communities and wolf subpopulations in Poland
  28. Waterhole use by African Fauna
  29. Animal Ethics and Ecotourism
  30. Spatial and temporal changes in group dynamics and range use enable anti‐predator responses in African buffalo
  31. Acting fast helps avoid extinction
  32. Prey preferences of the tiger Panthera tigris
  33. Key factors and related principles in the conservation of large African carnivores
  34. Time to agree on a conservation benchmark for Australia.
  35. Fencing for Conservation
  36. An Introduction to Fencing for Conservation
  37. Perspectives on Fencing for Conservation Based on Four Case Studies: Marsupial Conservation in Australian Forests; Bushmeat Hunting in South Africa; Large Predator Reintroduction in South Africa; and Large Mammal Conservation in Poland
  38. Do Lions Panthera leo Actively Select Prey or Do Prey Preferences Simply Reflect Chance Responses via Evolutionary Adaptations to Optimal Foraging?
  39. Minimum prey and area requirements of the Vulnerable cheetah Acinonyx jubatus: implications for reintroduction and management of the species in South Africa
  40. Scarcity in the prey community yields anti-predator benefits
  41. Using the IUCN Red List to determine effective conservation strategies
  42. The Natural History of Sydney
  43. Increasing elephantLoxodonta africana density is a more important driver of change in vegetation condition than rainfall
  44. Assessing re-introductions of the African Wild dog (Lycaon pictus) in the Limpopo Valley Conservancy, South Africa, using the stochastic simulation program VORTEX
  45. Increasing elephantLoxodonta africanadensity is a more important driver of change in vegetation condition than rainfall
  46. The Impact of Upgrading Roads on the Conservation of the Threatened Flightless Dung Beetle, Circellum bacchus (F.) (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae)
  47. Potential amplification of territorial advertisement markings by black-backed jackals (Canis mesomelas)
  48. The Need to Rationalize and Prioritize Threatening Processes Used to Determine Threat Status in the IUCN Red List
  49. Temporal Partitioning of Activity in Large African Carnivores: Tests of Multiple Hypotheses
  50. The impact of tourists on lion Panthera leo behaviour, stress and energetics
  51. Bushmeat Hunting in Dwesa and Cwebe Nature Reserves, Eastern Cape, South Africa
  52. Reintroduction of Top-Order Predators
  53. Moving beyond the Descriptive: Predicting the Responses of Top‐Order Predators to Reintroduction
  54. Reintroduction of Top‐Order Predators: Using Science to Restore One of the Drivers of Biodiversity
  55. Fencing for conservation: Restriction of evolutionary potential or a riposte to threatening processes?
  56. Prey preferences and dietary overlap amongst Africa's large predators
  57. Do fences constrain predator movements on an evolutionary scale? Home range, food intake and movement patterns of large predators reintroduced to Addo Elephant National Park, South Africa
  58. Conservation management for the past, present and future
  59. Lions, leopards and muskoxen: a (very) light-hearted look at the ups, downs, ins and outs of a postdoctoral career through the eyes of two zoologists
  60. Practical Considerations for the Reintroduction of Large, Terrestrial,Mammalian Predators Based on Reintroductions to South Africa's Eastern Cape Province
  61. Carrying capacity of large African predators: Predictions and tests
  62. Testing Predictions of the Prey of Lion Derived From Modeled Prey Preferences
  63. Erratum
  64. The reintroduction of large carnivores to the Eastern Cape, South Africa: an assessment
  65. Predicting the occurrence of the quokka, Setonix brachyurus (Macropodidae�:�Marsupialia), in Western Australia's northern jarrah forest
  66. PREY PREFERENCES OF THE AFRICAN WILD DOG LYCAON PICTUS (CANIDAE: CARNIVORA): ECOLOGICAL REQUIREMENTS FOR CONSERVATION
  67. Prey preferences of the cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) (Felidae: Carnivora): morphological limitations or the need to capture rapidly consumable prey before kleptoparasites arrive?
  68. Prey preferences of the spotted hyaena (Crocuta crocuta) and degree of dietary overlap with the lion (Panthera leo)
  69. Activity patterns of reintroduced lion Panthera leo and spotted hyaena Crocuta crocuta in the Addo Elephant National Park, South Africa
  70. The successful reintroduction of leopard Panthera pardus to the Addo Elephant National Park
  71. Prey preferences of the leopard (Panthera pardus)
  72. Prey preferences of the lion (Panthera leo)
  73. HABITAT USE OF THE QUOKKA, SETONIX BRACHYURUS (MACROPODIDAE: MARSUPIALIA), IN THE NORTHERN JARRAH FOREST OF AUSTRALIA
  74. Using faecal pellet counts along transects to estimate quokka ( Setonix brachyurus ) population density
  75. Mortality and survivorship of the quokka ( Setonix brachyurus ) (Macropodidae : Marsupialia) in the northern jarrah forest of Western Australia
  76. Diet of the quokka ( Setonix brachyurus ) (Macropodidae�:�Marsupialia) in the northern jarrah forest of Western Australia
  77. Home range and movements of the quokka Setonix brachyurus (Macropodidae: Marsupialia), and its impact on the viability of the metapopulation on the Australian mainland
  78. Local population structure of a naturally occurring metapopulation of the quokka (Setonix brachyurus Macropodidae: Marsupialia)
  79. Survival of Cheetahs Relocated from Ranchland to Fenced Protected Areas in South Africa