All Stories

  1. Interaction effects between local flower richness and distance to natural woodland on pest and beneficial insects in apple orchards
  2. Habitat as a mediator of mesopredator-driven mammal extinction
  3. Defining and measuring the social-ecological quality of urban greenspace: a semi-systematic review
  4. Threats to food production and water quality in the Murray–Darling Basin of Australia
  5. Using multiple-source occurrence data to identify patterns and drivers of decline in arid-dwelling Australian marsupials
  6. Keystone resources available to wild pollinators in a winter-flowering tree crop plantation
  7. Effects of landscape composition and connectivity on the distribution of an endangered parrot in agricultural landscapes
  8. Spatial and temporal variation in pollinator community structure relative to a woodland-almond plantation edge
  9. Land-use change: incorporating the frequency, sequence, time span, and magnitude of changes into ecological research
  10. The net return from animal activity in agro-ecosystems: trading off benefits from ecosystem services against costs from crop damage
  11. Relative brain size in Australian birds
  12. Preliminary Insights into the Habitat Preferences of the Centralian Bandy Bandy (Vermicella vermiformis)(Squamata: Elapidae) in Central Australia
  13. Interactions between almond plantations and native ecosystems: Lessons learned from north-western Victoria
  14. The net return from animal activity in agro-ecosystems: trading off benefits from ecosystem services against costs from crop damage
  15. Almond orchards with living ground cover host more wild insect pollinators
  16. Ecosystem services and ethics
  17. Changes in Bird Functional Diversity across Multiple Land Uses: Interpretations of Functional Redundancy Depend on Functional Group Identity
  18. Patterns in bat functional guilds across multiple urban centres in south-eastern Australia
  19. Fox baiting in agricultural landscapes: preliminary findings on the importance of bait-site selection
  20. Body sizes, activity patterns and habitat relationships of the orange-naped snake (Furina ornata) (Serpentes : Elapidae) in the MacDonnell Ranges, Northern Territory
  21. Bird use of almond plantations: implications for conservation and production
  22. Ethical Considerations in On-Ground Applications of the Ecosystem Services Concept
  23. Pan trap catches of pollinator insects vary with habitat
  24. Identifying spatial priorities for protecting ecosystem services
  25. The importance of managing the costs and benefits of bird activity for agricultural sustainability
  26. Environmental and socio-economic factors related to urban bird communities
  27. Improving the application of vertebrate trait-based frameworks to the study of ecosystem services
  28. Importance of fire in influencing the occurrence of snakes in an upland region of arid Australia
  29. Ecology of the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) in an agricultural landscape. 2. Home range and movements
  30. Ecology of the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) in an agricultural landscape. 1. Den-site selection
  31. Fox-baiting in agricultural landscapes in south-eastern Australia: a case-study appraisal and suggestions for improvement
  32. An integrated approach to ecological management: The only way forward
  33. Anuran species in urban landscapes: Relationships with biophysical, built environment and socio-economic factors
  34. Relations between Urban Bird and Plant Communities and Human Well-Being and Connection to Nature
  35. Ecology of Stimson's python (Antaresia stimsoni) in the MacDonnell Ranges of central Australia
  36. The impact of urbanization on taxonomic and functional similarity among bird communities
  37. Why is species richness often higher in more densely populated regions?
  38. What drives the positive correlation between human population density and bird species richness in Australia?
  39. Valuing ecosystem services on the basis of service-providing units: A potential approach to address the ‘endpoint problem’ and improve stated preference methods
  40. Ecosystem services and biodiversity conservation: concepts and a glossary
  41. Identifying and prioritising services in European terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems
  42. Response from Luck and colleagues
  43. Corrigendum to “Stand and landscape-level factors related to bird assemblages in exotic pine plantations: Implications for forest management” [Forest Ecol. Manage. 255 (2008) 2688–2697]
  44. Socio-Economics and Vegetation Change in Urban Ecosystems: Patterns in Space and Time
  45. Quantifying the Contribution of Organisms to the Provision of Ecosystem Services
  46. Nest-box use by arboreal mammals in a peri-urban landscape
  47. Stand and landscape-level factors related to bird assemblages in exotic pine plantations: Implications for forest management
  48. A review of the relationships between human population density and biodiversity
  49. A checklist for ecological management of landscapes for conservation
  50. The relationships between net primary productivity, human population density and species conservation
  51. Pinpointing and preventing imminent extinctions
  52. Synthesis: Thresholds in conservation and management
  53. An introduction to ecological thresholds
  54. Primary productivity and species richness: relationships among functional guilds, residency groups and vagility classes at multiple spatial scales
  55. Alleviating spatial conflict between people and biodiversity
  56. Population diversity and ecosystem services
  57. Effects of household dynamics on resource consumption and biodiversity
  58. Differences in the reproductive success and survival of the rufous treecreeper (Climacteris rufa) between a fragmented and unfragmented landscape
  59. The Parental Investment Strategy of an Avian Cooperative Breeder Differs between a Fragmented and an Unfragmented Landscape
  60. The habitat requirements of the rufous treecreeper (Climacteris rufa). 2. Validating predictive habitat models
  61. The habitat requirements of the rufous treecreeper (Climacteris rufa). 1. Preferential habitat use demonstrated at multiple spatial scales
  62. Determining habitat quality for the cooperatively breeding Rufous Treecreeper, Climacteris rufa
  63. Edges: Where Landscape Elements Meet