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Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2014) 28 (1-4): 59–64.
Published: 17 March 2014
... Revision of the Atlas of New South Wales Wildlife Murray Ellis NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service, P.O. Box 1967, Hurstville 2220 ABSTRACT A rev~sed mmp~ter-oased wl dlife Inventory programme has Deen developed to aid the collation ano mapping of lama ano f ora 8nfoimation F el0 data woks nave men...
Journal Articles
Book Chapter
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2004
10.7882/FS.2004.098
EISBN: 978-0-9586085-7-2
... of detailed “before development” data makes it difficult to accurately assess changes in species diversity or abundance over time. In this study, atlas data are used to investigate the impacts of urbanisation of the greater Melbourne area on the composition of the mammal community. The mammal community...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2020) 41 (1): 12–18.
Published: 01 October 2020
... and share animal location data: User engagement and future perspectives Peggy Newman1, Ross G. Dwyer2, Lee Belbin1, Hamish A. Campbell3 1 Atlas of Living Australia, CSIRO National Collections and Marine Infrastructure, Canberra, ACT, Australia, 2601 2 School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2018) 39 (2): 296–344.
Published: 01 January 2018
... of the fauna records in the Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH) Atlas of NSW Wildlife, and analysed the use of Scientific Licences issued by OEH for fauna research for 3.5 years to mid–2014. We found that the distribution and the number of Scientific Licences within protected areas show a heavy bias...
Book Chapter
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2002
10.7882/FS.2002.022
EISBN: 978-0-9586085-5-8
... This paper describes a project that produced an atlas of changes in the distribution and abundance of birds of the wheatbelt of Western Australia. The atlas was based on data collected by 187 community-based observers between 1987 and 1990. The atlas also contained data from annotated bird lists...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2023) 43 (1): 52–66.
Published: 14 March 2023
.... These records are kept on the public database BioCollect, run by the Atlas of Living Australia, and are used by Koala ecologists. Through this constructed portrait of citizen science practice, the paper also highlights the considerable threats faced by Koala populations in parts of Central Queensland, which...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2020) 40 (3): 487–491.
Published: 01 May 2020
...) Where the wild things go: a new epoch for animal biotelemetry (Peggy Newman, Atlas of Living Australia) The posters covered by this plenary session were: From scats to traps: how scat samples paved the way for future research (Rebecca Gooley, University of Sydney) Characterising the diet of Tasmanian...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2018) 39 (2): 280–295.
Published: 01 January 2018
... to detect nomadic reptiles and mammals remain elusive. Broad scale citizen science programs such as atlases might be the best way to start informing where to protect or manage these species (Tulloch et al. 2013a). When static protected areas are insufficient due to moving refugia, rather than designing...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2015) 37 (3): 350–364.
Published: 14 April 2015
... recorded over the 1962-78 period by other workers (A.Davies, J.Izzard, J.Hobbs, P.Wilson and other joint authors) giving a total or 319 species in the Riverina over that period. The more recent lists of the Bird Atlas I and 2 1988-2001 and the Bird Trails document up to 2011, which cover a large proportion...
Book Chapter
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2010
10.7882/FS.2010.019
EISBN: 978-0-9803272-3-6
... To identify changes in the dominance of broad groupings of bird species associated with the urbanisation of Sydney, records from the Australian Museum Ornithology Collection database and the Birds Australia Atlas Database were analysed. This historical comparison suggests that parrots, large...
Book Chapter
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2004
10.7882/FS.2004.988
EISBN: 978-0-9586085-8-9
... Of the 89 species of forest mammals of NSW, 8 are presumed extinct in the state and 40 are currently threatened, and 34 of the 41 species not listed as threatened have declined. Most of the records of forest mammals in the Atlas of NSW Wildlife have been taken along the coastal section, an area...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2023) 43 (2): 145–191.
Published: 10 August 2023
... Atlases (Blakers et al. 1984; Barrett et al. 2003); the Western Australian wheatbelt bird atlas (Saunders and Ingram 1995); field notes of colleagues; and personal observations. Most of our location records came from The New Australian Bird Atlas database maintained by BirdLife Australia...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2024) 43 (3): 443–454.
Published: 22 February 2024
... extensive urban development, the region contains a variety of streams and wetlands that provide habitat for freshwater turtles (e.g., Recher et al. 1993; Burgin et al. 2016). Data sources I downloaded location records for C. longicollis, E. macquarii and T. scripta from the Atlas of Living Australia...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2018) 39 (4): 675–697.
Published: 01 December 2018
...; Higgins et al. 2006) and is likely to have impacted on several of the declining woodland birds described in this study. The reporting rate for the Grey Butcherbird Cracticus torquatus within the Sydney bioregion increased by more than 20% between the first and second atlases despite being less likely...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2016) 38 (2): 147–160.
Published: 01 January 2016
... available in the park. Records were obtained from unpublished reports, records of the author, the Office of Environment and Heritage Atlas of NSW Wildlife database and discussion with other NPWS staff. Nomenclature in this paper follows Cogger (2014). Results The field survey identified 11 frog species...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2020) 40 (4): 652–655.
Published: 01 June 2020
...). This record is listed as 90393-035 in relatively small elapid (mean snout vent length = 42.6 cm, the BioNet Atlas of NSW Wildlife (NSW Bionet 2019). max = 60 cm) (Shine 1987) found across central inland Another specimen (Australian Museum catalog number - NSW, extending north through the interior of south...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2011) 34 (4): 561–563.
Published: 20 October 2011
..., R. and Poulter, R. 2003. The New Atlas of Australian Birds. Birds Australia, Hawthorn East, Victoria. The New Atlas of Australian Birds Blakers, M. Davies, S.J.J.F. and Reilly, P.N. 1985. The Atlas of Australian Birds. Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union, Melbourne University Press...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2020) 40 (3): 433–437.
Published: 01 May 2020
... these apps before the project is published. That s another comment. PAUL WILLIS: I ll take that as a comment. Are there other comments on this particular issue, because it seems we ve hit a bit of a rich vein here? TONY SAUNDERS: I ve been fairly involved with what was Birds Australia Atlas. I was actually...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2020) 40 (4): 636–640.
Published: 01 June 2020
..., and the Murray Mallee region in the south-east, while its Victorian distribution is restricted to the Murray-Sunset National Park (Atlas of Living Australia [ALA] 2018). Due to its small distribution in Victoria s north-west, H. millewae is listed on the Victorian Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988...