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roost switching
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Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2019) 40 (1): 75–91.
Published: 01 January 2019
... of their switching their prey base to endemic land birds and breeding seabirds. Simultaneous point surveys and radio-tracking of two female owls over 14 months in 2009–2010 indicated that owls occupied small overlapping home ranges with smaller discrete home range cores. The population of Tyto novaehollandiae...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2014) 30 (1): 71–77.
Published: 17 March 2014
... an additional survey technique, roost location. Three techniques were used: happing using harp trap and tripline methods: ultrasonic detection using hand-held, driving transect and remote sensing techniques; and roost location. No single survey technique recorded all 20 species of bats. A number of significant...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2014) 31 (1): 110–117.
Published: 17 March 2014
... type and tested because of its costs relative to other systems. The remote detection technique was inefficient as a means for identifying ail potential species that occur in the area, because of slow response by the equipment to switch on in response to bat calls, problems with high noise to signal...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2014) 30 (4): 467–479.
Published: 17 March 2014
... species richness. Targetting water-bodies increased the efficiency of our survey as the number of bat passes recorded over water-bodies was three times greater than at forest sites. The use of Delay Switches revealed temporal differences in activity for a number of species. it is suggested that bat...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2016) 38 (2): 183–191.
Published: 01 January 2016
... in historic roosting sites. Helicopter surveys located another 24 potential Ghost Bat sites but none contained evidence of occupation by these carnivorous bats. A number of cave features that were considered to be important to Ghost Bats and Cane Toads were recorded and samples of Ghost Bat droppings were...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2012) 36 (1): 1–4.
Published: 07 September 2012
... of riparian areas Wildlife Research 28 619 26 Law B. S. and Anderson J. 2000. Roost preferences and foraging ranges of the eastern forest bat Vespadelus pumilus under two disturbance histories in northern New South Wales, Australia. Austral Ecology 25: 352-67. Roost preferences and foraging...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2014) 30 (3): 346–350.
Published: 17 March 2014
... from direct capture. Bat detectors connected to Delay Switches (Anabat 11, Titley Electronics, Ballina, New South Wales) were used to record bats all night a t the ponds in front of Kingfisher Bay Resort (1 1 nights) and at Dundonga Creek (nine nights) ("remote recordings" Fig. 1). Surveys with bat...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2014) 31 (1): 166–174.
Published: 17 March 2014
.... macropus indicate that their ultrasonic calls can be detected by the Anabat system for at least 20 m. Anabat detectors were linked to a Delay Switch (Titley Electronics) to allow remote monitoring of sites (Law et al . 1998). Because of high bat activity levels Delay Switches were only able to extend...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2014) 30 (3): 310–315.
Published: 17 March 2014
... effect. The animals seemed to recognize the sound of the water pump used to generate the waterjet sprayed at them and would depart their roost when the pump was started and return when it was switched off! Pleropus have the capacity to learn (Ratcliffe 1931) and this must be considered when developing...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2014) 32 (3): 439–445.
Published: 17 March 2014
... (pers. obs Survey methods used in the past for sheathtail bat species include searching for roosts, spotlighting and shooting, and less successfully, mist nets and harp traps. In recent years, new information on some species has been obtained using electronic bat detectors. However, identification...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2014) 30 (4): 437–442.
Published: 17 March 2014
... roosting or "cradle" postures. . . o r they may hang upside- down from thumb claws. . . (Wimsatt 1960; West and Redshaw 1987). The latterposture appears most common" (my italics). This last statement does not derive from West and Redshaw (1987). who described emergence of the young as occurring when, "most...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2023) 43 (1): 1–144.
Published: 25 August 2023
... The discovery of the remains of the last Tasmanian tiger (Thylacinus cynocephalus) Robert N. Paddle, Kathryn M. Medlock97 Diurnal tree-roosting by Eastern Horseshoe Bats Rhinolophus megaphyllus Christopher P. Slade and David M. Power 109 Rottnest Island Peafowl Pavo cristatus - a colourful history comes...
Book
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2011
10.7882/9780980327243
EISBN: 978-0-9803272-4-3
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2024) 43 (4): 1–675.
Published: 04 October 2024
... on the availability of preferred and secondary prey species (Price & Banks, 2016). Introduced predators rapidly switch onto birds eggs and chicks during the nesting season because of their availability, nutritional value, and the ease with which they are found. By applying olfactory misinformation, we can reduce...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2022) 42 (2): fmii–fmcdxcviii.
Published: 31 August 2022
... (Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions 2021). Carnaby s and Baudin s Black-cockatoos Both Carnaby s and Baudin s Black-cockatoos roost in Wandoo Eucalyptus wandoo dominated woodlands and forage in heathlands located in the Stirling Range KBA. Large tracts of black-cockatoo feeding habitat...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2014) 31 (1): 38–54.
Published: 17 March 2014
...: Pteropididae) in tropical Queensland Aust. Mammal. 10 87 88 Richards, G. C., 1990a. The Spectacled Flying Fox, Pteropus conspicillatus (Chiroptera: Pteropididae), in north Queensland. 1. Roost sites and distribution patterns. Aust. Mammal. 13: 1-22. The Spectacled Flying Fox, Pteropus...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2022) 42 (3): 1–847.
Published: 22 November 2022
... 30 1417 1427 1423 0750 0708 Aug 3 1606 Aug 4 Aug 6 Aug 10 Aug 11 Aug 12 1511 1622 0945 1642 1629 Aug 27 Aug 28 0833 1627 The recorder was switched on as the nest was approached, in all cases except for the recordings on 16, 18, 22 and 30 July. So except for these four dates, the sound recordings...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2020) 40 (3): 379–391.
Published: 01 May 2020
... and switch on one s mobile phone (Wikelski et al. 2007, McKinnon & Love 2018). However, for all their strengths and future promise, all systems have limitations, including, but not limited to differences in cost, longevity and size of the animal- borne devices, and the spatiotemporal resolution and scale...
Journal Articles
Journal:
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist (2014) 32 (3): 381–400.
Published: 17 March 2014
... (corellas, cockatoos, parrots etc which nest in tree hollows and may forage for seed far from woodland. Nesting densities of birds of prey were similarly high in woodland communities. Figure 2 The White-striped Freetail Bat Tadarida australis, a species that is dependent on trees for roosting, was recorded...
Book
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2004
10.7882/9780958608572
EISBN: 978-0-9586085-7-2
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