Recent publications
Ashraf N, Anwar M, Hussain I, Latham ADM 2015. Habitat use of Himalayan grey goral in relation to livestock grazing in Machiara National Park, Pakistan. Mammalia 80(1): 59–70. doi: 10.1515/mammalia-2014-0099
Barron MC, Tompkins DM, Ramsey DSL, Bosson MAJ 2015. The role of multiple wildlife hosts in the persistence and spread of bovine tuberculosis in New Zealand. New Zealand Veterinary Journal 63(supplement 1): 68–76. doi: 10.1080/00480169.2014.968229
Bellingham PJ 2015. Lucy Cranwell Lecture, 3 September 2014: New Zealand’s native forests: driven by natural disturbances, now influenced by invasive plants and animals. Auckland Botanical Society Journal 70(2): 67–76.
Byrom AE, Nkwabi AJK, Metzger K, Mduma SAR, Forrester GJ, Ruscoe WA, Reed DN, Bukombe J, Mchetto J, Sinclair ARE 2015. Anthropogenic stressors influence small mammal communities in tropical East African savanna at multiple spatial scales. Wildlife Research 42(2): 119–131.
Byrom AE, Ruscoe WA, Nkwabi AK, Metzger KL, Forrester GJ, Craft ME, Durant SM, Makacha S, Bukombe J, Mchetto J, Mduma SA, Reed DN, Hampson K, Sinclair ARE 2015. Small mammal diversity and population dynamics in the greater Serengeti ecosystem. In: ARE Sinclair, KL Metzger, SAR Mduma, JM Fryxell (eds). Serengeti IV : sustaining biodiversity in a coupled human-natural system. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. doi: 10.1071/WR14223
Cowan P, Brown S, Forrester G, Booth L, Crowell M 2015. Bird-repellent effects on bait efficacy for control of invasive mammal pests. Pest Management Science71(8): 1075–1081. doi: 10.1002/ps.3887
Dowling DK, Tompkins DM, Gemmell NJ 2015. The Trojan Female Technique for pest control: a candidate mitochondrial mutation confers low male fertility across diverse nuclear backgrounds in Drosophila melanogaster. Evolutionary Applications 8(9): 871–880. doi: 10.1111/eva.12297
Farnworth B, Innes J, Waas JR 2016. Converting predation cues into conservation tools: the effect of light on mouse foraging behaviour. PLoS ONE 11(1): e0145432. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0145432
Forsyth DM, Wilson DJ, Easdale TA, Kunstler G, Canham CD, Ruscoe WA, Wright EF, Murphy L, Gormley A, Gaxiola A, Coomes DA 2015. Century-scale effects of invasive deer and rodents on the dynamics of forests growing on soils of contrasting fertility. Ecological Monographs 85(2): 157–180. doi: 10.1890/14-0389.1
Garvey PM, Glen AS, Pech RP 2015. Foraging ermine avoid risk: behavioural responses of a mesopredator to its interspecific competitors in a mammalian guild. Biological Invasions 17(6): 1771–1783. doi: 10.1007/s10530-014-0833-8
Goldson SL, Bourdôt GW, Brockerhoff EG, Byrom AE, Clout MN, McGlone MS, Nelson WA, Popay AJ, Suckling DM, Templeton MD 2015. New Zealand pest management: current and future challenges. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 45(1): 31–58. doi: 10.1080/03036758.2014.1000343
Gormley AM, Forsyth DM, Wright EF, Lyall J, Elliott M, Martini M, Kappers B, Perry M, McKay M 2015. Cost-effective large-scale occupancy–abundance monitoring of invasive brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) on New Zealand’s public conservation land. PLoS ONE 10(6): e0127693. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127693
Holland EP, James A, Ruscoe WA, Pech RP, Byrom AE 2015. Climate-based models for pulsed resources improve predictability of consumer population dynamics: outbreaks of house mice in forest ecosystems. PLoS ONE10(3): e0119139. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0119139
Krull CR, Galbraith JA, Glen AS, Nathan HW 2015. Invasive vertebrates in Australia and New Zealand. In: A Stow, N Maclean, GI Holwell (eds). Austral ark: the state of wildlife in Australia and New Zealand. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.pp.197–226
Latham ADM, Boutin S 2015. Impacts of utility and other industrial linear corridors on wildlife. In: R van der Ree, DJ Smith, C Grilo (eds). Handbook of road ecology. Chichester, UK: Wiley Blackwell. pp.228–236. doi: 10.1002/9781118568170.ch27
Latham ADM, Latham MC, Anderson DP, Cruz J, Herries D, Hebblewhite M 2015. The GPS craze: six questions to address before deciding to deploy GPS technology on wildlife. New Zealand Journal of Ecology39(1): 143–152.
Perry GLW, Wilmhurst JM, Ogden J, Enright NJ 2015. Exotic mammals and invasive plants alter fire-related thresholds in southern temperate forested landscapes. Ecosystems18(7): 1290–1305. doi: 10.1007/s10021-015-9898-1