Publications by: Alex Anderson

Also publishes as (Alexander Sibthorpe Anderson, Alexander S. Anderson, Alex S. Anderson)

Up a level
Export as [feed] Atom [feed] RSS 1.0 [feed] RSS 2.0 [feed] RSS 2.0
Number of items: 7.

Scheffers, Brett R., Shoo, Luke, Phillips, Ben, Macdonald, Stewart L., Anderson, Alex, VanDerWal, Jeremy, Storlie, Collin, Gourret, Arnaud, and Williams, Stephen E. (2017) Vertical (arboreality) and horizontal (dispersal) movement increase the resilience of vertebrates to climatic instability. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 26 (7). pp. 787-798.

Anderson, Alexander S., Marques, Tiago A., Shoo, Luke P., and Williams, Stephen E. (2015) Detectability in audio-visual surveys of tropical rainforest birds: the influence of species, weather and habitat characteristics. PLoS ONE, 10 (6). e0128464. pp. 1-24.

Anderson, Alexander S., Storlie, Collin J., Shoo, Luke P., Pearson, Richard G., and Williams, Stephen E. (2013) Current analogues of future climate indicate the likely response of a sensitive montane tropical avifauna to a warming world. PLoS ONE, 8 (7). e69393. pp. 1-13.

Anderson, Alex S., Reside, April E., VanDerWal, Jeremy J., Shoo, Luke P., Pearson, Richard G., and Williams, Stephen E. (2012) Immigrants and refugees: the importance of dispersal in mediating biotic attrition under climate change. Global Change Biology, 18 (7). pp. 2126-2134.

Gratani, Monica, Butler, James R.A., Royee, Frank, Valentine, Peter, Burrows, Damien, Canendo, Warren I., and Anderson, Alex S. (2011) Is validation of indigenous ecological knowledge a disrespectful process? A case study of traditional fishing poisons and invasive fish management from the Wet Tropics, Australia. Ecology and Society, 16 (3). 25. pp. 1-14.

Anderson, Alexander Sibthorpe (2011) Influences of past, present and future climate on the structure and diversity of rainforest bird assemblages in north-eastern Australia. PhD thesis, James Cook University.

Shoo, Luke P., Anderson, Alex, and Williams, Stephen (2009) On the isolated population of Lewin’s Honeyeater (Meliphaga lewinii amphochlora) from the McIlwraith Range uplands, Cape York Peninsula, Australia: estimates of population size and distribution. Emu: austral ornithology, 109 (4). pp. 288-293.

This list was generated on Wed Nov 13 06:16:36 2024 AEST.