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研究领域

Predicting the impact of climate change on the adaptive capacity of frogs and reptiles Thermal thresholds in embryonic sea turtles Reproductive biology of terrestrial breeding frogs Direct fitness benefits arising from mate choice Physiological constraints that affect sexually selected signals

近期论文

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Mitchell N, Rodriguez N, Kuchling G, Arnall S, Kearney M. 2016. Reptile embryos and climate change: modelling limits of viability to inform translocation decisions. Biological Conservation: (in press). Van Lohuizen S, Rossendell J, Mitchell NJ, Thums M. 2016. The effect of incubation temperatures on nest success of flatback sea turtles (Natator depressus). Marine Biology (in press) Tedeschi, J., Kennington, W., Tomkins, J., Berry, O., Whiting, S., Meekan, M. and Mitchell, N. 2016. Heritable variation in heat shock gene expression: a potential mechanism for adaptation to thermal stress in embryos of sea turtles. Proceedings of the Royal Society London; Series B 283, 20152320. Carter, A., Kearney, M., Mitchell, N., Hartley, S., Porter, W. and Nelson, N. 2015. Modelling the soil microclimate: does the spatial or temporal resolution of input parameters matter? Frontiers of Biogeography 7. Edwards, E., Mitchell, N. J. and Ridley, A. R. 2015. The impact of high temperatures on foraging behaviour and body condition in the Western Australian Magpie (Cracticus tibicen dorsalis). Ostrich 86, 137-144. Seddon, P. J., Moro, D., Mitchell, N. J., Chauvenet, A. L. M. and Mawson, P. R. 2015. Proactive conservation or planned invasion? Past, current and future use of assisted colonisation. In Advances in Reintroduction Biology for Australian and New Zealand Fauna, (ed. D. P. Armstrong): CSIRO Publishing Arnall, S., Kuchling, G., and Mitchell N.J. 2015. A thermal profile of metabolic performance in the rare Australian chelid, Pseudemydura umbrina. Australian Journal of Zoology; 62, 448-453 Tedeschi, J., Mitchell, N.J., Meekan, M, Berry, O, Whiting, S.D., Kennington, W.J. 2015. Reconstructed paternal genotypes reveal variable rates of multiple paternity at three rookeries of loggerhead sea turtles Caretta caretta in Western Australia. Australian Journal of Zoology; 62, 454-462 Tedeschi, J. N., Kennington, W. J., Berry, O., Whiting, S., Meekan, M. and Mitchell, N. J. 2015. Increased expression of Hsp70 and Hsp90 mRNA as biomarkers of thermal stress in loggerhead turtle embryos (Caretta Caretta). Journal of Thermal Biology 47, 42-50. Stubbs, J., Kearney, M.J, Whiting, S. D., & Mitchell, N.J. 2014. Models of primary sex ratios at a major flatback turtle rookery show an anomalous masculinizing trend. Climate Change Responses 1 (3); 1-18 Groom, C. G., Mawson, P. R., Roberts, J. D. and Mitchell, N. J. 2014. Meeting an expanding human population’s needs whilst conserving a threatened parrot species in an urban environment. WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment 191, 1199-1212. Grayson KL, Mitchell NJ & Nelson NJ. 2014. A hot threat to New Zealand’s tuatara. American Scientist 102: 350-7 Dade, M., Pauli, N., & Mitchell, N.J. 2014. Mapping a new future: using spatial multiple criteria analysis to identify novel habitats for endangered species. Animal Conservation doi: 10.1111/acv.12150 Grayson KL, Mitchell NJ, Monks JM, Keall SN, Wilson JN, Nelson NJ. 2014. Sex Ratio Bias and Extinction Risk in an Isolated Population of Tuatara Sphenodon punctatus. PloS one 9:e94214 Keith, D.A., Mahony, M., Hines, H., Elith, J., Regan, T.J., Baumgartner, J., Hunter, D., Heard, G., Mitchell, N., Penman, T., Parris, K., Reid, C., Scheele, B., Simpson, C.C., Tingly, R., West, M., Akcakaya, H.R. 2014. Detecting extinction risk from climate change by IUCN Red List criteria. Conservation Biology 28: 810-819. Woolgar L., S. Trocini and N. Mitchell. 2013. Key parameters describing temperature-dependent sex determination in the southernmost population of Loggerhead sea turtles. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 449:77-84 Rout, T.M., Mcdonald-Madden, E., Martin, T.G., Mitchell, N.J., Possingham, H.P. and Armstrong, D.P. 2013. How to decide whether to move species threatened by climate change. PLoS one 8: e75814 Harris, S., Arnall, S., Byrne, M., Coates, D., Hayward, M., Martin, T., Mitchell, N. & Garnett, S. 2013. Whose backyard? Some precautions in choosing recipient sites for assisted colonisation of Australian plants and animals. Ecological Management & Restoration, 14: 106-111. Mitchell, N., Hipsey, M., Arnall, S., McGrath, G., bin Tareque, H., Kuchling, G., Vogwill, R., Sivapalan, M., Porter, W., and Kearney, M. 2013 Linking eco-energetics and eco-hydrology to select sites for the assisted colonization of Australia’s rarest reptile. Biology 2: 1-25. Lunt, I.D., Byrne, M., Hellmann, J.J., Mitchell, N.J., Garnett, S.T., Hayward, M.W., Martin, T.G., McDonald-Madden, E., Williams, S., Zander, K.K. 2013. Using assisted colonisation to conserve biodiversity and restore ecosystem function under climate change. Biological Conservation 157: 172-177.

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