Professor David Lindenmayer

BSc, DipEd, PhD, DSc, FAA, AO
Professor

Professor David Lindenmayer is a world-leading expert in forest ecology and resource management, conservation science, and biodiversity conservation. He currently runs 5 large-scale, long-term research programs in south-eastern Australia, primarily associated with developing ways to conserve biodiversity in farmland, wood production forests, plantations, and reserves. He has maintained some of the largest, long-term research programs in Australia, with some exceeding 41 years in duration.

David Lindenmayer has published 1445 scientific articles including 925 peer-reviewed papers in international scientific journals. He has also published 49 books, including many award winning textbooks and other seminal books. He is among the world's most productive and most highly-cited scientists, particularly in forest ecology and conservation biology. He has a Google Scholar H-Index of 146. He was included in the 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2015, and 2014 Clarivate Highly Cited Lists (https://clarivate.com/hcr/2017-researchers-list/). Between 2004 and 2024, David Lindenmayer was listed among the top 2000 Highly Cited Researchers (h>100) according to Google Scholar Citations public profiles across all disciplines (http://www.webometrics.info/en/node/58). In 2017 he was listed in the top 50 Australian scientists across all disciplines. David Lindenmayer is a member of an elite group of 0.5% of scientists globally that have published >10 peer-reviewed scientific articles in international journals annually each year for the past decade. In 2020, 2021 and 2022, The Australian newspaper listed the 30 leading Australian scientists, and Lindenmayer was listed as the leading conservation and biodiversity expert in the nation.

David Lindenmayer held a prestigious Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow from 2013-2018. He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science (elected 2008), a Fellow of the Ecological Society of America (elected in 2019), Fellow of the Royal Zoological Society, Fellow of the American Academy of Science, and was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in 2014. His research has been recognised through numerous awards, including the Eureka Science Prize (three times), Whitley Award (10 times), the Serventy Medal for Ornithology, and the Australian Natural History Medallion. In 2018, he was awarded the prestigious Whittaker Medal from the Ecological Society of America. In 2022 he was elected a a Fellow of the NSW Royal Zoological Society.

Professor Lindenmayer has recently published an important book - The Forest Wars: The ugly truth about what's happening in our tall forests. This book lifts the lid on the destruction of native forests by government corporations and logging industry that is making bushfires worse, killing wildlife and costing taxpayers millions, for the sake of exported woodchips.

Research interests

Landscape restoration and remnant native vegetation

  • A major restoration experiment in the Riverina and western Murray regions of southern Australia - studies of birds, small mammals, frogs, reptiles and arboreal marsupials.
  • Tests of the applicability of the focal species and other surrogate approaches in restoration

Integrated forest use, wildlife conservation and ecologically sustainability

  • The ontogeny and process of the development of cavities in ash-type eucalypt trees and its implications for the conservation of hollow-dependent fauna.
  • The importance of forest structure in ecologically sustainable forestry
  • The impact of forest fragmentation on forest fauna inhabiting intensively-used wood production areas.
  • Integration of resource economic analysis and ecological data to assess the efficacy of various forest management options.
  • Performance measures for models of wildlife habitat and nest tree suitability.
  • Genetic variability, dispersal behaviour, metapopulation dynamics, forest fragmentation and the conservation of mammals.
  • The effects of clearfelling practices on the development of policies for the ecologically sustainable use of forest resources.
  • The value for generic models for integrating wildlife conservation and timber harvesting.
  • Associations of species of arboreal marsupials and the use of management indicator species in forest conservation.
  • Morphometric, genetic and parasitological changes along a latitudinal gradient in the Mountain Brushtail Possum.

Habitat fragmentation and retained systems in wood production forests

  • Major fragmentation natural experiments in the Tumut and Nanangroe regions of southern Australia - studies of birds, small mammals, frogs, weeds, reptiles and arboreal marsupials.
  • The importance of systems of retained vegetation for the conservation of forest vertebrate fauna.
  • Distribution and abundance of birds, small mammals & arboreal marsupials in habitat fragments.
  • Edge effects and its impacts on the deterioration of retained systems in timber production forests.

Sampling methodology for forest vertebrates

  • Comparisons of sampling methods for birds, arboreal marsupials and small mammals.

Species responses to vegetation types and ecological burning practices

  • Major ecological burning and vegetation type response study - for vertebrates (mammals, birds and reptiles) at Booderee National Park, Jervis Bay Territory, south-eastern Australia
  • Major studies of post-fire ecological recovery following major wildfires in Victorian in 2009 - builds upon 30 years of past research in the montane ash forests of the Central Highlands of Victoria

Re-introduction biology

  • The application of simulation and other modelling approaches in captive breeding and reintroduction.
  • The role and importance of disease in reintroduction biology and captive breeding programs.
  • Southwell, D, Legge, S, Woinarski, J et al. 2022, 'Design considerations for rapid biodiversity reconnaissance surveys and long-term monitoring to assess the impact of wildfire', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 28, no. 3, pp. 559ââ¬â570.
  • Howard, I, Ridley, J, Blanchard, W et al. 2022, 'Helping wildlife beat the heat: Testing strategies to improve the thermal performance of nest boxes', Australian Zoologist, vol. 42, no. 2, pp. 534-560.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, McBurney, L et al. 2022, 'Stand age related differences in forest microclimate', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 510.
  • Cunningham, S, Crane, M, Evans, M et al. 2022, 'Density of invasive western honey bee (Apis mellifera) colonies in fragmented woodlands indicates potential for large impacts on native species', Scientific Reports, vol. 12, no. 1, p. 10.
  • Yamaura, Y, Fletcher Jr, R, Lade, S et al. 2022, 'From nature reserve to mosaic management: Improving matrix survival, not permeability, benefits regional populations under habitat loss and fragmentation', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 59, no. 6, pp. 1472-1483pp.
  • Lindenmayer, D, McBurney, L, Blanchard, W et al. 2022, 'Elevation, disturbance, and forest type drive the occurrence of a specialist arboreal folivore', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 17, no. 4, pp. e0265963.
  • Westgate, M, Crane, C, Smith, D et al. 2022, 'Improved management of farm dams increases vegetation cover, water quality, and macroinvertebrate biodiversity', Ecology and Evolution, vol. 12, no. 3, p. 12.
  • Hingee, K, Westgate, M & Lindenmayer, D 2022, 'Long-term monitoring in endangered woodlands shows effects of multi-scale drivers on bird occupancy', Journal of Biogeography, vol. 49, no. 5, pp. 879-890.
  • Batterham, P, Brown, K, Calear, A et al. 2022, 'The FarmWell Study: Examining relationships between farm environment, financial status and the mental health and wellbeing of farmers', Psychiatry Research Communications, vol. 2, no. 2.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, Bowd, E et al. 2022, 'Rapid bird species recovery following high-severity wildfire but in the absence of early successional specialists', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 28, no. 10, pp. 2110-2123.
  • Sritharan, S, Scheele, B, Blanchard, W et al. 2022, 'Plant rarity in fire-prone dry sclerophyll communities', Scientific Reports, vol. 12, p. 10.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Zylstra, P & Yebra, M 2022, 'Adaptive wildfire mitigation approaches', Science, vol. 377, no. 6611, pp. 1163-1164.
  • Hartley, R, Clemann, N, Atkins, Z et al. 2022, 'Isolated on sky islands: genetic diversity and population structure of an endangered mountain lizard', Conservation Genetics, vol. 24, pp. 219â233.
  • Lavery, T, Dickman, C & Lindenmayer, D 2022, 'A most enigmatic mouse: Additional information on collection of blue-grey mouse (Pseudomys glaucus Thomas 1910) from New South Wales in 1956', Australian Mammalogy, vol. 44, no. 3, pp. 371-379.
  • Sweaney, N, Lindenmayer, D & Driscoll, D 2022, 'Movement across woodland edges suggests plantations and farmland are barriers to dispersal', Landscape Ecology, vol. 37, pp. 175-189.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blair, D, McBurney, L et al. 2021, 'Ten years on - a decade of intensive biodiversity research after the 2009 black saturday wildfires in victoria's mountain ash forest', Australian Zoologist, vol. 41, no. 2, pp. 220-230.
  • Higgins, T, Dobes, L, Crane, M et al. 2021, 'Increased livestock weight gain from improved water quality in farm dams: A cost-benefit analysis', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 16, no. 8 August.
  • Lavery, T, Morgain, R, Fitzsimons, J et al. 2021, 'Impact Indicators for Biodiversity Conservation Research: Measuring Influence within and beyond Academia', BioScience, vol. 71, no. 4, pp. 383-395.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Burnett, P 2021, 'Biodiversity in court: Will the Regional Forest Agreements (RFAs) make the EPBC Act irrelevant?', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. Online, pp. 1-5.
  • Westgate, M, Crane, M, Florance, D et al. 2021, 'Synergistic impacts of aggressive species on small birds in a fragmented landscape', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 58, no. 4, pp. 825-835.
  • Betts, M, Phalan, B, Wolf, C et al. 2021, 'Producing wood at least cost to biodiversity: integrating Triad and sharing-sparing approaches to inform forest landscape management', Biological Reviews, vol. 96, no. 4, pp. 1301-1317.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, McBurney, L et al. 2021, 'What factors influence the occurrence and abundance of midstorey Acacia in Mountain Ash forests?', Austral Ecology, vol. 46, no. 4, pp. 532-544.
  • Hartley, R, Blanchard, W, Schroder, M et al. 2021, 'Exotic herbivores dominate Australian high-elevation grasslands', Conservation Science and Practice, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 1-11.
  • Taylor, C & Lindenmayer, D 2021, 'Stakeholder engagement in a Forest Stewardship Council Controlled Wood assessment', Environmental Science and Policy, vol. 120, pp. 204-212.
  • Bergstrom, D, Wienecke, B, van den Hoff, J et al. 2021, 'Combating ecosystem collapse from the tropics to the Antarctic', Global Change Biology, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 1-12pp.
  • Youngentob, K, Lindenmayer, D, Ford, K et al. 2021, 'Food intake: an overlooked driver of climate change casualties?', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 36, no. 8, pp. 676-678.
  • Vardon, M, Keith, H, Burnett, P et al. 2021, 'From natural capital accounting to natural capital banking', Nature Sustainability, vol. online.
  • Bowd, E, Banks, S, Bissett, A et al. 2021, 'Direct and indirect disturbance impacts in forests', Ecology Letters, vol. 24, no. 6, pp. 1225-1236.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Bowd, E & McBurney, L 2021, 'Long-Term Empirical Studies Highlight Multiple Drivers of Temporal Change in Bird Fauna in the Wet Forests of Victoria, South-Eastern Australia', Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 9.
  • Bowd, E, McBurney, L & Lindenmayer, D 2021, 'Temporal patterns of vegetation recovery after wildfire in two obligate seeder ash forests', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 496.
  • Bowd, E, McBurney, L, Blair, D et al. 2021, 'Temporal patterns of forest seedling emergence across different disturbance histories', Ecology and Evolution, vol. 11, no. 14, pp. 9254-9292.
  • Bowd, E, Blair, D & Lindenmayer, D 2021, 'Prior disturbance legacy effects on plant recovery post-high-severity wildfire', Ecosphere, vol. 12, no. 5.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, Blair, D et al. 2021, 'The response of arboreal marsupials to long-term changes in forest disturbance', Animal Conservation, vol. 24, no. 2, pp. 246-258.
  • Angelstam, P, Albulescu, A, Andrianambinina, O et al. 2021, 'Frontiers of protected areas versus forest exploitation: Assessing habitat network functionality in 16 case study regions globally', AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment, vol. 50, no. 12, pp. 2286-2310.
  • Lavery, T, Eldridge, M, Legge, S et al. 2021, 'Threats to Australia's rock-wallabies (Petrogale spp.) with key directions for effective monitoring', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 30, pp. 4137-4161.
  • Belder, D, Pierson, J, Rudder, A et al. 2021, 'Ongoing declines of woodland birds: Are restoration plantings making a difference?', Ecological Applications, vol. 31, no. 3.
  • Von Takach Dukai, B, Ahrens, C, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2021, 'Scale-dependent signatures of local adaptation in a foundation tree species', Molecular Ecology, vol. 30 , no. 10, pp. 2248-2261.
  • Leverkus, A, Thorn, S, Gustafsson, L et al. 2021, 'Environmental policies to cope with novel disturbance regimes–steps to address a world scientists’ warning to humanity', Environmental Research Letters, vol. 16.
  • Seibold, S, Rammer, W, Hothorn, T et al. 2021, 'The contribution of insects to global forest deadwood decomposition', Nature, vol. 597, no. 7874, pp. 77-81.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Taylor, C & Blanchard, W 2021, 'Empirical analyses of the factors influencing fire severity in southeastern Australia', Ecosphere, vol. 12, no. 8.
  • Taylor, C, Blanchard, W & Lindenmayer, D 2021, 'What are the associations between thinning and fire severity?', Austral Ecology, vol. 46, no. 8, pp. 1425-1439.
  • Sritharan, S, Scheele, B, Blanchard, W et al. 2021, 'Spatial associations between plants and vegetation community characteristics provide insights into the processes influencing plant rarity', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 16, no. 12.
  • Bowd, E, Blanchard, W, McBurney, L et al. 2021, 'Direct and indirect disturbance impacts on forest biodiversity', Ecosphere, vol. 12, no. 12, pp. 1-22.
  • Scheele, B, Hollanders, M, Hoffmann, E et al. 2021, 'Conservation translocations for amphibian species threatened by chytrid fungus: A review, conceptual framework, and recommendations', Conservation Science and Practice, vol. 3, no. 11, pp. 1-15.
  • Mackey, B, Lindenmayer, D, Norman, P et al. 2021, 'Are fire refugia less predictable due to climate change?', Environmental Research Letters, vol. 16, no. 11.
  • Robinson, N, Rhoades, C, Pierson, J et al. 2021, 'Prioritising source populations for supplementing genetic diversity of reintroduced southern brown bandicoots Isoodon obesulus obesulus', Conservation Genetics, vol. 22, pp. 341ââ¬â353.
  • Cary GJ, Blanchard W, Foster CN, Lindenmayer DB (2021) Effects of altered fire intervals on critical timber production and conservation values. International Journal of Wildland Fire 30: 322-328.
  • Lavery, T, Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W et al. 2021, 'Counting plants: The extent and adequacy of monitoring for a continental-scale list of threatened plant species', Biological Conservation, vol. 260, 109193.
  • Yebra M, Barnes N, Bryant C, Cary GJ, et al. (2021) An integrated system to protect Australia from catastrophic bushfires. Australian Journal of Emergency Management 36, no. 4, pp. 20-22.
  • Zentelis, R, Hubbard, P, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2020, 'More bang for your buck: Managing the military training and environmental values of military training areas', Environmental and Sustainability Indicators, vol. 8.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, Foster, C et al. 2020, 'Habitat amount versus connectivity: An empirical study of bird responses', Biological Conservation, vol. 241.
  • Scheele, B, Pasmans, F, Skerratt, L et al. 2020, 'Response to Comment on Amphibian fungal panzootic causes catastrophic and ongoing loss of biodiversity', Science, vol. 367, no. 6484, pp. 1-4.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Lane, P, Westgate, M et al. 2020, 'Long-term mammal and nocturnal bird trends are influenced by vegetation type, weather and climate in temperate woodlands', Austral Ecology, vol. 45, no. 6, pp. 813-824.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Foster, C, Westgate, M et al. 2020, 'Managing interacting disturbances: Lessons from a case study in Australian forests', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 57, no. 9, pp. 1711-1716.
  • Ward, M, Tulloch, A, Radford, J et al. 2020, 'Impact of 2019-2020 mega-fires on Australian fauna habitat', Nature Ecology & Evolution, vol. 4, no. 10, pp. 1321-1326.
  • Yong, D, Barton, P, Okada, S et al. 2020, 'Conserving focal insect groups in woodland remnants: The role of landscape context and habitat structure on cross-taxonomic congruence', Ecological Indicators, vol. 115.
  • Robinson, N, Dexter, N, Brewster, R et al. 2020, 'Be nimble with threat mitigation: lessons learned from the reintroduction of an endangered species', Restoration Ecology, vol. 28, no. 1, pp. 29-38.
  • Manning, A, Cunningham, R, Tongway, D et al. 2020, 'Woodlands and woody debris: Understanding structure and composition to inform restoration', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 15, no. 3, pp. 1-16.
  • Robinson, N, Blanchard, W, MacGregor, C et al. 2020, 'Can evolutionary theories of dispersal and senescence predict postrelease survival, dispersal, and body condition of a reintroduced threatened mammal?', Ecology and Evolution, vol. 11, no. 2, pp. 1002-1012pp.
  • Robinson, N, Blanchard, W, MacGregor, C et al. 2020, 'Finding food in a novel environment: The diet of a reintroduced endangered meso-predator to mainland Australia, with notes on foraging behaviour', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 15, no. 12.
  • Barton, P, Westgate, M, Foster, C et al 2020, 'Using ecological niche theory to avoid uninformative biodiversity surrogates', Ecological Indicators, vol. 108, pp. 1-7.
  • Burnett, P, Vardon, M, Keith, H et al 2020, 'Measuring net-positive outcomes for nature using accounting', Nature, Ecology and Evolution, vol. 4, pp. 284-285.
  • Von Takach Dukai, B, Peakall, R, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2020, 'The influence of fire and silvicultural practices on the landscape-scale genetic structure of an Australian foundation tree species', Conservation Genetics, vol. 21, pp. 231-246.
  • Mariana, d, Prevedello, J, Pardini, R et al. 2020, 'Isolated trees support lower bird taxonomic richness than trees within habitat patches but similar functional diversity', Biotropica, vol. 53, no. 1, pp. 213-220.
  • Westgate, M, Philip, B, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2020, 'Quantifying shifts in topic popularity over 44 years of Austral Ecology', Austral Ecology, vol. 45, no. 6, pp. 663-671.
  • Crouzeilles, R, Maurenza, D, Prieto, P et al. 2020, 'Associations between socio-environmental factors and landscape-scale biodiversity recovery in naturally regenerating tropical and subtropical forests', Conservation Letters, vol. 14, no. 2, pp. 1-9.
  • MacGregor, C, Blanchard, W, Stein, J et al. 2020, 'Factors influencing the occurrence of the Southern Long-nosed Bandicoot (Perameles nasuta Geoffroy) during a population irruption and decline', Austral Ecology, vol. 45, no. 6, pp. 834-844.
  • Thorn, S, Chao, A, Georgiev, K et al. 2020, 'Estimating retention benchmarks for salvage logging to protect biodiversity', Nature Communications, vol. 11.
  • Razak, S, Saadun, N, Azhar, B et al. 2020, 'Smallholdings with high oil palm yield also support high bird species richness and diverse feeding guilds', Environmental Research Letters, vol. 15, no. 9, pp. 1-14.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2020, 'Fire, forests and fauna (The 2020 Krebs Lecture)', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 118-125.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Taylor, C 2020, 'Extensive recent wildfires demand more stringent protection of critical old growth forest', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 26, no. 4, pp. 395-403.
  • Thorn, S, Chao, A, Georgiev, K et al. 2020, 'Estimating retention benchmarks for salvage logging to protect biodiversity', Nature Communications, vol. 11, no. 1.
  • Taylor, C & Lindenmayer, D 2020, 'Temporal fragmentation of a critically endangered forest ecosystem', Austral Ecology, vol. 45, no. 3, pp. 340-354.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2020, 'Improving Restoration Programs Through Greater Connection With Ecological Theory and Better Monitoring', Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 8, pp. -.
  • Crouzeilles, R, Beyer, H, Monteiro, L et al. 2020, 'Achieving cost-effective landscape-scale forest restoration through targeted natural regeneration', Conservation Letters, vol. 13, no. 3, pp. 1-9.
  • Chazdon, R, Lindenmayer, D, Guariguata, M et al. 2020, 'Fostering natural forest regeneration on former agricultural land through economic and policy interventions', Environmental Research Letters, vol. 15, no. 4, p. 18.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Kooyman, R, Taylor, C et al. 2020, 'Recent Australian wildfires made worse by logging and associated forest management', Nature Ecology & Evolution, vol. 4, no. 7, pp. 898-900.
  • Thorn, S, Seibold, S, Leverkus, A et al. 2020, 'The living dead: acknowledging life after tree death to stop forest degradation', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, vol. 18, no. 9, pp. 505-512.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Taylor, C 2020, 'New spatial analyses of Australian wildfires highlight the need for new fire, resource, and conservation policies', PNAS - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 117, no. 22, pp. 12481-12485.
  • Taylor, C, Blanchard, W & Lindenmayer, D 2020, 'Does forest thinning reduce fire severity in Australian eucalypt forests?', Conservation Letters, vol. 14, no. 2, p. 9.
  • Beggs, R, Pierson, J, Tulloch, A et al. 2020, 'An empirical test of the mechanistic underpinnings of interference competition', Oikos, vol. 129, no. 1, pp. 93-105.
  • Belder, D, Pierson, J, Ikin, K et al. 2020, 'Revegetation and reproduction: do restoration plantings in agricultural landscapes support breeding populations of woodland birds?', Oecologia, vol. 192, pp. 865-878.
  • Leverkus, A, Gustafsson, L, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2020, 'Salvage logging effects on regulating ecosystem services and fuel loads', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, vol. 18, no. 7, pp. 391-400.
  • Foster CN, Banks SC, Cary GJ, Johnson CN, Lindenmayer DB, Valentine LE (2020) Animals as Agents in Fire Regimes. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 35 (4), pp. 346-356.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Woinarski, J, Legge, S et al. 2020, 'A checklist of attributes for effective monitoring of threatened species and threatened ecosystems', Journal of Environmental Management, vol. 262, 110312.
  • Scheele, B, Legge, S, Blanchard, W et al. 2019, 'Continental-scale assessment reveals inadequate monitoring for threatened vertebrates in a megadiverse country', Biological Conservation, vol. 235, pp. 273-278.
  • Wintle, B, Cadenhead, N, Morgain, R et al. 2019, 'Spending to save: What will it cost to halt Australia's extinction crisis?', Conservation Letters, vol. 12, no. 6, pp. 1-7.
  • Pulsford, S, Barton, P, Driscoll, D et al. 2019, 'Interactive effects of land use, grazing and environment on frogs in an agricultural landscape', Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment, vol. 281, pp. 25-34pp.
  • Vardon, M, Keith, H & Lindenmayer, D 2019, 'Accounting and valuing the ecosystem services related to water supply in the Central Highlands of Victoria, Australia', Ecosystem Services, vol. 39, no. 101004, pp. 1-12.
  • Neilan, W, Barton, P, McAlpine, C et al 2019, 'Contrasting effects of mosaic structure on alpha and beta diversity of bird assemblages in a human-modified landscape', Ecography, vol. 42, no. 1, pp. 173-186.
  • Baker, C, Bode, M, Dexter, N et al. 2019, 'A novel approach to assessing the ecosystem-wide impacts of reintroductions', Ecological Applications, vol. 29, no. 1, pp. 1-12.
  • Barton, P, Evans, M, Sato, C et al. 2019, 'Higher-taxon and functional group responses of ant and bird assemblages to livestock grazing: A test of an explicit surrogate concept', Ecological Indicators, vol. 96, pp. 458-465.
  • Foster, C, O'Loughlin, L, Sato, C et al. 2019, 'How practitioners integrate decision triggers with existing metrics in conservation monitoring', Journal of Environmental Management, vol. 230, pp. 94-101.
  • Müller, J, Noss, R, Thorn, S et al 2019, 'Increasing disturbance demands new policies to conserve intact forest', Conservation Letters, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 1-7.
  • Hansen, N, Sato, C, Michael, D et al. 2019, 'Predation risk for reptiles is highest at remnant edges in agricultural landscapes', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 56, no. 1, pp. 31-43.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2019, 'Small patches make critical contributions to biodiversity conservation', PNAS - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 116, no. 3, pp. 717-719.
  • Bowd, E, Banks, S, Strong, C et al 2019, 'Long-term impacts of wildfire and logging on forest soils', Nature Geoscience, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 113-118.
  • Scheele, B, Pasmans, F, Skerratt, L et al 2019, 'Amphibian fungal panzootic causes catastrophic and ongoing loss of biodiversity', Science, vol. 363, no. 6434, pp. 1459-1463pp.
  • Von Takach Dukai, B, Jack, C, Borevitz, J et al 2019, 'Pervasive admixture between eucalypt species has consequences for conservation and assisted migration', Evolutionary Applications, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 845-860.
  • Vardon, M, May, S, Keith, H et al 2019, 'Accounting for ecosystem services - Lessons from Australia for its application and use in Oceania to achieve sustainable development', Ecosystem Services, vol. 39, pp. 1-10.
  • Ikin, K, Barton, P, Blanchard, W et al. 2019, 'Avian functional responses to landscape recovery', Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B: Biological Sciences, vol. 286, no. 1901, pp. 1-8.
  • Michael, D, Blanchard, W, Scheele, B et al. 2019, 'Comparative use of active searches and artificial refuges to detect amphibians in terrestrial environments', Austral Ecology, vol. 44, no. 2, pp. 327-338.
  • Beggs, R, Pierson, J, Tulloch, A et al 2019, 'An experimental test of a compensatory nest predation model following lethal control of an overabundant native species', Biological Conservation, vol. 231, pp. 122-132.
  • Sato, C, Strong, C, Holliday, P et al 2019, 'Environmental and grazing management drivers of soil condition', Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment, vol. 276, pp. 1-7.
  • Beggs, R, Tulloch, A, Pierson, J et al. 2019, 'Patch-scale culls of an overabundant bird defeated by immediate recolonization', Ecological Applications, vol. 29, no. 3, pp. 1-13.
  • Garnett, S, Butchart, S, Baker, G et al. 2019, 'Metrics of progress in the understanding and management of threats to Australian birds', Conservation Biology, vol. 33, no. 2, pp. 456-468.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2019, 'Integrating forest biodiversity conservation and restoration ecology principles to recover natural forest ecosystems', New Forests, vol. 50, no. 2, pp. 169-181.
  • Bayraktarov, E, Ehmke, G, O'Connor, J et al. 2019, 'Do Big Unstructured Biodiversity Data Mean More Knowledge?', Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 6, no. 0, pp. 1-5.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, Blair, D et al. 2019, 'Spatiotemporal effects of logging and fire on tall, wet temperate eucalypt forest birds', Ecological Applications, vol. 29, no. 8.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Lane, P, Crane, M et al. 2019, 'Weather effects on birds of different size are mediated by long-term climate and vegetation type in endangered temperate woodlands', Global Change Biology, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 675-685.
  • Hansen, N, Scheele, B, Driscoll, D et al. 2019, 'Amphibians in agricultural landscapes: the habitat value of crop areas, linear plantings and remnant woodland patches', Animal Conservation, vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 72-82.
  • Scheele, B, Foster, C, Hunter, D et al. 2019, 'Living with the enemy: Facilitating amphibian coexistence with disease', Biological Conservation, vol. 236, pp. 52-59.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Westgate, M, Scheele, B et al. 2019, 'Key perspectives on early successional forests subject to stand-replacing disturbances', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 454.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, Westgate, M et al. 2019, 'Novel bird responses to successive, large-scale, landscape transformations', Ecological Monographs, vol. 89, no. 3.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Lane, P, Foster, C et al. 2019, 'Do migratory and resident birds differ in their responses to interacting effects of climate, weather and vegetation?', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 25, no. 3, pp. 449-461.
  • Taylor, C, Blair, D, Keith, H et al. 2019, 'Modelling water yields in response to logging and Representative Climate Futures', Science of the Total Environment, vol. 688, no. 0, pp. 890-902.
  • Chapman, B & Lindenmayer, D 2019, 'A novel approach to the sustainable financing of the global restoration of degraded agricultural land', Environmental Research Letters, vol. 14, no. 12, pp. -.
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  • Lindenmayer, D 2016, 'The importance of managing and conserving large old trees: a case study from Victorian Mountain Ash forests', Proceedings of The Royal Society of Victoria, 128(1), 64-70.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2016, 'Interactions between forest resource management and landscape structure', Current Landscape Ecology Reports, 1(1), 10-18.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, Blair, D et al 2016, 'Environmental and human drivers influencing large old tree abundance in Australian wet forests', Forest Ecology and Management, 372, 226-235.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, MacGregor, C et al 2016, 'Temporal trends in mammal responses to fire reveals the complex effects of fire regime attributes', Ecological Applications, 26(2), 557-573.
  • Lindenmayer, D.B., Candy, S.G., Banks, S.C., Westgate, M., Ikin, K., Pierson, J., Tulloch, A. & Barton, P. (2016). Do temporal changes in vegetation structure predict changes in bird occurrence additional to time since fire? Ecological Applications, 26, 2267-2279
  • Lindenmayer, D.B., Lane, P.W., Barton, P.S., Crane, M., Ikin, K., Michael, D. & Okada, S. (2016). Long-term bird colonization and turnover in restored woodlands. Biodiversity and Conservation, 25, 1587-1603.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Laurance, W 2016, 'The ecology, distribution, conservation and management of large old trees', Biological Reviews, vol. 92, iss. 3, pp. 1434-1458.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Laurance, W 2016, 'The unique challenges of conserving large old trees', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 31(6), 416-418.
  • Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C, Wood, J et al. 2016, 'Bombs, fire and biodiversity: Vertebrate fauna occurrence in areas subject to military training', Biological Conservation, vol. 204, no. 1, pp. 276-283.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Messier, C & Sato, C 2016, 'Avoiding ecosystem collapse in managed forest ecosystems', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, vol. 14, no. 10, pp. 561-568.
  • Lindenmayer, D., Michael, D., Crane, M., Okada, S., Florance, D., Barton, P.S. & Ikin, K. (2016). Wildlife Conservation in Farm Landscapes. CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Mortelliti, A, Ikin, K et al 2016, 'The vacant planting: limited influence of habitat restoration on patch colonization patterns by arboreal marsupials in south-eastern Australia', Animal Conservation, 20, pp. 294-304.
  • McAlpine, C, Catterall, C, Mac Nally, R et al 2016, 'Integrating plant- and animal-based perspectives for more effective restoration of biodiversity', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 37-45.
  • Macintosh, A, Keith, H & Lindenmayer, D 2016, 'Reply to 'Policy institutions and forest carbon'', Nature Climate Change, 5, 805-806.
  • Michael*, D.R., Ikin*, K., Crane, M., Okada, S. & Lindenmayer, D.B. (2016). Scale-dependent occupancy patterns in reptiles across topographically different landscapes. Ecography, 40, pp. 415-424. *Joint first authors
  • Michael, D, Wood, J, O'Loughlin, T et al 2016, 'Influence of land sharing and land sparing strategies on patterns of vegetation and terrestrial vertebrate richness and occurrence in Australian endangered eucalypt woodlands', Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment, 227, 24-32.
  • Mortelliti, A., Ikin, K., Tulloch, A., Cunningham, R., Stein, J. & Lindenmayer, D. (2016). Surviving with a resident despot: do revegetated patches act as refuges from the effects of the noisy miner (Manorina melanocephala) in a highly fragmented landscape? Diversity & Distributions, 22, 770-782.
  • Pereoglou, F, MacGregor, C, Banks, S et al. 2016. Landscape, fire and habitat: which features of recently burned heathland influence site occupancy of an early successional specialist?. Landscape Ecology, 31, 255-269.
  • Pierson, J, Mortelliti, A, Barton, P et al. 2016. Evaluating the effectiveness of overstory cover as a surrogate for bird community diversity and population trends. Ecological Indicators, 61, 790-798.
  • Pulsford, S, Lindenmayer, D & Driscoll, D. 2016. A succession of theories: purging redundancy from disturbance theory. Biological Reviews, 91, 148-167.
  • Sato, C, Wood, J, Stein, J et al 2016, 'Natural tree regeneration in agricultural landscapes: The implications of intensification', Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment, vol. 230, pp. 98-104.
  • Smith, A, Blanchard, W, Blair, D et al 2016, 'The dynamic regeneration niche of a forest following a rare disturbance event', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 457-467.
  • Thorn, S, Bassler, C, Bässler, H et al 2016, 'Bark-scratching of storm-felled trees preserves biodiversity at lower economic costs compared to debarking', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 364, pp. 10-16.
  • Todd, C, Lindenmayer, D, Stamation, K et al 2016, 'Assessing reserve effectiveness: Application to a threatened species in a dynamic fire prone forest landscape', Ecological Modelling, vol. 338, pp. 90-100.
  • Tulloch, A, Chades, I, Dujardin, Y et al 2016, 'Dynamic species co-occurrence networks require dynamic biodiversity surrogates', Ecography, 39, 1185-1196.
  • Tulloch, A, Mortelliti, A, Kay, G et al 2016, 'Using empirical models of species colonization under multiple threatening processes to identify complementary threat-mitigation strategies', Conservation Biology, vol. 30, no. 4, pp. 867-882.
  • Villasenor, N, Blanchard, W & Lindenmayer, D 2016, 'Decline of forest structural elements across forest urban interfaces is stronger with high rather than low residential density', Basic and Applied Ecology, vol. 17, no. 5, pp. 418-427.
  • Villasenor, N, Tulloch, A, Driscoll, D et al 2016, 'Compact development minimizes the impacts of urban growth on native mammals', Journal of Applied Ecology, 54, pp. 794-804.
  • Westgate, M, Tulloch, A, Barton, P et al 2016, 'Optimal taxonomic groups for biodiversity assessment: a meta-analytic approach', Ecography, 40, 539-548.
  • Woinarski, J, Lindenmayer, D, Garnett, S et al. 2016, 'A very preventable mammal extinction', Nature, vol. 535, no. 7613, pp. 493-493.
  • Woinarski, J, Garnett, S, Legge, S et al 2016, 'The contribution of policy, law, management, research, and advocacy failings to the recent extinctions of 3 Australian vertebrate species', Conservation Biology, vol. 31, no. 1, pp. 13-23.
  • Yong, D, Barton, P, Okada, S et al. 2016, 'Birds as surrogates for mammals and reptiles: Are patterns of cross-taxonomic associations stable over time in a human-modified landscape?', Ecological Indicators, vol. 69, pp. 152-164.
  • Banks, S, Lorin, T, Shaw, R et al 2015, 'Fine-scale refuges can buffer demographic and genetic processes against short-term climatic variation and disturbance: A 22-year case study of an arboreal marsupial', Molecular Ecology, vol. 24, no. 15, pp. 3831-3845.
  • Barton, P, Pierson, J, Westgate, M et al. 2015. Learning from clinical medicine to improve the use of surrogates in ecology. Oikos, 124(4), 391-398.
  • Berry, L, Driscoll, D, Banks, S et al 2015, 'The use of topographic fire refuges by the greater glider (Petauroides volans) and the mountain brushtail possum (Trichosurus cunninghami) following a landscape-scale fire', Australian Mammalogy, vol. 37, no. 1, pp. 39-45.
  • Berry, L, Driscoll, D, Stein, J et al. 2015, 'Identifying the location of fire refuges in wet forest ecosystems', Ecological Applications, vol. 25, no. 8, pp. 2337-2348.
  • Berry, L, Lindenmayer, D & Driscoll, D 2015, 'Large unburnt areas, not small unburnt patches, are needed to conserve avian diversity in fire-prone landscapes', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 52, no. 2, pp. 486-495.
  • DellaSala, D, Lindenmayer, D, Hanson, C et al 2015, 'In the Aftermath of Fire: Logging and Related Actions Degrade Mixed- and High-Severity Burn Areas', in DellaSala, D.A., Hanson, C.T. (ed.), The Ecological Importance of Mixed-Severity Fires. Nature's Phoenix, Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 313-347.
  • Foster, C, Barton, P, Sato, C et al 2015, 'Synergistic interactions between fire and browsing drive plant diversity in a forest understorey', Journal of Vegetation Science, vol. 26, no. 6, pp. 1112-1123.
  • Foster, C, Barton, P, Wood, J et al 2015, 'Interactive effects of fire and large herbivores on web-building spiders', Oecologia, vol. 179, no. 1, pp. 237-248.
  • Ikin, K., Le Roux, D.S., Rayner, L., Villaseñor, N.R., Eyles, K., Gibbons, P., Manning, A.D. & Lindenmayer, D.B. (2015). Key lessons for achieving biodiversity-sensitive cities and towns. Ecological Management & Restoration, 16, 206-214.
  • Ikin, K., Mortelliti, A., Stein, J., Michael, D., Crane, M., Okada, S., Wood, J. & Lindenmayer, D. (2015). Woodland habitat structures are affected by both agricultural land management and abiotic conditions. Landscape Ecology, 30, 1387–1403.
  • Keith, H, Lindenmayer, D, Macintosh, A et al 2015, 'Under what circumstances do wood products from native forests benefit climate change mitigation?', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 10, no. 10, pp. e0139640-e0139640.
  • Le Roux, D.S., Ikin, K., Lindenmayer, D.B., Bistricer, G., Manning, A.D. & Gibbons, P. (2015). Enriching small trees with artificial nest boxes cannot mimic the value of large trees for hollow-nesting birds. Restoration Ecology, 24, 252–258.
  • Le Roux, D., Ikin, K., Lindenmayer, D., Manning, A.D. & Gibbons, P. (2015). Single large or several small? Applying biogeographic principles to tree-level conservation and biodiversity offsets. Biological Conservation, 191, 558–566.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2015, 'Continental-level biodiversity collapse', PNAS - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 112, no. 15, pp. 4514-4515.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2015, 'Book Review - The Sixth Extinction. An unnatural history', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 16, no. 2, pp. e12.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Barton, P & Pierson, J, eds, 2015, Indicators and Surrogates of Biodiversity and Environmental Change, CSIRO Publishing, Clayton South, Victoria, Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Barton, P, Westgate, M et al 2015, 'Biodiversity surrogates', in Lindenmayer, D., Barton, P., Pierson, J. (ed.), Indicators and Surrogates of Biodiversity and Environmental Change, CSIRO Publishing, Clayton South, Victoria, Australia, pp. 15-24.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blair, D, McBurney, L et al 2015, Mountain Ash: Fire, Logging and the Future of Victoria's Giant Forests, CSIRO Publishing, Clayton South, Victoria, Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blair, D, McBurney, L et al 2015, 'IGNORING THE SCIENCE IN FAILING TO CONSERVE A FAUNAL ICON MAJOR POLITICAL POLICY AND MANAGEMENT PROBLEMS IN PREVENTING THE EXTINCTION OF LEADBEATER S POSSUM', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 21, no. 4, pp. 257-265.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blair, D, McBurney, L et al 2015, 'The need for a comprehensive reassessment of the Regional Forest Agreements in Australia', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 21, no. 4, pp. 266-270.
  • Lindenmayer, D., Blanchard, W., Tennant, P., Barton, P., Ikin, K., Mortelliti, A., Okada, S., Crane, M. & Michael, D. (2015). Richness is not all: how changes in avian functional diversity reflect major landscape modification caused by pine plantations. Diversity and Distributions, 21, 836–847.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Burns, E, Tennant, P et al. 2015, 'Contemplating the future: Acting now on long-term monitoring to answer 2050's questions', Austral Ecology, vol. 40, no. 3, pp. 213-224.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Crane, M, Blanchard, W et al. 2015. Do nest boxes in restored woodlands promote the conservation of hollow-dependent fauna?. Restoration Ecology, 24, 244-251.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Messier, C, Paquette, A et al 2015, 'Managing tree plantations as novel socioecological systems: Australian and North American perspectives', Canadian Journal of Forest Research, vol. 45, no. 10, pp. 1427-1433.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Pierson, J & Barton, P 2015, 'Introduction - disciplinary and multi-disciplinary perspectives on ecological indicators and surrogates', in Lindenmayer, D., Barton, P., Pierson, J. (ed.), Indicators and Surrogates of Biodiversity and Environmental Change, CSIRO Publishing, Clayton South, Victoria, Australia, pp. 1-4.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Pierson, J, Barton, P et al. 2015, 'A new framework for selecting environmental surrogates', Science of the Total Environment, vol. 538, pp. 1029-1038.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Pierson, J, Barton, P et al 2015, 'A diversity of approaches to ecological surrogates and key knowledge gaps', in Lindenmayer, D., Barton, P., Pierson, J. (ed.), Indicators and Surrogates of Biodiversity and Environmental Change, CSIRO Publishing, Clayton South, Victoria, Australia, pp. 189-194.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J, McBurney, L et al 2015, 'Single large versus several small: The SLOSS debate in the context of bird responses to a variable retention logging experiment', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 339, pp. 1-10.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J, MacGregor, C et al 2015, 'A long-term experimental case study of the ecological effectiveness and cost effectiveness of Invasive plant management in achieving conservation goals: Bitou bush control in Booderee National Park in Eastern Australia', PLOS One, vol. 10, no. 6, e0128482.
  • MacGregor, C, Cunningham, R & Lindenmayer, D. 2015. Nest site selection of the Long-nosed bandicoot (Perameles nasuta) in a post fire environment. Australian Journal of Zoology, 63, 324-330.
  • Macintosh, A, Keith, H & Lindenmayer, D 2015, 'Rethinking forest carbon assessments to account for policy institutions', Nature Climate Change, vol. 5, no. 10, pp. 946-U77.
  • Mackey, B, DellaSala, D, Kormos, C et al 2015, 'Policy options for the world's primary forests in multilateral environmental agreements', Conservation Letters, vol. 8, no. 2, pp. 139-147.
  • Michael, D, Kay, G, Crane, M et al. 2015, 'Ecological niche breadth and microhabitat guild structure in temperate Australian reptiles: Implications for natural resource management in endangered grassy woodland ecosystems', Austral Ecology, vol. 40, no. 6, pp. 651-660.
  • Mortelliti, A, Crane, M, Okada, S et al 2015, 'Marsupial response to matrix conversion: Results of a large-scale long-term 'natural experiment' in Australia', Biological Conservation, vol. 191, pp. 60-66.
  • Mortelliti, A & Lindenmayer, D 2015, 'Effects of landscape transformation on bird colonization and extinction patterns in a large-scale, long-term natural experiment', Conservation Biology, vol. 29, no. 5, pp. 1314-1326.
  • Mortelliti, A, Michael, D & Lindenmayer, D 2015, 'Contrasting effects of pine plantations on two skinks: results from a large-scale "natural experiment' in Australia', Animal Conservation, vol. 18, no. 5, pp. 433-441.
  • Mortelliti, A, Westgate, M, Stein, J et al 2015, 'Ecological and spatial drivers of population synchrony in bird assemblages', Basic and Applied Ecology, vol. 16, no. 3, pp. 269-278.
  • Pierson, J, Barton, P, Lane, P et al. 2015. Can habitat surrogates predict the response of target species to landscape change? Biological Conservation, 184, 1-10.
  • Pulsford, I, Lindenmayer, D, Wyborn, C et al 2015, 'Connectivity Conservation Management', in Worboys, G.L., Lockwood, M., Kothari, A., Feary, S., Pulsford, I. (ed.), Protected Area Governance and Management, ANU Press, Canberra, Australia, pp. 851-888.
  • Rayner, L., Ikin, K., Evans, M.J., Gibbons, P., Lindenmayer, D. & Manning, A.D. (2015). Avifauna and urban encroachment in time and space. Diversity and Distributions, 21, 428-440.
  • Russell-Smith, J., D. Lindenmayer, I. Kubiszewski, P. Green, R. Costanza, A. Campbell. 2015. Moving beyond evidence-free environmental policy. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 13(8): 441-448.
  • Stirnemann, I., Ikin, K., Gibbons, P., Blanchard, W. & Lindenmayer, D. (2015). Measuring habitat heterogeneity reveals new insights into bird community composition. Oecologia, 177, 733–746.
  • Stirnemann, I, Mortelliti, A, Gibbons, P et al 2015, 'Fine-scale habitat heterogeneity influences occupancy in terrestrial mammals in a temperate region of Australia', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 10, no. 9, pp. e0138681-e0138681.
  • Sweaney, N, Driscoll, D, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2015, 'Plantations, not farmlands, cause biotic homogenisation of ground-active beetles in South-Eastern Australia', Biological Conservation, vol. 186, pp. 1-11pp.
  • Villasenor, N, Blanchard, W, Driscoll, D et al. 2015, 'Strong influence of local habitat structure on mammals reveals mismatch with edge effects models', Landscape Ecology, vol. 30, no. 2, pp. 229-245.
  • Welbourne, D, MacGregor, C, Paull, D et al 2015, 'The effectiveness and cost of camera traps for surveying small reptiles and critical weight range mammals: a comparison with labour-intensive complementary methods', Wildlife Research, vol. 42, no. 5, pp. 414-425.
  • Welsh, A, Lindenmayer, D & Donnelly, C 2015, 'Adjusting for one issue while ignoring others can make things worse', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 10, no. 3, pp. e0120817-e0120817.
  • Westgate, M, Barton, P, Pierson, J et al. 2015. Text analysis tools for identification of emerging topics and research gaps in conservation science. Conservation Biology, 29, 1606-1614.
  • Woinarski, J, Burbidge, A, Comer, S et al. 2015, 'Fire and biodiversity in Australia', in A. Stow, N. Maclean, G.I. Holwell (ed.), Austral Ark: The State of Wildlife in Australia and New Zealand, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom, pp. 537-559.
  • Woinarski, J, Burbridge, A, Comer, S et al. 2015, 'Fire and biodiversity in Australia', in A. Stow, N. Maclean, G.I. Holwell (ed.), Austral Ark: The State of Wildlife in Australia and New Zealand, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom, pp. 537-559.
  • Woodley, S, Mackinnon, K, McCanny, S et al 2015, 'Managing Protected Areas for biological diversity and ecosystem functions', in Worboys, G.L., Lockwood, M., Kothari, A., Feary, S., Pulsford, I. (ed.), Protected Area Governance and Management, ANU Press, Canberra, Australia, pp. 651-684.
  • Youngentob, K, Yoon, H, Stein, J et al 2015, 'Where the wild things are: Using remotely sensed forest productivity to assess arboreal marsupial species richness and abundance', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 21, no. 8, pp. 977-990.
  • Youngentob, K, Yoon, H, Stein, J et al 2015, 'Where the wild things are: using remotely sensed forest productivity to assess arboreal marsupial species richness and abundance', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 21, no. 8, pp. 977-990.
  • Zentelis, R & Lindenmayer, D 2015, 'Bombing for BiodiversityEnhancing Conservation Values of Military Training Areas', Conservation Letters, vol. 8, no. 4, pp. 299-305.
  • Banks, S & Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'Inbreeding avoidance, patch isolation and matrix permeability influence dispersal and settlement choices by male agile antechinus in a fragmented landscape', Journal of Animal Ecology, vol. 83, no. 2, pp. 515-524.
  • Barton, P.S., Ikin, K., Smith, A.L., MacGregor, C. & Lindenmayer, D. (2014). Vegetation structure moderates the effect of fire on bird assemblages in a heterogeneous landscape. Landscape Ecology, 29, 703-714..
  • Barton, P, Westgate, M, Lane, P et al 2014, 'Robustness of habitat-based surrogates of animal diversity: a multitaxa comparison over time', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 51, no. 5, pp. 1434-1443.
  • Betts, M, Fahrig, L, Hadley, A et al 2014, 'A species-centered approach for uncovering generalities in organism responses to habitat loss and fragmentation', Ecography, vol. 37, no. 6, pp. 517-527.
  • Blyton, M, Banks, S, Peakall, R et al. 2014, 'Not all types of host contacts are equal when it comes to E. coli transmission', Ecology Letters, vol. 17, no. 8, pp. 970-978.
  • Blyton, M, Lindenmayer, D & Banks, S 2014, 'Maternal lineages best explain the associations of a semisocial marsupial', Behavioral Ecology, vol. 25, no. 5, pp. 1212-1222.
  • Burns, E, Lindenmayer, D, Stein, J et al. 2015, 'Ecosystem assessment of mountain ash forest in the Central Highlands of Victoria, south-eastern Australia', Austral Ecology, vol. 40, no. 4, pp. 386-399.
  • Burns, E, Lindenmayer, D, Tennant, P et al. 2014, Making ecological monitoring successful: Insights and lessons from the Long Term Ecological Research Network.
  • Crane, M, Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, R 2014, 'The value of countryside elements in the conservation of a threatened arboreal marsupial Petaurus norfolcensis in agricultural landscapes of south-eastern Australia-the disproportional value of scattered trees', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 9, no. 9, pp. e107178-e107178.
  • Cunningham, R., Lindenmayer, D., Barton, P., Ikin, K., Crane, M., Michael, D., Okada, S., Gibbons, P. & Stein, J. (2014). Cross-sectional and temporal relationships between bird occupancy and vegetation cover at multiple spatial scales. Ecological Applications, 24, 1275-1288.
  • Cunningham, R.B., Lindenmayer, D.B., Crane, M., Michael, D.R., Barton, P.S., Gibbons, P., Okada, S., Ikin, K. & Stein, J.A.R. (2014). The law of diminishing returns: woodland birds respond to native vegetation cover at multiple spatial scales and over time. Diversity and Distributions, 20, 59–71.
  • Driscoll, D.A., Banks, S.C., Barton, P.S., Ikin, K., Lentini, P., Lindenmayer, D.B., Smith, A.L., Berry, L.E., Burns, E.L., Edworthy, A., Evans, M.J., Gibson, R., Heinsohn, R., Howland, B., Kay, G., Munro, N., Scheele, B.C., Stirnemann, I., Stojanovic, D., Sweaney, N., Villaseñor, N.R. & Westgate, M.J. (2014). The trajectory of dispersal research in conservation biology. Systematic review. PLoS ONE, 9, e95053.
  • Fedrowitz, K, Koricheva, J, Baker, S et al 2014, 'Can retention forestry help conserve biodiversity? A meta-analysis', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 51, no. 6, pp. 1669-1679.
  • Foster, C, Barton, P & Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'Effects of large native herbivores on other animals', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 51, no. 4, pp. 929-938.
  • Grarock, K, Tidemann, C, Wood, J et al. 2014, 'Are invasive species drivers of native species decline or passengers of habitat modification? A case study of the impact of the common myna (Acridotheres tristis) on Australian bird species', Austral Ecology, vol. 39, no. 1, pp. 106-114.
  • Grarock, K, Tidemann, C, Wood, J et al 2014, 'Understanding basic species population dynamics for effective control: a case study on community-led culling of the common myna (Acridotheres tristis)', Biological Invasions, 16, 1427-1440.
  • Howland, B, Stojanovic, D, Gordon, I et al 2014, 'Eaten out of house and home: Impacts of grazing on ground-dwelling reptiles in Australian grasslands and grassy woodlands', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 9, no. 12, pp. 1-25.
  • Hunter, M, Redford, K & Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'The complementary niches of anthropocentric and biocentric conservationists', Conservation Biology, vol. 28, no. 3, pp. 641-645.
  • Ikin K., Barton P., Knight E., Lindenmayer D., Fischer J. & Manning A. (2014) Bird community responses to the edge between suburbs and reserves. Oecologia, 84, 989-995.
  • Ikin, K., Barton, P.S., Stirnemann, I.A., Stein, J.R., Michael, D., Crane, M., Okada, S. & Lindenmayer, D.B. (2014) Multi-Scale Associations between Vegetation Cover and Woodland Bird Communities across a Large Agricultural Region. PLoS ONE, 9, e97029.
  • Keith, D, Lindenmayer, D, Lowe, A et al 2014, 'Heathlands', in David Lindenmayer, Emma Burns, Nicole Thurgate, Andrew Lowe (ed.), Biodiversity and Environmental Change. Monitoring, Challenges and Direction, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, pp. 213-281.
  • Keith, H, Lindenmayer, D, Mackey, B et al 2014, 'Accounting for biomass carbon stock change due to wildfire in temperate forest landscapes in Australia', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 9, no. 9, pp. e107126-e107126.
  • Keith, H, Lindenmayer, D, Mackey, B et al 2014, 'Managing temperate forests for carbon storage: impacts of logging versus forest protection on carbon stocks', Ecosphere, vol. 5, no. 6, pp. 1-34.
  • Le Roux, D.S., Ikin, K., Lindenmayer, D.B., Blanchard, W., Manning, A.D. & Gibbons, P. (2014). Reduced availability of habitat structures in urban landscapes: Implications for policy and practice. Landscape and Urban Planning, 125, 57-64.
  • Lane, P, Lindenmayer, D, Barton, P et al 2014, 'Visualization of species pairwise associations: A case study of surrogacy in bird assemblages', Ecology and Evolution, vol. 4, no. 16, pp. 3279-3289.
  • Le Roux, D.S., Ikin, K., Lindenmayer, D.B., Manning, A.D. & Gibbons, P. (2014). The future of large old trees in urban landscapes. PLoS ONE, 9, e99403.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'The environmental implications of population growth', in Goldie, J., Betts, K (ed.), Sustainable Futures: Linking population, resources and the environment, CSIRO Publishing, Australia, pp. 7-11.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'Book Review : Naked Statistics. Stripping the Dread from the Data', Austral Ecology, vol. 39, no. 7, pp. e14-e14.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'Forests, forestry and forestry management', in Lindenmayer, D., Dovers, S., Morton, S. (ed.), Ten Commitments Revisited: Securing Australia's Future Environment, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, pp. 49-57.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Banks, S, Laurance, W et al 2014, 'Broad Decline of Populations of Large Old Trees', Conservation Letters, vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 72-73.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Barton, P, Lane, P et al 2014, 'An empirical assessment and comparison of species-based and habitat-based surrogates: A case study of forest vertebrates and large old trees', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 9, no. 2, pp. e89807-e89807.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blair, D, McBurney, L et al 2014, 'Preventing the extinction of a globally endangered species - Leadbeater's Possum (Gymnobelideus leadbeateri)', Journal of Biodiversity and Endangered Species, vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 1-7.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, McBurney, L et al. 2014, 'Complex responses of birds to landscape- level fire extent, fire severity and environmental drivers', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 20, no. 4, pp. 467-477.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Burns, E, Thurgate, N et al, eds, 2014, Biodiversity and Environmental Change, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Burns, E, Thurgate, N et al 2014, 'General overview', in David Lindenmayer, Emma Burns, Nicole Thurgate, Andrew Lowe (ed.), Biodiversity and Environmental Change. Monitoring, Challenges and Direction, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, pp. 3-19.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Burns, E, Thurgate, N et al 2014, 'The value of long-term research and how to design effective ecological research and monitoring', in David Lindenmayer, Emma Burns, Nicole Thurgate, Andrew Lowe (ed.), Biodiversity and Environmental Change. Monitoring, Challenges and Direction, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, pp. 21-48.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Burns, E, Thurgate, N et al. 2014, 'Synopsis', in David Lindenmayer, Emma Burns, Nicole Thurgate, Andrew Lowe (ed.), Biodiversity and Environmental Change. Monitoring, Challenges and Direction, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, pp. 573-595.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Dovers, S & Morton, S, eds, 2014, Ten Commitments Revisited: Securing Australia's Future Environment, 2nd edition, CSIRO Publishing, Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Dovers, S & Morton, S 2014, 'Synthesis and overview', in Lindenmayer, D., Dovers, S., Morton, S. (ed.), Ten Commitments Revisited: Securing Australia's Future Environment, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, pp. 317-322.
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  • Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C, Dexter, N et al 2014, Booderee National Park: The Jewel of Jervis Bay, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria, Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Prober, S, Crane, M et al 2014, 'Temperate eucalypt woodlands', in David Lindenmayer, Emma Burns, Nicole Thurgate, Andrew Lowe (ed.), Biodiversity and Environmental Change. Monitoring, Challenges and Direction, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, pp. 283-334.
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  • Md Sharif, B, Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J et al. 2014, 'Ecological impacts of oil palm agriculture on forest mammals in plantation estates and smallholdings', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 23, no. 5, pp. 1175-1191.
  • Michael, D, Banks, S, Piggott, M et al 2014, 'Geographical variation in body size and sexual size dimorphism in an Australian lizard, Boulenger's Skink (Morethia boulengeri)', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 9, no. 10.
  • Michael, D, MacGregor, C, Okada, S et al 2014, 'PREDATION OF A COMMON SCALY FOOT PYGOPUS LEPIDOPODUS BY AN EASTERN SMALL EYED SNAKE CRYPTOPHIS NIGRESCENS IN NEW SOUTH WALES', The Victorian Naturalist, vol. 131, no. 5, pp. 186-187.
  • Michael, D, Wood, J, Crane, M et al 2014, 'How effective are agri- environment schemes for protecting and improving herpetofaunal diversity in Australian endangered woodland ecosystems?', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 51, no. 2, pp. 494-504.
  • Mortelliti, A, Sozio, G, Driscoll, D et al 2014, 'Population and individual-scale responses to patch size, isolation and quality in the hazel dormouse', Ecosphere, vol. 5, no. 9.
  • Mortelliti, A, Westgate, M & Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'Experimental evaluation shows limited influence of pine plantations on the connectivity of highly fragmented bird populations', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 51, no. 5, pp. 1179-1187.
  • Possingham, H & Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'Biodiversity', in Lindenmayer, D., Dovers, S., Morton, S. (ed.), Ten Commitments Revisited: Securing Australia's Future Environment, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, pp. 245-253.
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  • Rayner, L, Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J et al 2014, 'Are protected areas maintaining bird diversity?', Ecography, vol. 37, no. 1, pp. 43-53.
  • Sato, C, Schroder, M, Green, K et al 2014, 'Managing ski resorts to improve biodiversity conservation: Australian reptiles as a case study', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 147-154.
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  • Sato, C, Wood, J, Schroder, M et al 2014, 'An experiment to test key hypotheses of the drivers of reptile distribution in subalpine ski resorts', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 51, no. 1, pp. 13-22.
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  • Smith, A, Blair, D, McBurney, L et al. 2014, 'Dominant Drivers of Seedling Establishment in a Fire-Dependent Obligate Seeder: Climate or Fire Regimes?', Ecosystems, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 258-270.
  • Sparrow, B, Dormontt, E, Thurgate, N et al 2014, 'Our capacity to tell an Australian ecological story', in David Lindenmayer, Emma Burns, Nicole Thurgate, Andrew Lowe (ed.), Biodiversity and Environmental Change. Monitoring, Challenges and Direction, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, pp. 49-81.
  • Sweaney, N, Lindenmayer, D & Driscoll, D 2014, 'Is the matrix important to butterflies in fragmented landscapes?', Journal of Insect Conservation: an international journal devoted to the conservation of insects, vol. 18, no. 3, pp. 283-294.
  • Taylor, C, McCarthy, M & Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'Nonlinear effects of stand age on fire severity', Conservation Letters, vol. 7, no. 4, pp. 355-370.
  • Villasenor, N, Driscoll, D, Escobar, M et al 2014, 'Urbanization impacts on mammals across urban-forest edges and a predictive model of edge effects', PLOS One, vol. 9, no. 5, e97036.
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  • Wood, S, Bowman, D, Prior, L et al 2014, 'Tall eucalypt forests', in David Lindenmayer, Emma Burns, Nicole Thurgate, Andrew Lowe (ed.), Biodiversity and Environmental Change. Monitoring, Challenges and Direction, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, pp. 519-569.
  • Zentelis, R & Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'Conservation: Manage military land for the environment', Nature, vol. 516, no. 7530, p. 170.
  • Zentelis, R & Lindenmayer, D 2014, 'Manage military land for the environment', Nature, vol. 516, no. 7530, pp. 170-170.
  • Banks SC, Cary GJ, Smith A, Davies I, Driscoll D, Gill AM, Lindenmayer DB, Peakhall R. 2013. How does ecological disturbance influence genetic diversity? Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 28: 670-679.
  • Banks, S, Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J et al 2013, 'Can individual and social patterns of resource use buffer animal populations against resource decline?', PLOS One, vol. 8, no. 1, e53672.
  • Barton, P, Cunningham, S, Lindenmayer, D et al 2013, 'The role of carrion in maintaining biodiversity and ecological processes in terrestrial ecosystems', Oecologia, vol. 171, no. 4, pp. 761-772.
  • Barton, P, Cunningham, S et al 2013, 'The role of carrion in maintaining biodiversity and ecological processes in terrestrial ecosystems', Oecologia, 171, 761-772.
  • Barton, P, Cunningham, S et al 2013, 'The role of carrion in maintaining biodiversity and ecological processes in terrestrial ecosystems', Oecologia, 171, 761-772.
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  • Barton, P, Cunningham, S, Macdonald, B et al 2013, 'Species Traits Predict Assemblage Dynamics at Ephemeral Resource Patches Created by Carrion', PLoS ONE, 8 (1) e53961. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0053961
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  • Barton, P, Cunningham, S, Manning, A et al 2013, 'The spatial scaling of beta diversity', Global Ecology and Biogeography, vol. 22, no. 6, pp. 639-647.
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  • Cunningham, S, Attwood, S, Bawa, K et al 2013, 'To close the yield-gap while saving biodiversity will require multiple locally relevant strategies', Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment, vol. 173, no. 1, pp. 20-27.
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  • Felton, A, Felton, A, Rumiz, D et al. 2013, 'Commercial harvesting of Ficus timber - An emerging threat to frugivorous wildlife and sustainable forestry', Biological Conservation, vol. 159, pp. 96-100.
  • Grarock, K, Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J et al 2013, 'Does Human-Induced Habitat Modification Influence the Impact of Introduced Species? A Case Study on Cavity-Nesting by the Introduced Common Myna (Acridotheres tristis) and Two Australian Native Parrots', Environmental Management (New York), vol. 52, no. 4, pp. 958-970.
  • Grarock, K, Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J et al. 2013, 'Using invasion process theory to enhance the understanding and management of introduced species: A case study reconstructing the invasion sequence of the common myna (Acridotheres tristis)', Journal of Environmental Management, vol. 129, pp. 398-409.
  • Hulvey, K, Hobbs, R, Standish, R et al 2013, 'Benefits of tree mixes in carbon plantings', Nature Climate Change, vol. 3, no. 10, pp. 869-874.
  • Ikin, K., Beaty, R.M., Lindenmayer, D., Knight, E., Fischer, J. & Manning, A. (2013). Pocket parks in a compact city: how do birds respond to increasing residential density? Landscape Ecology, 28, 45-56.
  • Ikin, K., Knight, E., Lindenmayer, D.B., Fischer, J. & Manning, A.D. (2013). The influence of native versus exotic streetscape vegetation on the spatial distribution of birds in suburbs and reserves. Diversity and Distributions, 19, 294-306.
  • Kay, G, Michael, D, Crane, M et al. 2013, 'A list of reptiles and amphibians from Box Gum Grassy Woodlands in south-eastern Australia', Check List, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 476-481.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2013, 'FROM BIODIVERSITY TO BIOPERVERSITY FROM GOOD SCIENCE TO POOR ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 19, no. 3-4, pp. 250-255.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blair, D, McBurney, L et al 2013, 'PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES FOR BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION AND RESTORATION FORESTRY A 30 YEAR CASE STUDY ON THE VICTORIAN MONTANE ASH FORESTS AND THE CRITICALLY ENDANGERED LEADBEATER S POSSUM', Australian Zoologist, vol. 36, no. 4, pp. 441-460.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, McBurney, L et al. 2013, 'Fire severity and landscape context effects on arboreal marsupials', Biological Conservation, vol. 167, pp. 137-148.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, S 2013, 'Six principles for managing forests as ecologically sustainable ecosystems', Landscape Ecology, vol. 28, pp. 1099-1110.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, S 2013, 'Six principles for managing forests as ecologically sustainable ecosystems', Landscape Ecology, vol. 28, no. 6, pp. 1099-1110.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Laurance, W & Franklin, J 2013, 'Old Trees: Large and Small - Response', Science, vol. 339, no. 6122, pp. 905-905.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Likens, G 2013, 'Benchmarking Open Access Science Against good Science', Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America (CEASED), vol. 94, pp. 338-340.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Likens, G 2013, 'Don't do big-data science backwards', Nature, vol. 499, no. 7458, pp. 284-284.
  • Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C, Dexter, N et al 2013, 'BOODEREE NATIONAL PARK MANAGEMENT CONNECTING SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 2-10.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Piggott, M & Wintle, B 2013, 'Counting the books while the library burns: why conservation monitoring programs need a plan for action', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, vol. 11, no. 10, pp. 549-555.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Possingham, H 2013, 'No Excuse for Habitat Destruction', Science, vol. 340, no. 6133, pp. 680-680.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Willinck, E, Crane, M et al 2013, 'MURRAY CATCHMENT HABITAT RESTORATION LESSONS FROM LANDSCAPE LEVEL RESEARCH AND MONITORING', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 14, no. 2, pp. 80-92.
  • MacGregor, C, Wood, J, Dexter, N et al 2013, 'Home range size and use by the long-nosed bandicoot (Perameles nasuta) following fire', Australian Mammalogy, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 206-216.
  • Mackey, B, Prentice , I, Steffen, W et al. 2013, 'Untangling the confusion around land carbon science and climate change mitigation policy', Nature Climate Change, vol. 3, no. 6, pp. 552-557.
  • Manning, A, Cunningham, R & Lindenmayer, D 2013, 'Bringing forward the benefits of coarse woody debris in ecosystem recovery under different levels of grazing and vegetation density', Biological Conservation, vol. 157, pp. 204-214.
  • Md Sharif, B, Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J et al 2013, 'Contribution of illegal hunting, culling of pest species, road accidents and feral dogs to biodiversity loss in established oil-palm landscapes', Wildlife Research, vol. 40, pp. 1-9.
  • Md Sharif, B, Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J et al. 2013, 'The influence of agricultural system, stand structural complexity and landscape context on foraging birds in oil palm landscapes', Ibis, vol. 155, no. 2, pp. 297-312.
  • Michael, D, Cunningham, R, MacGregor, C et al 2013, 'The effects of prey, habitat heterogeneity and fire on the spatial ecology in peninsular Diamond Pythons (Morelia spilota spilota: Pythonidae)', Austral Ecology, 39, 181-189.
  • Nicholson, E, Lindenmayer, DB, Frank, K 2013, 'Testing the focal species approach to making conservation decisions for species persistence', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 19, pp. 530-540.
  • Pereoglou, F, Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C et al 2013, 'Landscape genetics of an early successional specialist in a disturbance-prone environment', Molecular Ecology, vol. 22, no. 5, pp. 1267-1281.
  • Pharo, E, Meagher, D & Lindenmayer, D 2013, 'Bryophyte persistence following major fire in eucalypt forest of southern Australia', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 296, pp. 24-32.
  • Ritchie, E, Bradshaw, C, Dickman, C et al, eds, 2013, Continental-Scale Governance and the Hastening of Loss of Australia's Biodiversity. Conservation Biology, 27, 1133-1135.
  • Ritchie, E, Nimmo, D, Bradshaw, C et al. 2013, 'Relaxed laws imperil Australian wildlife', Nature, vol. 498, no. 7455, pp. 434-434.
  • Sato, C, Wood, J & Lindenmayer, D 2013, 'The Effects of Winter Recreation on Alpine and Subalpine Fauna: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 8, no. 5, pp. e64282-e64282.
  • Viggers, J, Weaver, H & Lindenmayer, D 2013, Melbourne's Water Catchments, CSIRO Publishing, Australia.
  • Welsh, A, Lindenmayer, D & Donnelly, C 2013, 'Fitting and Interpreting Occupancy Models', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 8, no. 1, pp. e52015-e52015.
  • Westgate, M, Likens, G & Lindenmayer, D 2013, 'Adaptive management of biological systems: A review', Biological Conservation, vol. 158, pp. 128-139.
  • Youngentob, K, Likens, G, Williams, J & Lindenmayer, DB 2013, 'A survey of long-term terrestrial ecology studies in Australia', Austral Ecology, vol. 38, pp. 365-373.
  • Youngentob, K, Wood, J & Lindenmayer, D 2013, 'The response of arboreal marsupials to landscape context over time: a large-scale fragmentation study revisited', Journal of Biogeography, vol. 40, no. 11, pp. 2082-2093.
  • Youngentob, K, Wood, J & Lindenmayer, D 2013, 'The response of arboreal marsupials to landscape context over time: a large-scale fragmentation study revisited', Journal of Biogeography, vol. 40, no. 11, pp. 2082-2093.
  • Banks, S, Blyton, M, Blair, D et al 2012, 'Adaptive responses and disruptive effects: how major wildfire influences kinship-based social interactions in a forest marsupial', Molecular Ecology, vol. 21, pp. 673-684.
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  • Bennett, V, Doerr, V, Doerr, E et al. 2012, 'Habitat Selection and Post-Release Movement of Reintroduced Brown Treecreeper Individuals in Restored Temperate Woodland', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 7, no. 12, pp. e50612-e50612.
  • Bradstock RA, Cary GJ, Davies I, Lindenmayer DB, Price OF. 2012. Wildfires, fuel treatment and risk mitigation in Australian eucalypt forests: Insights from landscape-scale simulation. Journal of Environmental Management, 105: 66-75.
  • Blyton, M, Banks, S, Peakall, R et al. 2012, 'Using probability modelling and genetic parentage assignment to test the role of local mate availability in mating system variation', Molecular Ecology, vol. 21, no. 3, pp. 572-586.
  • Crane, M, Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, R 2012, 'Use and characteristics of nocturnal habitats of the squirrel glider (Petaurus norfocensis) in Australian temperate woodlands', Australian Journal of Zoology, vol. 60, no. 5, pp. 320-329.
  • Dexter, N, Ramsey, D, MacGregor, C et al 2012, 'Predicting Ecosystem Wide Impacts of Wallaby Management Using a Fuzzy Cognitive Map', Ecosystems, vol. 15, no. 8, pp. 1363-1379.
  • Driscoll, D, Felton, A, Gibbons, P et al 2012, 'Priorities in policy and management when existing biodiversity stressors interact with climate-change', Climatic Change, vol. 111, pp. 533-557.
  • Elliott, C, Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, S, and Young, A. 2012, 'Landscape context affects honeyeater communities and their foraging behaviour in Australia: Implications for plant pollination', Landscape Ecology, vol. 27, no. 3, pp. 393-404.
  • Elliott, C, Young, A, Cunningham, S et al. 2012, 'Landscape context affects honeyeater communities and their foraging behaviour in Australia: Implications for plant pollination', Landscape Ecology, vol. 27, no. 3, pp. 393-404.
  • Gibbons P, Van Bommel L, Gill AM, Cary GJ, et al. 2012. Land management practices associated with house loss in wildfires. PLoS ONE, 7: e2912.
  • Grarock, K, Tidemann, C, Wood, J, & Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'Is it benign or is it a pariah? Empirical evidence for the impact of the common Myna (Acridotheres tristis) on Australian birds', PLoS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 7, no. 7, pp. e40622-12pp.
  • Gustafsson, L, Baker, S, Bauhus, J et al 2012, 'Retention Forestry to Maintain Multifunctional Forests: A World Perspective', BioScience, vol. 62, no. 7, pp. 633-645.
  • Ikin, K., Knight, E., Lindenmayer, D., Fischer, J. & Manning, A. (2012). Linking bird species traits to vegetation characteristics in a future urban development zone: implications for urban planning. Urban Ecosystems, 15, 961-977.
  • Likens, G & Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'Integrating approaches leads to more effective conservation of biodiversity', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 21, no. 13, pp. 3323-3341.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'Book Review - Merchants of Doubt. How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming', Austral Ecology, vol. 37, no. 2, pp. e15.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'Ecological History has Present and Future Ecological Consequences - Case Studies from Australia', in J.A. Wiens, G.D. Haywood, H.D. Safford, C.M. Giffen (ed.), Historical Environmental Variation in Conservation and Natural Resource Management, John Wiley & Sons Inc, UK, pp. 273-280.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'Making monitoring up-front and centre in Australian biodiversity conservation', in David Lindenmayer and Philip Gibbons (ed.), Biodiversity Monitoring in Australia, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood Australia, pp. 7-13.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'Land use intensification in natural forest settings', in David Lindenmayer, Saul Cunningham and Andrew Young (ed.), Land Use Intensification: Effects on Agriculture, Biodiversity and Ecological Processes, CSIRO Publishing, Australia, pp. 113-121.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blanchard, W, McBurney, L et al 2012, 'Interacting Factors Driving a Major Loss of Large Trees with Cavities in a Forest Ecosystem', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 7, no. 10, pp. e41864-e41864.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, S & Young, A, eds, 2012, Land Use Intensification: Effects on Agriculture, Biodiversity and Ecological Processes, CSIRO Publishing, Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, S & Young, A, eds, 2012, Land Use Intensification: Effects on Agriculture, Biodiversity and Ecological Processes, CSIRO Publishing, Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, S & Young, A 2012, 'Land use intensification: A challenge for humanity', in David Lindenmayer, Saul Cunningham and Andrew Young (ed.), Land Use Intensification: Effects on Agriculture, Biodiversity and Ecological Processes, CSIRO Publishing, Australia, pp. 1-4pp.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, S & Young, A 2012, 'Land use intensification: A challenge for humanity', in David Lindenmayer, Saul Cunningham and Andrew Young (ed.), Land Use Intensification: Effects on Agriculture, Biodiversity and Ecological Processes, CSIRO Publishing, Australia, pp. 1-4pp.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, S & Young, A 2012, 'Perspectives on land use intensification and biodiversity conservation', in David Lindenmayer, Saul Cunningham and Andrew Young (ed.), Land Use Intensification: Effects on Agriculture, Biodiversity and Ecological Processes, CSIRO Publishing, Australia, pp. 137-149.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, S & Young, A 2012, 'Perspectives on land use intensification and biodiversity conservation', in David Lindenmayer, Saul Cunningham and Andrew Young (ed.), Land Use Intensification: Effects on Agriculture, Biodiversity and Ecological Processes, CSIRO Publishing, Australia, pp. 137-149pp.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Franklin, J, Lohmus, A et al 2012, 'A major shift to the retention approach for forestry can help resolve global forest sustainability issues', Conservation Letters, vol. 5, pp. 421-431.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Gibbons, P, eds, 2012, Biodiversity Monitoring in Australia, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Gibbons, P 2012, 'Introduction: Making Monitoring Happen - and then delivering on Australia's Biodiversity Conservation Strategy', in David Lindenmayer and Philip Gibbons (ed.), Biodiversity Monitoring in Australia, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood Australia, pp. 1-4.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Gibbons, P 2012, 'Can we make biodiversity monitoring happen in Australia? Moving beyond 'it's the thought that counts'', in David Lindenmayer and Philip Gibbons (ed.), Biodiversity Monitoring in Australia, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood Australia, pp. 193-201.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Gibbons, P, Bourke, M et al 2012, 'Improving biodiversity monitoring', Austral Ecology, vol. 37, 285-294.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Gibbons, P, Bourke, M et al. 2012, 'Improving biodiversity monitoring', Austral Ecology, vol. 37, no. 3, pp. 285-294.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Hulvey, K, Hobbs, R et al. 2012, 'Avoiding bio-perversity from carbon sequestration solutions', Conservation Letters, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 28-36.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Laurance, W 2012, 'A history of hubris - Cautionary lessons in ecologically sustainable forest management', Biological Conservation, vol. 151, no. 1, pp. 11-16.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Laurance, W & Franklin, J 2012, 'Global Decline in Large Old Trees', Science, vol. 338, no. 6112, pp. 1305-1306.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Likens, G, Andersen, A et al. 2012, 'Value of long-term ecological studies', Austral Ecology, vol. 37, no. 7, pp. 745-757.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Northrop-Mackie, A, Montague-Drake, R et al 2012, 'Not all kinds of revegetation are created equal: Revegetation type influences bird assemblages in threatened australian woodland ecosystems', PLoS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 7, no. 4, pp. e34527.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J, Montague-Drake, R et al 2012, 'Is biodiversity management effective? Cross-sectional relationships between management, bird response and vegetation attributes in an Australian agri-environment scheme', Biological Conservation, vol. 152, pp. 62-73.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Zammit, C, Attwood, S et al 2012, 'A Novel and Cost-Effective Monitoring Approach for Outcomes in an Australian Biodiversity Conservation Incentive Program', PLoS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 7, no. 12, pp. e50872.
  • Manning, A, Gibbons, P, Fischer, J et al 2012, 'Hollow futures? Tree decline, lag effects and hollow-dependent species', Animal Conservation, 16, 395-403.
  • Maron, M, Hobbs, R, Moilanen, A et al 2012, 'Faustian bargains? Restoration realities in the context of biodiversity offset policies', Biological Conservation, vol. 155, pp. 141-148.
  • Michael, D, Cunningham, R, Donnelly, & Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'Comparative use of active searches and artificial refuges to survey reptiles in temperate eucalypt woodlands', Wildlife Research, vol. 39, no. 2, pp. 149-162.
  • Michael, D & Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'VEGETATION STRUCTURE AND FLORISTICS OF GRANITE LANDFORMS IN THE SOUTH WEST SLOPES OF NEW SOUTH WALES', Cunninghamia, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 309-323.
  • Munro, N, Fischer, J, Wood, J et al 2012, 'Assessing ecosystem function of restoration plantings in south-eastern Australia', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 282, pp. 36-45.
  • Sheean, V, Manning, A & Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'An assessment of scientific approaches towards species relocations in Australia', Austral Ecology, vol. 37, pp. 204-215
  • Spies, T, Lindenmayer, D, Gill, M et al. 2012, 'Challenges and a checklist for biodiversity conservation in fire-prone forests: Perspectives from the Pacific Northwest of USA and Southeastern Australia', Biological Conservation, vol. 145, no. 1, pp. 5-14.
  • Stagoll, K, Lindenmayer, DB, Knight, E., Fischer, J & Manning, AD (2012). Large trees are keystone structures in urban parks. Conservation Letters, 5, 115-122.
  • Sutherland, W, Aveling, R, Bennun, L et al 2012, 'A horizon scan of global conservation issues for 2012', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 12-18.
  • Tscharntke, T, Tylianakis, J, Rand, T et al 2012, 'Landscape moderation of biodiversity patterns and processes - eight hypotheses', Biological Reviews, vol. 87, no. 3, pp. 661-685.
  • Westgate, M, Driscoll, D & Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'Can the intermediate disturbance hypothesis and information on species traits predict anuran responses to fire?', Oikos, vol. 121, no. 10, pp. 1516-1524.
  • Westgate, M, Driscoll, D & Lindenmayer, D 2012, 'Limited influence of stream networks on the terrestrial movements of three wetland-dependent frog species', Biological Conservation, vol. 153, pp. 169-176.
  • Youngentob, K, Renzullo, L, Held, A et al 2012, 'Using imaging spectroscopy to estimate integrated measures of foliage nutritional quality', Methods in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 3, 416-419.
  • Youngentob, K, Yoon, H, Coggan, N et al 2012, 'Edge effects influence competition dynamics: A case study of four sympatric arboreal marsupials', Biological Conservation, vol. 155, pp. 68-76.
  • Bailey, M & Lindenmayer, D 2011, 'What history reveals about reactions to climate debates', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 26, no. 12, pp. 615-616.
  • Banks, S, Dujardin, M, McBurney, L et al 2011, 'Starting points for small mammal population recovery after wildfire: recolonisation or residual populations?', Oikos, vol. 120, pp. 26-37.
  • Banks, S, Knight, E, McBurney, L et al 2011, 'The Effects of Wildfire on Mortality and Resources for an Arboreal Marsupial: Resilience to Fire Events but Susceptibility to Fire Regime Change', PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science), vol. 6, no. 8, pp. e22952-e22952.
  • Banks, S, Lindenmayer, D, McBurney, L et al 2011, 'Kin selection in den sharing develops under limited availability of tree hollows for a forest marsupial', Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B: Biological Sciences, vol. 278, pp. 2768-2776.
  • Barton, P, Gibb, H, Manning, A et al 2011, 'Morphological traits as predictors of diet and microhabitat use in a diverse beetle assemblage', Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 102, 301-310.
  • Barton, P, Gibb, H, Manning, A et al 2011, 'Morphological traits as predictors of diet and microhabitat use in a diverse beetle assemblage', Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, vol. 102, no. 2, pp. 301-310.
  • Barton, P, Manning, A, Gibb, H et al 2011, 'Experimental reduction of native vertebrate grazing and addition of logs benefit beetle diversity at multiple scales', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 48, no. 4, pp. 943-951.
  • Barton, P, Manning, A, Gibb, H et al 2011, 'Experimental reduction of native vertebrate grazing and addition of logs benefit beetle diversity at multiple scales', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 48, no. 4, pp. 943-951.
  • Bekessy, S, Wintle, B, Lindenmayer, D et al 2011, 'Growing Biodiversity Banking', in Daniela Ottaviani and Nadia El-Hage Scialabba (ed.), Payments for Ecosystem Services and Food Security, FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, Italy, pp. 104-107.
  • Driscoll, D & Lindenmayer, D 2011, 'Framework to improve the application of theory in ecology and conservation', Ecological Monographs vol. 82, pp. 129-147
  • Fischer, J, Batary, P, Bawa, K et al 2011, 'Conservation: Limits of Land Sparing', Science, vol. 334, no. 6056, pp. 593-593.
  • Garnett, S & Lindenmayer, D 2011, 'Conservation science must engender hope to succeed', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 26, no. 2, pp. 59-60.
  • Garnett, S & Lindenmayer, D 2011, 'Avoiding the fate of Troy: response to Arlettaz et al', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 26, no. 8, pp. 380-380.
  • Lentini, P, Fischer, J, Gibbons, P et al 2011, 'AUSTRALIA S STOCK ROUTE NETWORK 2 REPRESENTATION OF FERTILE LANDSCAPES', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 148-151.
  • Lentini, P, Fischer, J, Gibbons, P et al 2011, 'AUSTRALIA S STOCK ROUTE NETWORK 1 A REVIEW OF ITS VALUES AND IMPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE MANAGEMENT', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 119-127.
  • Likens, G & Lindenmayer, D 2011, 'A strategic plan for an Australian Long-Term Environmental Monitoring Network', Austral Ecology, vol. 36, 108.
  • Lindenmayer, D.B., Archer, S., Barton, P.S., Bond, S., Crane, M., Gibbons, P., Kay, G., MacGregor, C., Manning, A.D., Michael, D., Montague-Drake, R., Munro, N., Muntz, R. & Stagoll, K. (2011). What makes a good farm for wildlife?, CSIRO Publishing.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Blair, D, McBurney, L, Banks, S. 2011, Forest Phoenix: How a great forest recovers after wildfire. CSIRO Publishing. Melbourne.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, R 2011, 'Longitudinal patterns in bird reporting rates in a threatened ecosystem: Is change regionally consistent?', Biological Conservation, vol. 144, pp. 430-440.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Hobbs, R, Likens, G et al. 2011, 'Newly discovered landscape traps produce regime shifts in wet forests', PNAS - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 108, no. 38, pp. 15887-15891.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Likens, G 2011, 'Losing the Culture of Ecology', Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America (CEASED), vol. 92, pp. 245-246.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Likens, G 2011, 'Effective monitoring of agriculture', Journal of Environmental Monitoring, vol. 13, no. 6, pp. 1559-1563.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Likens, G 2011, 'Direct Measurement Versus Surrogate Indicator Species for Evaluating Environmental Change and Biodiversity Loss', Ecosystems, vol. 14, pp 47-59.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Likens, G, Haywood, A et al. 2011, 'Adaptive monitoring in the real world: proof of concept', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 26, no. 12, pp. 641-646.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Munro, N 2011, Planting for Wildlife, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Viggers, K 2011, 'Tool use by the Sandstone Shrike-thrush Colluricincla woodwardi', Corella, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 59-59.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J, McBurney, L et al 2011, 'Cross-sectional vs. longitudinal research: a case study of trees with hollows and marsupials in Australian forests', Ecological Monographs, vol. 81, no. 4, pp. 557-580.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J, McBurney, L et al 2011, 'How to make a common species rare: A case against conservation complacency', Biological Conservation, vol. 144, no. 5, pp. 1663-1672.
  • Manning, A, Wood, J, Cunningham, R et al 2011, 'INTEGRATING RESEARCH AND RESTORATION THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A LONG TERM WOODLAND EXPERIMENT IN SOUTH EASTERN AUSTRALIA', Australian Zoologist, vol. 35, no. 3, pp. 633-648.
  • Md Sharif, B, Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J et al. 2011, 'The conservation value of oil palm plantation estates, smallholdings and logged peat swamp forest for birds', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 262, no. 12, pp. 2306-2315.
  • Michael, D, Cunningham, R & Lindenmayer, D 2011, 'Regrowth and revegetation in temperate Australia presents a conservation challenge for reptile fauna in agricultural landscapes', Biological Conservation, vol. 144 (1), pp. 407-415.
  • Michael, D & Lindenmayer, D 2011, 'Diplodactylus tessellatus Gunther, 1875 (Squamata: Diplodactylidae), Parasuta dwyeri Greer, 2006 and Suta suta Peters, 1863 (Squamata: Elapidae): Distribution extension in the Murray catchment of New South Wales, South-eastern Australia', Check List, vol. 7, no. 5, pp. 578-580.
  • Michael, D, Lindenmayer, D, Crane, M et al 2011, 'Reptilia, Murray catchment, New South Wales, south-eastern Australia', Check List, vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 025-029.
  • Montague-Drake, R, Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R et al. 2011, 'A reverse keystone species affects the landscape distribution of woodland avifauna: a case study using the Noisy Miner (Manorina melanocephala) and other Australian birds', Landscape Ecology, vol. 26, no. 10, pp. 1383-1394.
  • Munro, N, Fischer, J, Barrett, G et al 2011, 'Birds response to revegetation of different structure and floristics - are "restoration plantings" restoring Bird Communities?', Restoration Ecology, 19, 223-235
  • Pereoglou, F, MacGregor, C, Banks, S et al 2011, 'Refuge site selection by the eastern chestnut mouse in recently burnt heath', Wildlife Research, vol. 38, no. 4, pp. 290-298.
  • Sutherland, W, Bardsley, S, Bennun, L et al 2011, 'Horizon Scan of Global Conservation Issues for 2011', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 26, pp. 10-16.
  • Swanson, M, Franklin, J, Beschta, R et al 2011, 'The forgotten stage of forest succession: early-successional ecosystems on forest sites', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, vol. 9, 117-125.
  • Swanson, M, Franklin, J, Beschta, R et al 2011, 'A reply to King et al', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, p. 320.
  • Youngentob, K, Roberts, D, Held, A et al 2011, 'Mapping two Eucalyptus subgenera using multiple endmember spectral mixture analysis and continuum-removed imaging spectrometry data', Remote Sensing of Environment, vol. 115, no. 5, pp. 1115-1128.
  • Youngentob, K, Wallis, I, Lindenmayer, D et al 2011, 'Foliage Chemistry Influences Tree Choice and Landscape Use of a Gliding Marsupial Folivore', Journal of Chemical Ecology, vol. 37, pp. 71-84.
  • Banks, S, Dubach, J, Viggers, K et al 2010, 'Adult survival and microsatellite diversity in possums: effects of major histocompatibility complex-linked microsatellite diversity but not multilocus inbreeding estimators', Oecologia, vol. 162, no. 2, pp. 359-370.
  • Barton, P, Manning, A, Gibb, H et al 2010, 'Fine-scale heterogeneity in beetle assemblages under co-occurring Eucalyptus in the same subgenus', Journal of Biogeography,37, 1927-1937.
  • Barton, P, Manning, A, Gibb, H et al 2010, 'Fine-scale heterogeneity in beetle assemblages under co-occurring Eucalyptus in the same subgenus', Journal of Biogeography, vol. 37, no. 10, pp. 1927-1937.
  • Bekessy, S, Wintle, B, Lindenmayer, D et al 2010, 'The biodiversity bank cannot be a lending bank', Conservation Letters, vol. 3, no. 3, pp. 151-158.
  • Crane, M, Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, R 2010, 'The use of den trees by the squirrel glider (Petaurus norfolcensis) in temperate Australian woodlands', Australian Journal of Zoology, vol. 58, no. 1, pp. 39-49.
  • Driscoll, D & Lindenmayer, D 2010, 'Assembly rules are rare in SE Australian bird communities, but sometimes apply in fragmented agricultural landscapes', Ecography, vol. 33, no. 5, pp. 854-865.
  • Driscoll DA, Lindenmayer DB, Bennett AF, Bode M, Bradstock RA, Cary GJ, et al. 2010. Fire management for biodiversity conservation: Key research questions and our capacity to answer them. Biological Conservation, 143: 1928-1939.
  • Driscoll DA, Lindenmayer DB, Bennett AF, Bode M, Bradstock RA, Cary GJ, et al. 2010.Resolving conflicts in fire management using decision theory: asset-protection versus biodiversity conservation. Conservation Letters, 3: 215-223.
  • Felton, A, Felton, A, Foley, W et al. 2010, 'The role of timber tree species in the nutritional ecology of spider monkeys in a certified logging concession, Bolivia', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 259, no. 8, pp. 1642-1649.
  • Felton, A, Knight, E, Wood, J et al 2010, 'A meta-analysis of fauna and flora species richness and abundance in plantations and pasture lands', Biological Conservation, vol. 143, no. 3, pp. 545-554.
  • Gibbons, P, Briggs, S, Murphy, D, Lindenmayer, DB, McElhinny, C & Brookhouse, M, 2010, 'Benchmark stem densities for forests and woodlands in south-eastern Australia under conditions of relatively little modification by humans since European settlement', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 260, pp. 2125-2133.
  • Gibbons, P, McElhinny, C & Lindenmayer, D 2010, 'What strategies are effective for perpetuating structures provided by old trees in harvested forests? A case study on trees with hollows in south-eastern Australia', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 260, no. 6, pp. 975-982.
  • Hunter, M, Dinerstein, E, Hoekstra, J et al 2010, 'A Call to Action for Conserving Biological Diversity in the Face of Climate Change', Conservation Biology, vol. 24, no. 5, pp. 1169-1171.
  • Keith, H, Mackey, B, Berry, S et al. 2010, 'Estimating carbon carrying capacity in natural forest ecosystems across heterogeneous landscapes: addressing sources of error', Global Change Biology, vol. 16, no. 11, pp. 2971-2989.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2010, 'Forest logging creates fire traps', Australasian Science, vol. 31, no. 2, p. 38.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2010, 'Landscape change and the science of biodiversity conservation in tropical forests: A view from the temperate world', Biological Conservation, vol. 143, no. 10, pp. 2405-2411.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Bennett, A & Hobbs, R, eds, 2010, Temperate Woodland Conservation and Management, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Bennett, A & Hobbs, R 2010, 'A decade of research and management insights in Australia's temperate woodlands: Introduction', in David Lindenmayer, Andrew Bennett, Richard Hobbs (ed.), Temperate Woodland Conservation and Management, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Australia, pp. 1-3.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Bennett, A & Hobbs, R 2010, 'An overview of the ecology, management and conservation of Australia's temperate woodlands', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 201-209.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Bennett, A & Hobbs, R 2010, 'How far have we come? Perspectives on ecology, management and conservation of Australia's temperate woodlands', in David Lindenmayer, Andrew Bennett, Richard Hobbs (ed.), Temperate Woodland Conservation and Management, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Australia, pp. 363-374.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Crane, M, Michael, D et al 2010, 'Conservation of woodland vertebrate biota in the temperate woodlands of southern New South Wales', in David Lindenmayer, Andrew Bennett, Richard Hobbs (ed.), Temperate Woodland Conservation and Management, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Australia, pp. 175-182.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, Crane, M et al 2010, 'The importance of temperate woodland in travelling stock reserves for vertebrate biodiversity conservation', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 27-30.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hunter, M 2010, 'Some Guiding Concepts for Conservations Biology', Conservation Biology, vol. 24, no. 6, pp. 1459-1468.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Knight, E, Crane, M et al 2010, 'What makes an effective restoration planting for woodland birds?', Biological Conservation, vol. 143, no. 2, pp. 289-301.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Knight, E, McBurney, L et al 2010, 'Small mammals and retention islands: An experimental study of animal response to alternative logging practices', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 260, no. 12, pp. 2070-2078.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Likens, G 2010, Effective Ecological Monitoring, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Likens, G 2010, 'The science and application of ecological monitoring', Biological Conservation, vol. 143, no. 6, pp. 1317-1328.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Likens, G 2010, 'Improving ecological monitoring', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 25, no. 4, pp. 200-201.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Likens, G & Franklin, J 2010, 'Rapid responses to facilitate ecological discoveries from major disturbances', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, vol. 8, pp. 527-532.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Likens, G, Krebs, C et al 2010, 'Improved probability of detection of ecological "surprises"', PNAS - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 107, pp. 21957-21962.
  • Lindenmayer, D, McBurney, L, Banks, S et al 2010, Forest Phoenix: How a great forest recovers after wildfire, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Steffen, W, Burbidge, A et al. 2010, 'Conservation strategies in response to rapid climate change: Australia as a case study', Biological Conservation, vol. 143, no. 7, pp. 1587-1593.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Wood, J 2010, 'Long-term patterns in the decay, collapse, and abundance of trees with hollows in the mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans) forests of Victoria, southeastern Australia', Canadian Journal of Forest Research, vol. 40, no. 1, pp. 48-54.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J, McBurney, L et al 2010, 'Comparing bird species richness and assemblage composition between montane ash eucalypt forest and cool temperate rainforests: an empirical study from Victoria, south-eastern Australia', Emu, vol. 110, pp. 109-117.
  • McIntyre, S, Stol, J, Harvey, J et al 2010, 'Biomass and floristic patterns in the ground layer vegetation of box-gum grassy eucalypt woodland in Goorooyarroo and Mulligans Flat Nature Reserves, Australian Capital Territory', Cunninghamia, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 319-357.
  • Michael, D, Crane, M, Holliday, S et al 2010, 'A range extension for the prong-snouted blindsnake Ramphotyphlops bituberculatus (Typholpidae) in the south-western slopes of NSW', Herpetofauna, vol. 39, no. 2, pp. 113-114.
  • Michael, D, Cunningham, R & Lindenmayer, D 2010, 'The social elite: Habitat heterogeneity, complexity and quality in granite inselbergs influence patterns of aggregation in Egernia striolata (Lygosominae: Scincidae)', Austral Ecology, vol. 35, pp. 862-870.
  • Michael, D, Cunningham, R & Lindenmayer, D 2010, 'Microhabitat relationships among five lizard species associated with granite outcrops in fragmented agricultural landscapes of south-eastern Australia', Austral Ecology, vol. 35, pp. 214-225
  • Michael, D & Lindenmayer, D 2010, Reptiles of the NSW Murray Catchment: A Guide to Their Identification, Ecology and Conservation, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne Australia.
  • Michael, D & Lindenmayer, D 2010, 'The Conservation of Reptiles in the Temperate Woodlands of Southern New South Wales', in David Lindenmayer, Andrew Bennett, Richard Hobbs (ed.), Temperate Woodland Conservation and Management, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Australia, pp. 217-223.
  • Michael, D, Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, R 2010, 'Managing rock outcrops to improve biodiversity conservation in Australian agricultural landscapes', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 43-50.
  • Stagoll, K., Manning, A.D., Knight, E., Fischer, J. & Lindenmayer, D.B. (2010). Using bird-habitat relationships to inform urban planning. Landscape and Urban Planning, 98, 13-25.
  • Sutherland, W, Clout, M, Cote, I et al 2010, 'A horizon scan of global conservation issues for 2010', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 1-7.
  • Barton PS, Manning AD, Gibb H, Lindenmayer DB, Cunningham SA 2009, 'Conserving ground-dwelling beetles in an endangered woodland community: Multi-scale habitat effects on assemblage diversity', Biological Conservation, 142, 1701-1709.
  • Barton, P, Manning, A, Gibb, H et al 2009, 'Conserving ground-dwelling beetles in an endangered woodland community: Multi-scale habitat effects on assemblage diversity', Biological Conservation, vol. 142, no. 8, pp. 1701-1709.
  • Driscoll, D & Lindenmayer, D 2009, 'Empirical tests of metacommunity theory using an isolation gradient', Ecological Monographs, vol. 79, no. 3, pp. 485-501.
  • Felton, A, Felton, A, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2009, 'Nutritional goals of wild primates', Functional Ecology, vol. 23, pp. 70-78.
  • Felton, A, Felton, A, Raubenheimer, D et al. 2009, 'Protein content of diets dictates the daily energy intake of a free-ranging primate', Behavioral Ecology, vol. 20, no. 4, pp. 685-690.
  • Felton, A, Felton, A, Wood, J et al. 2009, 'Nutritional Ecology of Ateles chamek in lowland Bolivia: How Macronutrient Balancing Influences Food Choices', International Journal of Primatology, vol. 30, pp. 675-696.
  • Felton, A, Fischer, J, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2009, 'Climate change, conservation and management: an assessment of the peer-reviewed scientific journal literature', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 18, pp. 2243-2253.
  • Fischer, J, Brosi, B, Daily, G et al 2009, 'Fostering constructive debate: a reply to Chappell et al.', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, vol. 7, p. 184.
  • Fischer, J, Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2009, 'Landscape Pattern and Biodiversity', in Simon A. Levin (ed.), The Princeton Guide to Ecology, Princeton University Press, Princton, New Jersey, pp. 431-437.
  • Franklin, J & Lindenmayer, D 2009, 'Importance of matrix habitats in maintaining biological diversity', PNAS - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 106, no. 2, pp. 349-350.
  • Hansen, B, Harley, D, Lindenmayer, D et al 2009, 'Population genetic analysis reveals a long-term decline of a threatened endemic Australian marsupial', Molecular Ecology, vol. 18, pp. 3346-3362.
  • Hunter, M, Bean, M, Lindenmayer, D et al 2009, 'Thresholds and the Mismatch between Environmental Laws and Ecosystems', Conservation Biology, vol. 23, no. 4, pp. 1053-1055.
  • Keith, H, Mackey, B & Lindenmayer, D 2009, 'Re-evaluation of forest biomass carbon stocks and lessons from the world's most carbon-dense forests', PNAS - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 106, no. 28, pp. 11635-11640.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2009, Forest Pattern and Ecological Process: A Synthesis of 25 Years of Research, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2009, 'Forest Wildlife Management and Conservation', Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, vol. 1162, pp. 284-310.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2009, 'Book Review: Habitat management for conservation: A Handbook of Techniques', Quarterly Review of Biology, vol. 84, no. 1, pp. 93-94.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2009, Large-Scale Landscape Experiments: Lessons from Tumut, Cambridge University Press, New York.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2009, 'Old forests, new perspectives - Insights from the Mountain Ash Forests of the Central Highlands of Victoria, south-eastern Australia', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 258, no. 4, pp. 357-365.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Hunter, M, Burton, P et al 2009, 'Effects of logging on fire regimes in moist forests', Conservation Letters, vol. 2, pp. 271-277.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Likens, G 2009, 'Adaptive monitoring: a new paradigm in long-term studies', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 24, pp. 482-486.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Likens, G, Franklin, J et al 2009, 'Opportunity in the Wake of Natural "Disasters"', Science, vol. 324, no. 2009, p. 463.
  • Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C, Brown, D et al 2009, 'Lists of Species: Aves, Booderee National Park, Jervis Bay Territory, south-eastern Australia', Check List, vol. 5, no. 3, pp. 479-488.
  • Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C, Wood, J et al. 2009, 'What factors influence rapid post-fire site re-occupancy? A case study of the endangered Eastern Bristlebird in eastern Australia', International Journal of Wildland Fire, vol. 18, pp. 84-95.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Welsh, A, Donnelly, C et al 2009, 'Are nest boxes a viable alternative source of cavities for hollow-dependent animals? Long-term monitoring of nest box occupancy, pest use and attrition', Biological Conservation, vol. 142, no. 1, pp. 33-42.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J, Cunningham, R et al. 2009, 'Experimental evidence of the effects of a changed matrix on conserving biodiversity within patches of native forest in an industrial plantation landscape', Landscape Ecology, vol. 24, pp. 1091-1103.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J & MacGregor, C 2009, 'Do observer differences in bird detection affect inferences from large-scale ecological studies?', Emu - Austral Ornithology, vol. 109, pp. 100-106.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J, Michael, D et al 2009, 'Are gullies best for biodiversity? An empirical examination of Australian wet forest types', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 258, pp. 169-177.
  • Manning, A, Fischer, J, Felton, A et al. 2009, 'Landscape Fluidity - a unifying perspective for understanding and adapting to global change', Journal of Biogeography, vol. 36, pp. 193-199.
  • Manning, A, Gibbons, P & Lindenmayer, D 2009, 'Scattered trees: a complementary strategy for facilitating adaptive responses to climate change in modified landscapes?', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 46, pp. 915-919.
  • Manning, A & Lindenmayer, D 2009, 'Paddock trees, parrots and agricultural production: An urgent need for large-scale, long-term restoration in south-eastern Australia', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 126-135.
  • Montague-Drake, R, Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, R 2009, 'Factors affecting site occupancy by woodland bird species of conservation concern', Biological Conservation, vol. 142, pp. 2896-2903.
  • Moore, S, Wallington, T, Hobbs, R et al 2009, 'Diversity in Current Ecological Thinking: Implications for Environmental Management', Environmental Management (New York), vol. 43, pp. 17-27.
  • Morton, S, Hoegh-Guldberg, O, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2009, 'The Big Ecological Questions Inhibiting Effective Environment Management in Australia', Austral Ecology, vol. 34, no. 1, pp. 1-9.
  • Munro, N, Fischer, J, Wood, J et al. 2009, 'Revegetation in agricultural areas: development of structural complexity and floristic diversity', Ecological Applications, vol. 19, no. 5, pp. 1197-1210.
  • Munro, N, Fischer, J, Wood, J et al 2009, 'The effect of structural complexity on large mammal occurrence in revegetation', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 150-153.
  • Pharo, E & Lindenmayer, D 2009, 'Biological legacies soften pine plantation effects for bryophytes', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 18, pp. 1751-1764.
  • Steffen, W, Burbridge, A, Hughes, L et al. 2009, Australia's Biodiversity and Climate Change, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne Australia.
  • Werner, P, Steffen, W, Burbidge, A et al. 2009, 'Ecological principles underpin a national approach to biodiversity conservation under climate change in Australia', ESA Annual Meeting, Conference Organising Committee, USA.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Likens, G & Likens, G 2010, 'Improving ecological monitoring', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 25, 200-201.
  • Banks, S, Knight, E, Dubach, J et al 2008, 'Microhabitat heterogeneity influences offspring sex allocation and spatial kin structures in possums', Journal of Animal Ecology, vol. 77, no. 6, pp. 1250-1256.
  • Crane, M, Montague-Drake, R, Cunningham, R et al 2008, 'The characteristics of den trees used by the squirrel glider (Petaurus norfolcensis) in temperate Australian woodlands', Wildlife Research, vol. 35, pp. 663-675.
  • Cunningham, R, Lindenmayer, D, Crane, M et al 2008, 'The combined effects of remnant vegetation and tree planting on farmland birds', Conservation Biology, vol. 22, no. 3, pp. 742-752.
  • Dovers, S, Hutchinson, M, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2008, 'Uncertainty, Complexity and the Environment', in Gabriele Bammer and Michael Smithson (ed.), Uncertainty and Risk: Multidisciplinary Perspectives, Earthscan Publications Ltd, London, pp. 245-260.
  • Felton, A, Felton, A & Lindenmayer, D 2008, 'The display of a Reddish Hermit (Phaethornis ruber) in a Lowland Rainforest, Bolivia', The Wilson Journal of Ornithology, vol. 120, no. 1, p. 4.
  • Felton, A, Felton, A, Wood, J et al. 2008, 'Diet and Feeding Ecology of Ateles chamek in a Bolivian Semi-humid Forest: The Importance of Ficus as a Staple Food Resource', International Journal of Primatology, vol. 29, no. 2, pp. 379-403.
  • Felton, A, Wood, J, Felton, A et al. 2008, 'Bird community responses to reduced-impact logging in a certified forestry concession in lowland Bolivia', Biological Conservation, vol. 141, no. 1, pp. 545-555.
  • Felton, A, Wood, J, Felton, A et al. 2008, 'A comparison of bird communities in the anthropogenic and natural-tree fall gaps of a reduced-impact logged subtropical forest in Bolivia', Bird Conservation International, vol. 18, no. 2, pp. 129-143.
  • Fischer, J, Brosi, B, Daily, G et al 2008, 'Should agricultural policies encourage land sparing or wildlife-friendly farming?', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, vol. 6, pp. 380-385.
  • Fischer, J, Lindenmayer, D & Montague-Drake, R 2008, 'The role of landscape texture in conservation biogeography: a case study on birds in south-eastern Australia', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 38-46.
  • Gibbons, P, Cunningham, R & Lindenmayer, D 2008, 'What factors influence the collapse of trees retained on logged sites? A case-control study', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 255, no. 1, pp. 62-67.
  • Gibbons, P, Lindenmayer, D, Fischer, J et al 2008, 'The Future of Scattered Trees in Agricultural Landscapes', Conservation Biology, vol. 22, no. 5, pp. 1309-1319.
  • Gibbons, P, Zammit, C, Youngentob, K et al 2008, 'Some practical suggestions for improving engagement between researchers and policy-makers in natural resource management', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 182-186.
  • Hoegh-Guldberg, O, Hughes, L, McIntyre, S, Lindenmayer, DB, Parmesan, C, Possingham, HP, and Thomas, CD. 2008, Assisted colonization and rapid climate change. Science, 321, 345-346.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2008, 'Reflections on landscape integration: lessons from the past and principles for the future', in Ted Lefroy, Kay Bailey, Greg Unwin & Tony Norton (ed.), Biodiversity: Integrating Conservation and Production: Case studies from Australian Farms, Forests and Fisheries, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, VIC, pp. 21-29.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2008, 'Forests, Forestry and Forest Management', in D Lindenmayer, S Dovers, M Harriss Olson & S Morton (ed.), Ten commitments: reshaping the lucky country's environment, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria, pp. 43-49.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2008, 'Response', Science, vol. 322, no. 5904, pp. 1049-1050.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Burton, P & Franklin, J 2008, Salvage Logging and Its Ecological Consequences, Island Press, Washington, USA.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, MacGregor, C et al 2008, 'Temporal changes in vertebrates during landscape transformation: A large-scale "Natural Experiment"', Ecological Monographs, vol. 78, no. 4, pp. 567-590.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Dovers, S, Harriss Olson, M et al, eds, 2008, Ten commitments: reshaping the lucky country's environment, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Dovers, S, Harriss Olson, M et al 2008, 'Synthesis and overview', in D Lindenmayer, S Dovers, M Harriss Olson & S Morton (ed.), Ten commitments: reshaping the lucky country's environment, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria, pp. 227-231.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Dovers, S, Harriss Olson, M et al 2008, 'Introduction [to Ten commitments: reshaping the lucky country's environment]', in D Lindenmayer, S Dovers, M Harriss Olson & S Morton (ed.), Ten commitments: reshaping the lucky country's environment, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria, pp. 1-2.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Fischer, J, Felton, A et al 2008, 'Novel ecosystems resulting from landscape transformation create dilemmas for modern conservation practice', Conservation Letters, vol. 1, pp. 129-135.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Hobbs, R, Montague-Drake, R et al 2008, 'A checklist for ecological management of landscapes for conservation', Ecology Letters, vol. 11, pp. 78-91.
  • Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C, Welsh, A et al. 2008, 'Contrasting mammal responses to vegetation type and fire', Wildlife Research, vol. 35, pp. 395-408.
  • Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C, Welsh, A et al 2008, 'The use of hollows and dreys by the common ringtail possum (Pseudocheirus peregrinus) in different vegetation types', Australian Journal of Zoology, vol. 56, pp. 1-11.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J, Cunningham, R et al. 2008, 'Testing hypotheses associated with bird responses to wildfire', Ecological Applications, vol. 18, no. 8, pp. 1967-1983.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Wood, J, MacGregor, C et al 2008, 'How predictable are reptile responses to wildfire?', Oikos, vol. 117, pp. 1086-1097.
  • Lowe, A, Dovers, S, Lindenmayer, D et al 2008, 'Evaluation in environmental conservation: issues of adequacy and rigour', International Journal of Environment and Sustainable Development, vol. 7, no. 3, pp. 245-275.
  • Mackey, B, Keith, H, Berry, S et al. 2008, Green Carbon: the role of natural forests in carbon storage. Part 1, A green carbon account of Australia's south-eastern Eucalypt forest, and policy implications, ANU ePress, Canberra Australia.
  • Michael, D, Cunningham, R & Lindenmayer, D 2008, 'A forgotten habitat? Granite inselbergs conserve reptile diversity in fragmented agricultural landscapes', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 45, pp. 1742-1752.
  • Michael, D & Lindenmayer, D 2008, 'Records of the inland Carpet Python, Morelia spilota metcalfei (Serpentes: Pythonidae), from the South-western Slopes of New South Wales', Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales, vol. 129, no. 1, pp. 253-262.
  • Michael, D, Montague-Drake, R & Lindenmayer, D 2008, 'A herpetofauna survey of the VISY pulp and paper mill property, Glimore, NSW', Herpetofauna, vol. 38, no. 2, pp. 116-122.
  • Spring, D, Kennedy, J, Lindenmayer, D et al 2008, 'Optimal management of a flammable multi-stand forest for timber production and maintenance of nesting sites for wildlife', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 255, no. 11, pp. 3857-3865.
  • Spring, D, Kennedy, J, Lindenmayer, D et al 2008, 'Optimal management of a flammable multi-stand forest for timber production and maintenance of nesting sites for wildlife', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 255, no. 11, pp. 3857-3865.
  • Wintle, B & Lindenmayer, D 2008, 'Adaptive risk management for certifiably sustainable forestry', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 256, pp. 1311-1319.
  • Hobbs, R & Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'From Perspectives to Principles: Where to From Here?', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 561-568.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Synthesis: Landscape Classification', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 49-51.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Synthesis: Disturbance, Resilience and Recovery', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 423-425.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Synthesis: Ecosystems and Ecosystem Processes', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 390-392.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Fischer, J 2007, 'Edge Effects', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 165-178.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Synthesis: Total Vegetation Cover, Pattern and Patch Content', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 245-247.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Fischer, J 2007, 'Landscape Models for Use in Studies of Landscape Change and Habitat Fragmentation', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 35-48.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'Response to Ewers and Didham: untangling the complex ecology of modified landscapes', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 22, no. 10, p. 512.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'Infinite perspectives of Infinite Nature', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 22, no. 4, p. 61.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'Leadbeater's Possum', in Christopher Dickman and Rosemary Woodford Ganf (ed.), A fragile balance: The extraordinary story of Australian marsupials, Craftsman House, Victoria, pp. 38-39.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Synthesis: Edge Effects', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 195-197.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Synthesis: Habitat, Habitat Loss and Patch Sizes', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 96-98.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Synthesis: Structure, Degradation and Condition', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 146-148.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Fischer, J 2007, 'Tackling the habitat fragmentation panchreston', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 22, no. 3, pp. 127-132.
  • Cunningham, R, Lindenmayer, D, Crane, M et al. 2007, 'Reptile and arboreal marsupial response to replanted vegetation in agricultural landscapes', Ecological Applications, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 609-619.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'Landscape modification and habitat fragmentation: a synthesis', Global Ecology and Biogeography, vol. 16, pp. 265-280.
  • McCarthy, M & Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'Info-Gap Decision Theory for Assessing the Management of Catchments for Timber Production and Urban Water Supply', Environmental Management (New York), vol. 39, no. 4, pp. 553-562.
  • Viggers, K & Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'The kangaroo conundrum remains', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 44, pp. 1086-1088.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Fischer, J & Hobbs, R 2007, 'The need for pluralism in landscape models: a reply to Dunn and Majer', Oikos, vol. 116, pp. 1419-1421.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R & Weekes, A 2007, 'A study of the foraging ecology of the White-throated Treecreeper (Cormobates leucophaeus)', Emu - Austral Ornithology, vol. 107, pp. 135-142.
  • Taylor, A, Tyndale-Biscoe, H & Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'Unexpected persistence on habitat islands: genetic signatures reveal dispersal of a eucalypt-dependent marsupial through a hostile pine matrix', Molecular Ecology, vol. 16, pp. 2655-2666.
  • Tubelis, D, Lindenmayer, D & Cowling, A 2007, 'The peninsula effect on bird species in native eucalypt forests in a wood production landscape in Australia', Journal of Zoology, vol. 271, pp. 11-18.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Fischer, J, Felton, A et al. 2007, 'The complementarity of single-species and ecosystem-oriented research in conservation research', Oikos, vol. 116, pp. 1220-1226.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, Crane, M et al. 2007, 'Farmland bird responses to intersecting replanted areas', Landscape Ecology, vol. 22, pp. 1555-1562.
  • Manning, A, Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, R 2007, 'A study of coarse woody debris volumes in two box-gum grassy woodland reserves in the Australian Capital Territory', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 8, no. 3, pp. 221-224.
  • Fischer, J, Lindenmayer, D, Blomberg, S et al. 2007, 'Functional Richness and Relative Resilience of Bird Communities in Regions with Different Land Use Intensities', Ecosystems, vol. 10, no. 6, pp. 964-974.
  • Kraaijeveld-Smith, F, Lindenmayer, D, Taylor, A et al 2007, 'Comparative genetic structure reflects underlying life histories of three sympatric small mammal species in continuous forest of south-eastern Australia', Oikos, vol. 116, pp. 1819-1830.
  • Felton, A, Hennessey, B, Felton, A et al. 2007, 'Birds surveyed in the harvested and unharvested areas of a reduced-impact logged forestry concession, located in the lowland subtropical humid forests of the Department of Santa Cruz Bolivia', Check List, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 43-50.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, MacGregor, C et al 2007, 'Aves, Tumut, New South Wales, South-eastern Australia.', Check List, vol. 3, no. 3, pp. 168-174.
  • Tubelis, D, Lindenmayer, D & Cowling, A 2007, 'Bird populations in native forest patches in south-eastern Australia: the roles of patch width, matrix type (age) and matrix use', Landscape Ecology, vol. 22, pp. 1045-1058.
  • Munro, N, Lindenmayer, D & Fischer, J 2007, 'Faunal response to revegetation in agricultural areas of Australia: A Review', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 8, no. 3, pp. 199-207.
  • Fischer, J, Manning, A, Steffen, W et al. 2007, 'Mind the sustainability gap', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 22, no. 12, pp. 621-624.
  • Gibbons, P & Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'Offsets for land clearing: No net loss or the tail wagging the dog?', Ecological Management and Restoration, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 26-31.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Synthesis: Corridors, Connectivity and Stepping Stones', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 290-292.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Synthesis: Aquatic Ecosystems and Integrity', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 473-475.
  • Hunter, M, Lindenmayer, D & Calhoun, A 2007, 'Saving the Earth as a Career; Advice on Becoming a Conservation Professional', in Hunter, Lindenmeyer, Colhoun (ed.), Saving the Earth as a Career: Advice on Becoming a Conservation Professional, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Uk, p. 216.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'Avoiding Irreversible Change: Considerations for Vegetation Cover, Vegetation Structure and Species Composition', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 229-244.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Introduction [to Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles]', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 1-5.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2007, On Borrowed Time: Australia's Environmental Crisis and what we must do about it, Penguin Books, Melbourne Australia.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'Gaining or losing ground', Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 176-177.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2007, 'Synthesis: Individual Species Management - Threatened Taxa and Invasive Species', in DB Lindenmayer and RJ Hobbs (ed.), Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne, pp. 343-345.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2007, 'The conservation and management of ecological communities', in John Mulvaney & Hugh Tyndale-Biscoe (ed.), Rediscovering Recherche Bay, Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia, Canberra, pp. 145-156.
  • Manning, A, Lindenmayer, D, Barry, S et al. 2007, 'Large-scale spatial and temporal dynamics of the vulnerable and highly mobile superb parrot', Journal of Biogeography, vol. 34, pp. 289-304.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R, eds, 2007, Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Melbourne.
  • Gibbons, P & Lindenmayer, D 2007, Fudged Kyoto figures deceive, The Canberra Times.
  • Gibbons, P & Lindenmayer, D 2007, What's the value of biodiversity offsets?, AEDA News.
  • Manning, A, Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2006, 'Scattered trees are keystone structures- implications for conservation', Biological Conservation, vol. 132, pp. 311-321.
  • Sanecki, G, Green, K, Wood, H et al 2006, 'The implications of snow-based recreation for small mammals in the subnivean space in south-east Australia', Biological Conservation, vol. 129, no. 4, pp. 511-518.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Franklin, J & Fischer, J 2006, 'General management principles and a checklist of strategies to guide forest biodiversity conservation', Biological Conservation, vol. 131, pp. 433-445.
  • Sanecki, G, Green, K, Wood, H et al 2006, 'The influence of snow cover on home range and activity of the bush-rat (Rattus fuscipes) and the dusky antechinus (Antechinus swainsonii)', Wildlife Research, vol. 33, pp. 489-496.
  • Manning, A, Lindenmayer, D, Barry, S et al. 2006, 'Multi-scale site and landscape effects on the vulnerable superb parrot of south-eastern Australia during the breeding season', Landscape Ecology, vol. 31, pp. 1119-1133.
  • Manning, A, Lindenmayer, D & Fischer, J 2006, 'Stretch goals and backcasting: approaches for overcoming barriers to large-scale ecological restoration', Restoration Ecology, vol. 14, no. 4, pp. 487-492.
  • Sanecki, G, Cowling, A, Green, K et al 2006, 'Winter distribution of small mammals in relation to snow cover in the subalpine zone, Australia', Journal of Zoology, vol. 269, pp. 99-110.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Fischer, J 2006, Habitat Fragmentation and Landscape Change, Island Press, Washington.
  • Fazey, I, Fazey, J, Salisbury, J et al 2006, 'The nature and role of experiential knowledge for environmental conservation', Environmental Conservation, vol. 33, no. 1, pp. 1-10.
  • Felton, A, Felton, A, Wood, J et al. 2006, 'Vegetation structure, phenology, and regeneration in the natural and anthropogenic tree-fall gaps of a reduced impact logged subtropical Bolivian forest', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 235, pp. 186-193.
  • Peakall, R, Ebert, D, Cunningham, R et al. 2006, 'Mark-recapture by genetic tagging reveals restricted movements by bush rats (Rattus fuscipes) in a fragmented landscape', Journal of Zoology, vol. 268, pp. 207-216.
  • Fischer, J, Lindenmayer, D & Manning, A 2006, 'Biodiversity, ecosystem function, and resilience: ten guiding principles for commodity production landscapes', Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 80-86.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2006, 'Beyond fragmentation: the continuum model for fauna research and conservation in human-modified landscapes', Oikos, vol. 112, no. 2, pp. 473-480.
  • Peakall, R & Lindenmayer, D 2006, 'Genetic insights into population recovery following experimental perturbation in a fragmented landscape', Biological Conservation, vol. 132, pp. 520-532.
  • Burgmann, M, Lindenmayer, D & Elith, J 2005, 'Managing landscapes for conservation under uncertainty', Ecology, vol. 86, no. 8, pp. 2007-17.
  • Cunningham, R, Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C et al 2005, 'Effects of trap position, trap history, microhabitat and season on capture probabilities of small mammals in a wet eucalypt forest', Wildlife Research, vol. 32, no. 8, pp. 657-671.
  • Wayne, A, Cowling, A, Rooney, J et al 2005, 'Factors affecting the detection of possums by spotlighting in Western Australia', Wildlife Research, vol. 32, no. 8, pp. 689-700.
  • Grafton, R, Kompas, T & Lindenmayer, D 2005, 'Marine reserves with ecological uncertainty', Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, vol. 67, pp. 957-971.
  • Cunningham, R & Lindenmayer, D 2005, 'Modeling count data of rare species: some statistical issues', Ecology, vol. 86(5), pp. 1135-1142.
  • Wayne, A, Cowling, A, Ward, C et al 2005, 'A comparison of survey methods for arboreal possums in jarrah forest, Western Australia', Wildlife Research, vol. 32, no. 8, pp. 701-714.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2005, 'Nestedness in fragmented landscapes: a case study on birds, arboreal marsupials and lizards', Journal of Biogeography, vol. 32, pp. 1737-1750.
  • Fazey, I, Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2005, 'Who does all the research in conservation biology?', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 14, pp. 917-934.
  • Banks, S, Finlayson, G, Lawson, S et al. 2005, 'The effects of habitat fragmentation due to forestry plantation establishment on the demography and genetic variation of a marsupial carnivore, Antechinus agilis', Biological Conservation, vol. 2005, no. 122, pp. 581-597.
  • Hazell, D, Heinsohn, R & Lindenmayer, D 2005, 'Ecology', in R.Q.Grafton, L.Robin & RJ Wasson (ed.), Understanding the environment: bridging the disciplinary divides, UNSW Press, Sydney, pp. 97-112.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R & Peakall, R 2005, 'The recovery of populations of bush rat Rattus fuscipes in forest fragments following major population reduction', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 42, pp. 649-658.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Luck, G 2005, 'Synthesis: Thresholds in conservation and management', Biological Conservation, vol. 124, pp. 351-354.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Fischer, J & Cunningham, R 2005, 'Native Vegetation cover thresholds associated with species responses', Biological Conservation, vol. 124, pp. 311-316.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2005, 'The sensitivity of lizards to elevation: A case study from south-eastern Australia', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 11, pp. 225-233.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2005, '2004 Tsunami Cleanup', Conservation Biology in Practice, vol. 19, no. 4, p. 991.
  • Manning, A, Lindenmayer, D, Nix, H et al. 2005, 'A bioclimatic analysis for the highly mobile superb parrot of south-eastern Australia', Emu - Austral Ornithology, vol. 105, pp. 193-201.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2005, 'Perfectly nested or significantly nested - an important difference for conservation management', Oikos, vol. 109, no. 3, pp. 485-494.
  • Fazey, I, Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2005, 'What do conservation biologists publish?', Biological Conservation, vol. 124, pp. 63-73.
  • Fischer, J, Fazey, I, Briese, R et al 2005, 'Making the matrix matter: challenges in Australian grazing landscapes', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 14, pp. 561-578.
  • Wayne, A, Rooney, J, Ward, C et al 2005, 'The life history of Pseudocheirus occidentalis (Pseudocheiridae) in the jarrah forest of south-western Australia', Australian Journal of Zoology, vol. 53, pp. 325-337.
  • Fischer, J, Lindenmayer, D, Barry, S et al 2005, 'Lizard distribution patterns in the Tumut fragmentation Natural Experiment in south-eastern Australia', Biological Conservation, vol. 123, pp. 301-315.
  • Gilna, B, Lindenmayer, D & Viggers, K 2005, 'Dangers of New Zealand Possum Biocontrol Research to Endogenous Australian Fauna', Conservation Biology, vol. 19, no. 6, pp. 2030-2032.
  • Banks, S, Ward, S, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2005, 'The effects of habitat fragmentation on the social kin structure and mating system of the agile antechinus, Antechinus agilis', Molecular Ecology, vol. 14, no. 6, pp. 1789-1801.
  • Banks, S, Lindenmayer, D, Ward, S et al 2005, 'The effects of habitat fragmentation via forestry plantation establishment on spatial genotypic structure in the small marsupial carnivore, Antechinus agilis', Molecular Ecology, vol. 14, no. 6, pp. 1667-1680.
  • Dovers S, Cary G, Lindenmayer D (2004) Fire research and policy priorities: insights from the 2003 national fire forum. Australian Journal of Emergency Management, 19, 76-84.
  • Manning, A, Lindenmayer, D & Barry, S 2004, 'The conservation implications of bird reproduction in the agricultural `matrix: a case study of the vulnerable Superb Parrot (Polytelis swainsonii) of south-eastern Australia', Biological Conservation, vol. 120, no. 3, pp. 363-374.
  • Belovsky, G, Botkin, D, Crowl, T et al 2004, 'Ten suggestions to strengthen the science of ecology', BioScience, vol. 54, no. 4, pp. 345-351.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Gibbs, A 2004, 'On charcoal, the increased intensity of logging and a flawed Environmental Assessment process', in Daniel Lunney (ed.), Conservation of Australia's Forest Fauna (2nd ed), Royal Zoological Society of NSW, Sydney Australia, pp. 56-62.
  • Pharo, E, Lindenmayer, D & Taws, N 2004, 'The effects of large-scale fragmentation on bryophytes in temperate forests', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 41, pp. 910-921.
  • Viggers, K & Lindenmayer, D 2004, 'A review of the biology of the short-eared possum Trichosurus caninus and the mountain brushtail possum Trichosurus cunninghamii', in Ross L. Goldingay and Stephen M. Jackson (ed.), The Biology of Australian Possums and Gliders, Surrey Beatty & Sons, Chipping Norton, NSW, pp. 490-505.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2004, 'Fauna conservation in Australian plantation forests - a review', Biological Conservation, vol. 119, pp. 151-168.
  • Tubelis, D, Lindenmayer, D & Cowling, A 2004, 'Novel patch-matrix interactions: patch width influences matrix use by birds', Oikos, vol. 107, pp. 634-644.
  • Pope, M, Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, R 2004, 'Patch use by the greater glider (Petauroides volans) in a fragmented forest ecosystem. I. Home range size and movements', Wildlife Research, vol. 31, pp. 559-568.
  • Salt, D, Lindenmayer, D & Hobbs, R 2004, 'Trees and biodiversity: A guide for farm forestry', in Salt (ed.), Trees and biodiversity: A guide for farm forestry, Rural Industries Research & Development Corporation, Canberra, p. 201.
  • Fischer, J, Lindenmayer, D & Cowling, A 2004, 'The challenge of managing multiple species at multiple scales: reptiles in an Australian grazing landscape', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 41, no. 1, pp. 32-44.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Franklin, J, Angelstam, P et al 2004, 'The Victorian Forestry Roundtable Meeting: a discussion of transitions to sustainability in Victorian Forests', Australian Forestry, vol. 67, no. 1, pp. 1-5.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2004, 'Possums, gliders and fragments: a sysnthesis of work in the Tumut and Nanangroe fragmentation studies', in Ross L. Goldingay and Stephen M. Jackson (ed.), The Biology of Australian Possums and Gliders, Surrey Beatty & Sons, Chipping Norton, NSW, pp. 549-563.
  • Fischer, J, Lindenmayer, D & Fazey, I 2004, 'Appreciating ecological complexity: Habitat contours as a conceptual landscape model', Conservation Biology, vol. 18, no. 5, pp. 1245-1253.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Pope, M & Cunningham, R 2004, 'Patch use by the greater glider (Petauroides volans) in a fragmented forest ecosystem. II. Characteristics of den trees and preliminary data on den-use patterns', Wildlife Research, vol. 31, pp. 569-577.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R & Lindenmayer, B 2004, 'Sound recording of bird vocalisations in forests. II. Longitudinal profiles in vocal activity', Wildlife Research, vol. 31, pp. 209-217.
  • Cunningham, R, Pope, M & Lindenmayer, D 2004, 'Patch use by the greater glider (Petauroides volans) in a fragmented forest ecosystem. III. Night-time use of trees', Wildlife Research, vol. 31, pp. 579-585.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Franklin, J & Foster, D 2004, 'Salvage harvesting fire-damaged wet eucalypt forests: some ecological perspectives', Australian Forestry, vol. 67, no. 2, pp. 131-136.
  • Parris, K & Lindenmayer, D 2004, 'Evidence that creation of a Pinus radiate plantation in south-eastern Australia has reduced habitat for frogs', Acta Oecologica, vol. 25, pp. 93-101.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Foster, D, Franklin, J et al 2004, 'Salvage harvesting policies after natural disturbance', Science, vol. 303, p. 1303.
  • Manning, A, Lindenmayer, D & Nix, H 2004, 'Continua and umwelt: novel perspectives on viewing landscapes', Oikos, vol. 104, no. 3, pp. 621-627.
  • Cunningham, R, Lindenmayer, D & Lindenmayer, B 2004, Sound recording of bird vocalisations in forests. I. Relationships between bird vocalisations and point interval counts of bird numbers: a case study in statistical modeling. Wildlife Research, vol. 31, pp. 195-207.
  • Fazey, I, Salisbury, J, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2004, 'Can methods applied in medicine be used to summarize and disseminate conservation research?', Environmental Conservation, vol. 31, no. 3, pp. 190-198.
  • Hazell, D, Hero, J, Lindenmayer, D et al 2004, 'A comparison of constructed and natural habitat for frog conservation in an Australian agricultural landscape', Biological Conservation, vol. 119, pp. 61-71.
  • Heinsohn, R, Lacy, R, Lindenmayer, D et al. 2004, 'Unsustainable harvest of dugongs in Torres Strait and Cape York (Australia) waters: two case studies using population viability analysis', Animal Conservation, vol. 7, pp. 1-9.
  • Henle, K, Lindenmayer, D, Margules, C et al 2004, 'Species survial in fragmented landscapes: where are we now?', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 13, pp. 1-8.
  • Melbourne, B, Davies, K, Margules, C et al 2004, 'Species in fragmented landscapes: where to from here?', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 13, pp. 275-284.
  • Cary G, Lindenmayer D & Dovers S, eds. (2003) Australia Burning: Fire Ecology, Policy and Management Issues, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne.
  • Fischer, J, Lindenmayer, D & Cowling, A 2003, 'Habitat models for the four-fingered skink(Carlia tetradactyla) at the microhabitat and landscape scale (submitted)', Wildlife Research, vol. 30, no. 5, pp. 495-504.
  • Kearney, M, Moussalli, A, Strasburg, J, Lindenmayer, DB, and Moritz, C. 2003. 'Geographic parthenogenesis in the Australian arid zone: I. A climatic analysis of the Heteronotia binoei complex (Gekkonidae)', Evolutionary Ecology Research, vol. 5, no. 7, pp. 953-976.
  • Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C, Cunningham, R et al. 2003, 'The use of nest boxes by arboreal marsupials in the forests of the Central Highlands of Victoria', Wildlife Research, vol. 30, pp. 259-264.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, MacGregor, C et al. 2003, 'A survey design for monitoring the abundance if arboreal marsupials in the Central Highlands of Victoria', Biological Conservation, vol. 110, pp. 161-167.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Taylor, A 2003, 'Ghosts of gliders past', Nature Australia, vol. 27, no. 8, pp. 30-37.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Cunningham, R 2003, 'Playing possum', Nature Australia, vol. 27, no. 10, pp. 27-33.
  • Cary G, Lindenmayer D & Dovers S. 2003 Research and policy priorities: A synthesis. In: Cary, G., Lindenmayer, D., and Dovers, S. (ed.), Australia Burning: Fire Ecology, Policy and Management Issues, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne, pp. 252-265.
  • Ball, S, Lindenmayer, D & Possingham, H 2003, 'The predictive accuracy of population viability analysis: a test using data from two small mammal species in a fragmented landscape', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 12, pp. 2393-2413.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Claridge, A, Hazell, D et al 2003, Wildlife on farms: How to conserve native animals, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Hobbs, R & Salt, D 2003, 'Plantation forests and biodiversity conservation', Australian Forestry, vol. 66, pp. 62-66.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Possingham, H, Lacy, R et al. 2003, 'How accurate are population models? Lessons from landscape-scale population tests in a fragmented system', Ecology Letters, vol. 6, pp. 41-47.
  • Hazell, D, Osborne, W & Lindenmayer, D 2003, 'Impact of post-European stream change on frog habitat: Southeastern Australia', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 12, pp. 301-320.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2003, 'Fire behaviour, forest management and biodiversity conservation', in Cary, G., Lindenmayer, D., and Dovers, S. (ed.), Australia burning: fire ecology, policy and management issues, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne, pp. 82-88.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2003, 'Integrating wildlife conservation and wood production in Victorian montane ash forests.', in Lindenmayer, D., and Franklin, J. (ed.), Towards Forest Sustainability, Island Press, Washington DC, pp. 47-72.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Fischer, J 2003, 'Sound science or social hook - a response to Brookers application of the focal species approach', Landscape and Urban Planning, vol. 62, no. 3, pp. 149-158.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Franklin, J 2003, 'Transitions to ecological sustainability in forests � a synthesis', in Lindenmayer, D., and Franklin, J. (ed.), Towards Forest Sustainability, Island Press, Washington DC, pp. 205-213.
  • Lindenmayer, D, McIntyre, S & Fischer, J 2003, 'Birds in eucalypt and pine forests: landscape alteration and its implications for research models of faunal habitat use', Biological Conservation, vol. 110, pp. 45-53.
  • Peakall, R, Ruibal, M & Lindenmayer, D 2003, 'Spatial autocorrelation analysis offers new insights into gene flow in the Australian bush rat, Rattus fuscipes', Evolution, vol. 57, no. 5, pp. 1182-1195.
  • Svendrup-Thyseon, A & Lindenmayer, D 2003, 'Ecological continuity and assumed indicator fungi in boreal forest: the importance of the landscape matrix', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 174, pp. 353-363.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2002, 'The conservation value of paddock trees for birds in a variegated landscape in southern New South Wales. 1. Species composition and site occupancy patterns', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 11, pp. 807-832.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2002, 'The conservation value of paddock trees for birds in a variegated landscape in southern New South Wales. 2. Paddock trees as stepping stones', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 11, pp. 833-849.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2002, 'Treating the nestedness temperature calculator as a black box can lead to false conclusions', Oikos, vol. 99, no. 1, pp. 193-199.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2002, 'Small patches can be valuable for biodiversity conservation: two case studies on birds in southeastern Australia', Biological Conservation, vol. 106, pp. 129-136.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Manning, A, Smith, P et al 2002, 'The focal-species approach and landscape restoration: a critique', Conservation Biology, vol. 16, no. 2, pp. 338-345.
  • Viggers, K & Lindenmayer, D 2002, 'Problems with keeping native Australian mammals as companion animals', A Zoological Revolution, ed. Lunney, D. and C. Dickman, Royal Zoological Society of NSW and Australian Museum, Sydney, pp. 130-151.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2002, Gliders of Australia: a natural history, UNSW Press, Sydney, Australia.
  • Franklin, J, Spies, T, Van Pelt, R et al 2002, 'Disturbances and structural development of natural forest ecosystems with silvicultural implications, using Douglas-fir forests as an example', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 155, pp. 399-423.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Claridge, A, Gilmore, A et al 2002, 'The ecological role of logs in Australian forests and the potential impacts of harvesting intensification on log-using biota', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 8, pp. 121-140.
  • Lindenmayer, D & McCarthy, M 2002, 'Congruence between natural and human forest disturbance: a case study from Australian montane ash forest', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 155, pp. 319-335.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, Donnelly, C et al. 2002, 'Effects of forest fragmentation on bird assemblages in a novel landscape context', Ecological Monographs, vol. 72, no. 1, pp. 1-18.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Franklin, J 2002, Conserving forest biodivesity: a comprehensive multiscaled approach, Island Press, Washington.
  • McAlpine, C, Lindenmayer, D, Eyre, T et al 2002, 'Landscape surrogates of forest fragmentation: synthesis of Australian Montreal Process case studies', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 8, pp. 108-120.
  • Mackey, B, Lindenmayer, D, Gill, M et al. 2002, Wildlife, fire and future climate: A Forest Ecosystem Analysis, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne.
  • Lindenmayer, D, MacGregor, C & Gibbs, A 2002, 'Comment: Economics of a nest-box program of an endangered species, a reappraisal', Canadian Journal of Forest Research, vol. 32, no. 12, pp. 2244-2247.
  • Gibbons, P & Lindenmayer, D 2002, Tree hollows and wildlife conservation in Australia, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic.
  • Gibbons, P, Lindenmayer, D, Barry, S et al. 2002, 'Hollow selection by vertebrate fauna in forests of southern Australia and implications for forest management', Biological Conservation, vol. 103, pp. 1-12.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Dubach, J & Viggers, K 2002, 'Geographic dimorphism in the mountain brushtail possum (Trichosurus caninus): the case for a new species', Australian Journal of Zoology, vol. 50, pp. 369-393.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, Donnelly, C et al. 2002, 'On the use of landscape surrogates as ecological indicators in fragmented forests', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 159, no. 3, pp. 203-216.
  • Mackey, B & Lindenmayer, D 2001, 'Towards a hierarchical framework for modelling the spatial distribution of animals', Journal of Biogeography, vol. 28, pp. 1147-1166.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, MacGregor, C et al. 2001, 'A prospective longitudinal study of landscape matrix effects on fauna in woodland remnants: experimental design and baseline data', Biological Conservation, vol. 101, no. 2, pp. 157-169.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Broome, L 2001, 'Ringtails, Pygmy Possums and Gliders', in D.Macdonald (ed.), Encyclopedia of Mammals, Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 834-839.
  • Possingham, H, Lindenmayer, D & McCarthy, M 2001, 'Population Viability Analysis', in Levin SA (ed.), Encyclopedia of Biodiversity, Academic Press, San Diego, pp. 831-843.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Ball, I, Possingham, H et al. 2001, 'A landscape-scale test of the predictive ability of a spatially explicit model for population viability analysis', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 38, pp. 36-48.
  • McCarthy, M, Lindenmayer, D & Possingham, H 2001, 'Assessing spatial PVA models of arboreal marsupials using significance tests and Bayesian statistics', Biological Conservation, vol. 18, pp. 191-200.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Lacy, R 2001, 'Small mammals, habitat patches and PVA models: a field test of model predictive ability', Biological Conservation, vol. 103, pp. 247-265.
  • Hazell, D, Cunningham, R, Lindenmayer, D et al 2001, 'Use of farm dams as frog habitat in an Australian agricultural landscape: factors affecting species richness and distribution', Biological Conservation, vol. 102, pp. 155-169.
  • Lindenmayer, D & McCarthy, M 2001, 'The spatial distribution of non-native plant invaders in a pine-eucalypt mosaic in south-eastern Australia', Biological Conservation, vol. 102, pp. 77-87.
  • Tyre, D, Possingham, H & Lindenmayer, D 2001, 'Inferring process from pattern: can territory occupancy provide information about life history parameters?', Ecological Applications, vol. 11, pp. 1722-1737.
  • Viggers, K & Lindenmayer, D 2001, 'Hematological and plasma biochemical values of the Greater Glider in Australia', Journal of Wildlife Diseases, vol. 37, pp. 370-374.
  • Fischer, J, Lindenmayer, D, Nix, H et al. 2001, 'Climate and animal distribution: a climatic analysis of the Australian marsupial Trichosurus caninus', Journal of Biogeography, vol. 28, pp. 293-304.
  • Lindenmayer, D, McCarthy, M, Possingham, H et al 2001, 'A simple landscape-scale test of a spatially explicit population model: patch occupancy in fragmented south-eastern Australian forests', Oikos, vol. 92, pp. 445-458.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, Donnelly, C et al. 2001, 'How effective is spotlighting for detecting the greater glider (Petauroides volans)?', Wildlife Research, vol. 28, pp. 105-109.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Mackey, B, Cunningham, R et al. 2000, 'Factors affecting the presence of the cool temperate rain forest tree myrtle beech (Nothofagus cunninghamii) in southern Australia: integrating climatic, terrain and disturbance predictors of distribution patterns', Journal of Biogeography, vol. 27, pp. 1001-1009.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Pope, M, Parris, K et al. 2000, 'Habitat fragmentation, landscape context, and mammalian assemblages in southeastern Australia', Journal of Mammalogy, vol. 81, no. 3, pp. 787-797.
  • Gibbons, P, Lindenmayer, D, Barry, S et al. 2000, 'Hollow formation in eucalypts from temperate forests in southeastern Australia', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 6, pp. 218-228.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2000, 'Using environmental history and ecological evidence to appraise management regimes in forests', in unknown (ed.), Environmental History and Policy: Still Settling Australia, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, pp. 74-96.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2000, 'Guidelines for biodiversity conservation in new and existing softwood plantations', in The Short Report No., 77, 1-4. Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation Report.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, Donnelly, C et al 2000, 'Structural features of old-growth Australian montane Ash forests', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 134, pp. 189-204.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2000, 'Factors at multiple scales affecting distribution patterns and their implications for animal conservation - Leadbeaters Possum as a case study.', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 9, pp. 15-35.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Lacy, R & Pope, M 2000, 'Testing a Simulation Model for Population Viability Analysis', Ecological Applications, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 580-597.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Margules, C & Botkin, D 2000, 'Indicators of biodiversity for ecologically sustainable forest management', Conservation Biology, vol. 14, no. 4, pp. 941-950.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, Pope, M et al. 2000, 'Cavity sizes and types in Australian eucalypts from wet and dry forest types', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 137, pp. 139-150.
  • Franklin, J, Lindenmayer, D, MacMahon, J et al 2000, 'Threads of Continuity', Conservation Biology in Practice, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 8-16.
  • Gibbons, P, Lindenmayer, D, Barry, S et al. 2000, 'The effects of slash burning on the mortality and collapse of trees retained on logged sites in south-eastern Australia.', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 139, pp. 51-61.
  • Fischer, J & Lindenmayer, D 2000, 'An assessment of the published results of animal relocations', Biological Conservation, vol. 96, pp. 1-11.
  • Lindenmayer, D & McCarthy, M 2000, 'Spatially correlated extinction in a metapopulation model of Leadbeaters Possum.', Biodiversity and Conservation, vol. 9, pp. 47-63.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Possingham, H & McCarthy, M 2000, 'Testing spatial PVA models of Australian treecreepers (Aves: Climacteridae) in fragmented forest', Ecological Applications, vol. 10, no. 6, pp. 1722-1731.
  • Viggers, K & Lindenmayer, D 2000, 'A population study of the Mountain Brushtail possum (Trichosurus caninus) in the Central Highlands of Victoria', Australian Journal of Zoology, vol. 2000, no. 48, pp. 201-216.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Peakall, R 2000, 'The Tumut experiment - integrating demographic and genetic studies to unravel fragmentation effects: a case study of the native bush rat', in Young, A.G.; Clarke, G.M. (ed.), Genetics, Demography and Viability of Fragmented Populations, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom, pp. 173-201.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2000, 'Genetic consequences of habitat fragmentation: unravelling the complexity in native bush rats', Genetics Society of Australia Annual Meeting 2000, Unknown, unknown.
  • Lindenmayer, D 2000, 'The spatial anatomy of two weed invasions', in Centre for Resource and Environmental Studies Working Paper 2000/1. ISBN 0 86740 519 8.
  • Lindenmayer, D & McCarthy, M 1999, 'Incorporating metapopulation dynamics of Greater Gliders into reserve design in disturbed landscapes', Ecology, vol. 80, pp. 651-667.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Lindenmayer, B 1999, 'Quantifying observer heterogeneity in bird counts', Austral Ecology, vol. 24, no. 3, pp. 270-277.
  • Lindenmayer, D 1999, 'The response of arboreal Marsupials to landscape context: A large-scale fragmentation study', Ecological Applications, vol. 9, pp. 594-611.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Pope, M & Cunningham, R 1999, 'Roads and nest predation: an experimental study in a modified forest ecosystem', Emu - Austral Ornithology, vol. 99, no. part 2, pp. 148-152.
  • Lindenmayer, D 1999, 'A large-scale experiment to examine the effects of landscape context and habitat fragmentation on mammals', Biological Conservation, vol. 88, pp. 387-403.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Lacy, R, Tyndale-Biscoe, H et al. 1999, 'Intergrating demographic and genetic studies of the Greater Glider (Petauroides volans) at Tumut, south-eastern Australia: Setting Hypotheses for future testing', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 5, pp. 2-8.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Pope, M 1999, 'A field-based experiment to examine the response of mammals to landscape context and habitat fragmentation', Biological Conservation, vol. 88, pp. 387-403.
  • Lindenmayer, D 1999, 'Future directions for biodiversity conservation in managed forests: indicator species, impact studies and monitoring programs', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 115, pp. 277-287.
  • Mackey, B, Lesslie, R, Lindenmayer, D et al. 1999, 'Wilderness and its place in nature conservation in Australia', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 4, no. 3, pp. 182-185.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Lacy, R, Tyndale-Biscoe, H et al. 1999, 'Integrating demographic and genetic studies of the Greater Glider Petauroides volans in fragmented forests: predicting movement patterns and rates for future testing', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 5, pp. 2-8.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Mackey, B, Mullen, I et al. 1999, 'Factors affecting stand structure in forests - are there climatic and topographic determinants?', Forest Ecology and Management, no. 123, pp. 55-63.
  • Lindenmayer, D & McCarthy, M 1999, 'The conservation of arboreal marsupials in the montane ash forests of the Central highlands of Victoira, south-eastern Australia. Landscape analysis of the occurrence of arboreal marsupials in the montane ash forests', Biological Conservation, vol. 89, pp. 83-92.
  • Lindenmayer, D & Incoll, R 1999, 'Attributes of logs in the Mountain Ash forests in south-eastern Australia.', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 123, pp. 195-203.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Pope, M & McCarthy, M 1999, 'Arboreal marsupial incidence in eucalypt patches in south-eastern Australia: A test of Hanskis simple model for metapopulation model.', Oikos, vol. 84, pp. 99-109.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Gill, M & McCarthy, M 1999, 'Fire regimes in mountain ash forests: evidence from forest age structure,extinction models and wildlife habitat.', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 124, pp. 193-203.
  • Cunningham, R, Lindenmayer, D, Nix, H et al. 1999, 'Counting birds in forests: a comparison of observers and observation methods', Austral Ecology, vol. 24, pp. 270-277.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Mackey, B, Gill, M et al 1999, 'Stand structure within forest types - are there environmental determinants ?', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 123, pp. 55-63.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Cunningham, R, Pope, M et al. 1999, 'The Tumut fragmentation experiment in south-eastern Australia: the effects of landscape context and fragmentation of arboreal marsupials', Ecological Applications, vol. 9, pp. 594-611.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Triggs, B, Incoll, R et al. 1999, 'Comparison of hairtubing methods for the detection of mammals.', Wildlife Research, vol. 26, pp. 745-753.
  • Lindenmayer, D, Lacy, R, Pope, M et al. 1999, 'Integrating demographic and genetic studies of the Greater Glider (Petauroides volans) at Tumut, south-eastern Australia: Setting hypotheses for future testing.', Pacific Conservation Biology, vol. 5, pp. 2-8.
  • Lindenmayer, D 1999, 'Some key aspects of biodiversity conservation in managed forests: indicators, logging impacts and monitoring.', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 115, pp. 277-287.
  • Lindenmayer, D 1999, 'Use of nest trees by the Mountain Brushtail Possum (Trichosurus caninus) (Phalangeridae: Marsupialia). V. Synthesis of studies.', Wildlife Research, vol. 25, pp. 627-634.