naturalist • tour guide • author • photographer • museum curator • researcher
Research
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- Calystegia affinis twiner restoration
- Placostylus bivaricosus snail surveys
- Mountain palm surveys.
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Current research Additional research captioned images |
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Research
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Report on IUCN Island Invasives Conference, Auckland, February 2001 (60K Word doc)
Islands support some of the world’s most remarkable
ecosystems. They are home to numerous distinctive species, interlocking in
unique plant and animal communities. They are demonstrations of evolution in
action. More
Reassembling island ecosystems: the case of Lord Howe Island (128K pdf)
Exotic species that invade remote islands, usually following human settlement, have had catastrophic effects on native biota. However, on islands it is increasingly feasible to eradicate key exotic species allowing extant native species to recover in situ or to return naturally. More
Decline in the distribution and abundance of flesh-footed shearwaters on Lord Howe Island Australia (282K pdf)
The flesh-footed shearwater (Puffinus carneipes) is a migratory seabird that ranges widely across the Pacific and Indian Oceans. The principal breeding populations are in Australia and New Zealand. The only breeding site in eastern Australia is on Lord Howe Island. Despite it being afforded a high level of legislative protection, the population on Lord Howe Island has declined substantially during the last few decades. More
Lepidorrachis palm (291K pdf)
Lepidorrhachis mooreana must surely rate as one of the most narrowly distributed of all palms. Not only is this monotypic genus endemic to the remote Pacific island of Lord Howe 580 km off the eastern coast of Australia, but it is also restricted to the summits of the island’s two mountains, Mt. Gower (875 m) and Mt. Lidgbird (777 m), where it occurs above 750 m in dwarf mossy forest. More
Conservation issues for the vascular flora of Lord Howe Island (222K pdf)
The flora of the Lord Howe Island Group (31°30’S, 159°05’E) comprises a unique mix of elements of Australian, New Zealand and New Caledonian floras. It is significant for its high degree of endemism and for its structural and biological (leaves, flowers, fruit) role in supporting a diverse array of fauna. Conservation of this flora is dependant upon: reducing current habitat degradation (mostly the result of exotic weeds); minimising any future impacts, in particular the effects
of climate change on the unique cloud forests of the southern mountains and the continued introduction and spread of weeds and the pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi. More
Breeding biology of the Black-winged Petrel, Pterodroma nigripennis, on Lord Howe Island (280K PDF)
The Black-winged Petrel, Pterodroma nigripennis, is a recent coloniser of Lord Howe Island, with adults present between late October and early May. Four nests were monitored during both the 1989-90 and 1990-91 breeding seasons. More
Breeding biology of Masked Boobies (Sula dactylatra tasmani) on Lord Howe Island (652K PDF)
The breeding biology and reproductive output of a colony of Masked Boobies on Mutton Bird Point, Lord Howe Island, Australia, were studied during the 2001 02 breeding season. The colony produced a total of 200 clutches. Eggs were laid between 31 May and 15 September 2001, with 80% of clutches begun before 21 July. More than 90% of clutches consisted of two eggs, laid, on average, 5.3 days apart. More
Little Shearwaters, Puffinus assimilis assimilis, breeding on Lord Howe Island (175K PDF)
Little Shearwaters, Puffinus assimilis assimilis, were thought to have disappeared from Lord Howe Island during the early 1900s. This study reports Little Shearwaters breeding on Lord Howe Island between 1990 and 2001. A survey in 2000 recorded 85 nestlings. It is unclear whether this species has persisted on Lord Howe Island in low numbers throughout last century or whether it is recolonising. More
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