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Heather Neilly
Heather Neilly
Postdoctoral Fellow, Australian Landscape Trust
Verified email at alt.org.au
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Interactions between a top order predator and exotic mesopredators in the Australian rangelands
KE Moseby, H Neilly, JL Read, HA Crisp
International Journal of Ecology 2012, 2012
1322012
Balancing biodiversity and food production: a better understanding of wildlife response to grazing will inform off-reserve conservation on rangelands
H Neilly, J Vanderwal, L Schwarzkopf
Rangeland Ecology & Management 69 (6), 430-436, 2016
462016
Arboreality increases reptile community resistance to disturbance from livestock grazing
H Neilly, EJ Nordberg, J VanDerWal, L Schwarzkopf
Journal of Applied Ecology 55 (2), 786-799, 2018
432018
Why do some species in arid lands increase under grazing? Mechanisms that favour increased abundance of Maireana pyramidata in overgrazed chenopod …
JÉM Facelli, H Springbett
Austral Ecology 34 (5), 588-597, 2009
302009
Profitable and sustainable cattle grazing strategies support reptiles in tropical savanna rangeland
H Neilly, P O’Reagain, J Vanderwal, L Schwarzkopf
Rangeland ecology & management 71 (2), 205-212, 2018
272018
The impact of cattle grazing regimes on tropical savanna bird assemblages
H Neilly, L Schwarzkopf
Austral Ecology 44 (2), 187-198, 2019
162019
Heavy livestock grazing negatively impacts a marsupial ecosystem engineer
H Neilly, L Schwarzkopf
Journal of Zoology 305 (1), 35-42, 2018
132018
The response of an arboreal mammal to livestock grazing is habitat dependant
H Neilly, L Schwarzkopf
Scientific Reports 7 (1), 17382, 2017
122017
Converting rangelands to reserves: Small mammal and reptile responses 24 years after domestic livestock grazing removal
H Neilly, M Ward, P Cale
Austral Ecology 46 (7), 1112-1124, 2021
92021
Ants drive invertebrate community response to cattle grazing
H Neilly, H Jones, L Schwarzkopf
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 290, 106742, 2020
82020
Potential and pitfalls of citizen science with children: Reflections on Pollinators in the Playground project
K Prendergast, A Vanderstock, H Neilly, C Ross, V Pirotta, P Tegart
Austral Ecology 47 (2), 189-195, 2022
72022
‘Branching’with complex coarse woody debris reduces herbivory on recovering erosion scalds
H Neilly, P Cale
Ecological Management & Restoration 21 (2), 143-146, 2020
72020
Incubation mound building by the Australian megapode (malleefowl, Leipoa ocellata) creates novel, resource‐rich patches in a semi‐arid woodland
H Neilly, P Cale, DJ Eldridge
Journal of Ecology 110 (6), 1432-1441, 2022
42022
Malleefowl'Leipoa ocellata'breeding behaviour: Insights from citizen science camera surveillance
H Neilly, DE Wells, T Pascoe, P Cale
Australian Field Ornithology 38, 87-98, 2021
42021
A re-evaluation of the distribution and status of the Lake Eyre dragon (Ctenophorus maculosus): an endemic South Australian salt lake specialist
R Pedler, H Neilly
South Australian Naturalist, The 84 (1), 15-29, 2010
32010
Malleefowl'Leipoa ocellata'incubation mounds as habitat for other vertebrates
H Neilly, DE Wells, T Pascoe, C Gillespie, P Cale
Australian Field Ornithology 38, 99-106, 2021
22021
G'day mate! Aussie bush birds' spectacular greeting.
H Neilly, DE Wells, T Pascoe
Frontiers in Ecology & the Environment 17 (8), 2019
22019
Megapode mound-builders (malleefowl, Leipoa ocellata) enhance soil function through altered bacterial community composition
O Decker, P Contos, J Vido, H Neilly
Applied Soil Ecology 192, 105087, 2023
12023
Potential drivers of common brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula) decline on a Murray River floodplain
H Neilly, T McKenzie, M Ward, A Chaber, P Cale
Australian Mammalogy 45 (1), 62-70, 2022
12022
Incubation mound-building by megapodes creates novel, high-resource patches in a semi-arid woodland
H Neilly, P Cale, D Eldridge
EcoEvoRxiv, 2021
2021
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