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Philip W. Bateman
Philip W. Bateman
Associate Professor, School of Molecular & Life Sciences, Curtin University, W. Australia
Verified email at curtin.edu.au - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Big city life: carnivores in urban environments
PW Bateman, PA Fleming
Journal of zoology 287 (1), 1-23, 2012
8582012
To cut a long tail short: a review of lizard caudal autotomy studies carried out over the last 20 years
PW Bateman, PA Fleming
Journal of zoology 277 (1), 1-14, 2009
4642009
Leave it all behind: a taxonomic perspective of autotomy in invertebrates
PA Fleming, D Muller, PW Bateman
Biological Reviews 82 (3), 481-510, 2007
2792007
Male size and sequential mate preference in the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus
PW Bateman, LN Gilson, JWH Ferguson
Animal Behaviour 61 (3), 631-637, 2001
1632001
What drives human–carnivore conflict in the North West Province of South Africa?
M Thorn, M Green, F Dalerum, PW Bateman, DM Scott
Biological Conservation 150 (1), 23-32, 2012
1622012
Evolution and maintenance of social status-signaling badges
MJ Whiting, KA Nagy, PW Bateman
Lizard social behavior, 47-82, 2003
1612003
Experimental alteration of litter sex ratios in a mammal
EZ Cameron, PR Lemons, PW Bateman, NC Bennett
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 275 (1632), 323-327, 2008
1542008
The relative performance of sampling methods for native bees: an empirical test and review of the literature
KS Prendergast, MHM Menz, KS Dixon, PW Bateman
Ecosphere 11, 2020
1432020
Are negative effects of tourist activities on wildlife over-reported? A review of assessment methods and empirical results
PW Bateman, PA Fleming
Biological Conservation 211, 10-19, 2017
1292017
Estimating brown hyaena occupancy using baited camera traps
M Thorn, DM Scott, M Green, PW Bateman, EZ Cameron
South African Journal of Wildlife Research-24-month delayed open access 39 …, 2009
1222009
A different kind of ecological modelling: the use of clay model organisms to explore predator–prey interactions in vertebrates
PW Bateman, PA Fleming, AK Wolfe
Journal of Zoology 301, 251-262, 2017
932017
The good, the bad, and the ugly: which Australian terrestrial mammal species attract most research?
PA Fleming, PW Bateman
Mammal Review 46, 241-254, 2016
872016
Does human pedestrian behaviour influence risk assessment in a successful mammal urban adapter?
PW Bateman, PA Fleming
Journal of Zoology 294 (2), 93-98, 2014
802014
The ecology and evolution of autotomy
Z Emberts, I Escalante, PW Bateman
Biological Reviews, 2019
792019
Novel predation opportunities in anthropogenic landscapes
PA Fleming, PW Bateman
Animal Behaviour 138, 145-155, 2018
742018
Mate preference for novel partners in the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus
PW Bateman
Ecological entomology 23 (4), 473-475, 1998
741998
Who are you looking at? Hadeda ibises use direction of gaze, head orientation and approach speed in their risk assessment of a potential predator
PW Bateman, PA Fleming
Journal of Zoology 285 (4), 316-323, 2011
732011
A global review of determinants of native bee assemblages in urbanised landscapes
KS Prendergast, KW Dixon, PW Bateman
Insect Conservation and Diversity 15 (4), 385-405, 2022
612022
Males are selective too: mating, but not courtship, with sequential females influences choosiness in male field crickets (Gryllus bimaculatus)
PW Bateman, PA Fleming
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 59, 577-581, 2006
602006
Brown hyaenas on roads: estimating carnivore occupancy and abundance using spatially auto-correlated sign survey replicates
M Thorn, M Green, PW Bateman, S Waite, DM Scott
Biological Conservation 144 (6), 1799-1807, 2011
592011
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