Had a great time collecting this footage last year during the field biology of Australian wildlife subject. Got to work with Dr Kath Handasyde and an amazing team.
Giving a public lecture tomorrow with @luketkelly @KateLSenior@GibberGrl@ellapouton, come along to hear about the cool research we are doing: https://t.co/vxajNqEkjp
Needing some romance in your life?
Come to my talk on Wednesday at 4.26pm during the "Open Forum: Fire Impacts" symposium to find out why the heath mouse is in a love triangle 🐀🔥🍃🦊. There's some other great talks during this symposium too! #ESAus20
While woodland small mammals are resilient to different patterns of fire, they benefit from shrubby vegetation even though these areas only make up a small proportion of the landscape, @LilyJWheeler from @unimelb found #ESAus20
Come along to my speed talk at 2:10 pm today in the fire symposium to find out how patterns of prescribed fire influence mammals, reptiles and invasive predators, including common dunnarts and southern spiny-tailed geckos #ESAus20#ESAus2020
I'm presenting in this symposium at 2:10 pm, so come along and here about how small mammals and reptiles respond to fine-scale patterns of prescribed burning #ESAus2020
Come ask me questions about my work determining the interacting effects of fire regimes, climate and landscape context on plant populations at the Barbara Rice Memorial Poster Session- 6-7.30pm !! #ESAus2020
When I signed up to help @wildgaltales radio collar yellow footed antechinus I didn’t compute how small their lil collars would be! #ecologytwitter can anyone beat this little dude for the tiniest tracker? #fieldwork#AcademicTwitter
Got to present my masters research at #VicBioCon20 yesterday. It was a great conference and I learnt a lot about all the great work being done to protect Victoria’s biodiversity.
Lily @lilyjwheeler is studying small mammal populations in heathland landscape mosaics of fire, vegetation and land-use. Have fun looking through those camera-trap images, we look forward to hearing your results! #VicBioCon20
Great talk from @BrenWintle at #unimelb today pointing out how drastic change is needed if we wants to successfully protect Australia’s endangered species