Author pages are created from data sourced from our academic publisher partnerships and public sources.
- Publications
- Influence
The Breeding Biology of the Glossy Black-Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus lathami on Kangaroo Island, South Australia
- S. Garnett, Lynn P. Pedler, G. Crowley
- Biology
- 1 December 1999
Summary: Glossy Black-Cockatoos on Kangaroo Island nest in large hollows in eucalypts, primarily Sugar Gums Eucalyptus cladocalyx, and usually near their principal food trees. A single egg is laid… Expand
Managing the long-term persistence of a rare cockatoo under climate change
- J. Harris, D. A. Fordham, +7 authors B. Brook
- Biology
- 1 August 2012
Summary
1. Linked demographic-bioclimatic models are emerging tools for forecasting climate change impacts on well-studied species, but these methods have been used in few management… Expand
A survey of outlying populations of the Grey Grasswren Amytornis barbatus
- A. Black, G. Carpenter, R. Jaensch, Lynn P. Pedler, R. Pedler
- Geography
- 2015
- 1
- 1
Records of the golden-headed cisticola, yellow chat, tawny grassbird and eastern grass owl in the channel country following several wet years
- R. Jaensch, Lynn P. Pedler, G. Carpenter, A. Black
- Geography
- 1 June 2013
We report observations of the Golden-headed Cisticola (Cisticola exilis), Yellow Chat (Epthianura crocea), Tawny Grassbird (Megalurus timoriensis) and Eastern Grass Owl (Tyto longimembris) from… Expand
- 3
- PDF
Two new but threatened subspecies of Rufous Grasswren Amytornis whitei (Maluridae)
- A. Black, C. A. Wilson, Lynn P. Pedler, Scott R. McGregor, L. Joseph
- Geography
- Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club
- 22 June 2020
Summary. Rufous Grasswren Amytornis whitei is the most widely distributed of three species formerly included within the Striated Grasswren A. striatus complex. Included among four phenotypically,… Expand
Rare bird surveys, Mt Lyndhurst Station March 2007
- Chestnut-breasted Whiteface, Lynn P. Pedler, Michelle Watson, P. Langdon, R. Pedler
- Geography
- 2007
- 1
- PDF
Genomic data show little geographical structure across the naturally fragmented range of the purple-gaped honeyeater
- L. Joseph, Catriona D. Campbell, Lynn P. Pedler, A. Drew
- Australian Journal of Zoology
- 23 December 2020
Abstract. Using single nucleotide polymorphisms and mitochondrial DNA sequences we find some evidence of genetic structure within a widespread and naturally fragmented species, the purple-gaped… Expand