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- Publications
- Influence
The relationship between physiological stress and wildlife disease: consequences for health and conservation
- Stephanie Hing, E. Narayan, R. Thompson, S. Godfrey
- Biology
- Wildlife Research
- 20 April 2016
Abstract. Wildlife populations are under increasing pressure from a variety of threatening processes, ranging from climate change to habitat loss, that can incite a physiological stress response. The… Expand
A review of factors influencing the stress response in Australian marsupials
- Stephanie Hing, E. Narayan, R. Thompson, S. Godfrey
- Biology, Medicine
- Conservation physiology
- 23 July 2014
Conservation of Australian marsupials requires an understanding of how they respond to threats. Measuring stress hormones is an important approach to characterise animals' response to threats but… Expand
Evaluating Stress Physiology and Parasite Infection Parameters in the Translocation of Critically Endangered Woylies (Bettongia penicillata)
- Stephanie Hing, A. Northover, +5 authors S. Godfrey
- Biology, Medicine
- EcoHealth
- 17 February 2017
Translocation can be stressful for wildlife. Stress may be important in fauna translocation because it has been suggested that it can exacerbate the impact of infectious disease on translocated… Expand
Parasite zoonoses and climate change: molecular tools for tracking shifting boundaries.
- L. Polley, R. Thompson
- Biology, Medicine
- Trends in parasitology
- 1 June 2009
For human, domestic animal and wildlife health, key effects of directional climate change include the risk of the altered occurrence of infectious diseases. Many parasite zoonoses have high potential… Expand
Prevalence of Zoonotic Pathogens from Feral Pigs in Major Public Drinking Water Catchments in Western Australia
- J. Hampton, P. B. Spencer, A. Elliot, R. Thompson
- Biology
- EcoHealth
- 13 June 2006
Australia has the largest number of wild pigs in the world. Their pronounced impacts on agriculture and biodiversity make the estimated 23 million feral pigs one of Australia’s most important… Expand
Evaluating the Effects of Ivermectin Treatment on Communities of Gastrointestinal Parasites in Translocated Woylies (Bettongia penicillata)
- A. Northover, S. Godfrey, A. Lymbery, Keith Morris, A. Wayne, R. Thompson
- Biology, Medicine
- EcoHealth
- 1 March 2017
Wildlife species are often treated with anti-parasitic drugs prior to translocation, despite the effects of this treatment being relatively unknown. Disruption of normal host–parasite relationships… Expand
An improved value for the hyperfine splitting of hydrogen-like 209 Bi 82+
- Johannes Ullmann, Z. Andelković, +21 authors W. Nörtershäuser
- Physics
- 28 May 2015
We report an improved measurement of the hyperfine splitting in hydrogen-like bismuth (209Bi82+) at the experimental storage ring ESR at GSI by laser spectroscopy on a coasting beam. Accuracy was… Expand
Identifying factors that influence stress physiology of the woylie, a critically endangered marsupial
- Stephanie Hing, E. Narayan, R. Thompson, S. Godfrey
- Biology
- 1 May 2017
Faecal glucocorticoid metabolites are minimally invasive stress physiology indices that can be used to understand how animals respond to physical and/or psychological challenges (stressors) and… Expand
Wildlife in the line of fire: evaluating the stress physiology of a critically endangered Australian marsupial after bushfire
- Stephanie Hing, Krista L. Jones, Christine M. Rafferty, R. Thompson, E. Narayan, S. Godfrey
- Biology
- Australian Journal of Zoology
- 2017
Abstract. Australian native fauna are thought to be well adapted to fire-prone landscapes, but bushfires may still pose considerable challenges or stressors to wildlife. We investigated the impact of… Expand