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Recently but infrequently burnt breeding sites are favoured by threatened Gouldian finches (Erythrura gouldiae)

Anna Weier A , Ian J. Radford B , Sofia L. J. Oliveira A and Michael J. Lawes A C
+ Author Affiliations
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A Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT 0909, Australia.

B Department of Parks and Wildlife, PO Box 942, Lot 248 Ivanhoe Road, Kununurra, WA 6743, Australia.

C Corresponding author. Email: michael.lawes@cdu.edu.au

International Journal of Wildland Fire 25(12) 1281-1290 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF16105
Submitted: 9 June 2016  Accepted: 1 October 2016   Published: 2 November 2016



10 articles found in Crossref database.

Sympatric finches increase trophic and spatiotemporal partitioning to enable coexistence through periods of low resource availability
Collett Sydney J., Crewe Tara L., Radford Ian J., Garnett Stephen T., Campbell Hamish A.
Functional Ecology. 2022 36(9). p.2138
Seed set in Sorghum stipoideum, and not fire, determines the timing of breeding by Gouldian finches (Erythrura gouldiae)
Weier Anna, Radford Ian J., Bellairs Sean M., Lawes Michael J.
Austral Ecology. 2019 44(1). p.151
Mammal responses to spatial pattern in fire history depend on landscape context
Delaney Lauren, Di Stefano Julian, Sitters Holly
Landscape Ecology. 2021 36(3). p.897
Landscape-Scale Effects of Fire, Cats, and Feral Livestock on Threatened Savanna Mammals: Unburnt Habitat Matters More Than Pyrodiversity
Radford Ian J., Corey Ben, Carnes Karin, Shedley Erica, McCaw Lachie, Woolley Leigh-Ann
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 2021 9
The threatened Gouldian finch preferentially forages in prescribed burnt savannas
Collett Sydney J., Radford Ian J., Kaestli Mirjam, Crewe Tara L., Garnett Stephen T., Campbell Hamish A.
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2023 32(9). p.1277
Frequent fires reduce the nutritional quality of Sorghum stipoideum seed, a keystone food resource for the Gouldian finch (Erythrura gouldiae)
Weier Anna, Radford Ian J., Manson Alan, Durrans Lesley J., Lawes Michael J.
The Rangeland Journal. 2017 39(2). p.105
Fire regime effects on annual grass seeds as food for threatened grass-finch
Weier Anna, Radford Ian J., Woolley Leigh-Ann, Lawes Michael J.
Fire Ecology. 2018 14(2).
Cognition in a Changing World: Red-Headed Gouldian Finches Enter Spatially Unfamiliar Habitats More Readily Than Do Black-Headed Birds
Mettke-Hofmann Claudia, Eccles Georgina R., Greggor Alison L., Bethell Emily J.
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 2020 8
Individual Variation in Dietary Wariness Is Predicted by Head Color in a Specialist Feeder, the Gouldian Finch
Eccles Georgina R., Bethell Emily J., Greggor Alison L., Mettke-Hofmann Claudia
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 2021 9
Tree hollow densities reduced by frequent late dry-season wildfires in threatened Gouldian finch (
Radford I. J., Oliveira S. L. J., Byrne B., Woolley L.-A.
Wildlife Research. 2021 48(6). p.511

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