Register      Login
Australian Mammalogy Australian Mammalogy Society
Journal of the Australian Mammal Society

Articles citing this paper

The role of Acacia in the diets of Australian marsupials ? A review.

NA Irlbeck and ID Hume
25(2) pp.121 - 134


12 articles found in Crossref database.

Pest or Guest (2007)
Rose Tania A., Banks Peter B.
Will Acacia secondary forest become rainforest in the Australian Wet Tropics?
Yeo W.L.J., Fensham R.J.
Forest Ecology and Management. 2014 331 p.208
Acacia Pycnantha Gum Exudates Recognised as a Traditional Food in Two Countries May Have Economic Potential
Hurr Thomas
Qeios. 2024
Effects of terpenes and tannins on some physiological and biochemical parameters in two species of phalangerid possums (Marsupialia : Phalangeridae)
Burchfield E., Agar N. S., Hume I. D.
Australian Journal of Zoology. 2005 53(6). p.395
The role of host and environmental factors in the epidemiology of rumpwear in brushtail possums
Hufschmid J., Handasyde K. A., Beveridge I.
Australian Journal of Zoology. 2010 58(4). p.250
Comparative dietary ecology of two congeneric marsupial folivores
Gloury April Maree, Handasyde Kathrine Ann
Austral Ecology. 2016 41(4). p.355
Ruminant meat production and quality enhancement, nematode suppression and greenhouse gas emission mitigation: A sustainable paradigm for valorisation of Acacia leaves
Uushona T., Chikwanha O.C., Katiyatiya C.L.F., Tayengwa T., Strydom P.E., Mapiye Cletos
Animal Feed Science and Technology. 2022 284 p.115187
Large Forest Owls in the River Red Gum State Forests of south-western New South Wales - an account of their 2008 status
McGregor Hugh
Australian Zoologist. 2011 35(3). p.864
Exploiting a readily available but hard to digest resource: A review of exudativorous mammals identified thus far and how they cope in captivity
CABANA Francis, DIERENFELD Ellen S., Wirdateti , DONATI Giuseppe, NEKARIS K. A. I.
Integrative Zoology. 2018 13(1). p.94
Multiple scales of diet selection by brush-tailed rock-wallabies (Petrogale penicillata)
Tuft Katherine D., Crowther Mathew S., McArthur Clare
Australian Mammalogy. 2011 33(2). p.169
When losing your nuts increases your reproductive success: sandalwood (Santalum spicatum) nut caching by the woylie (Bettongia penicillata)
Murphy Marie, Howard Kay, Hardy Giles E. St J., Dell Bernard
Pacific Conservation Biology. 2015 21(3). p.243
Vertical clingers and gougers: Rapid acquisition of adult limb proportions facilitates feeding behaviours in young Javan slow lorises ( Nycticebus javanicus )
Poindexter Stephanie A., Nekaris K.A.I.
Mammalian Biology. 2017 87 p.40

Committee on Publication Ethics


Abstract Export Citation