2006
DOI: 10.1071/wr05057
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Home range and den characteristics of the brush-tailed rabbit-rat (Conilurus penicillatus) in the monsoonal tropics of the Northern Territory, Australia

Abstract: Radio-telemetry was used to investigate the home range and den characteristics of the brush-tailed rabbit-rat (Conilurus penicillatus) from three sites in the monsoonal tropics of the Northern Territory, Australia. Radio-tracking was conducted in a series of discontinuous 4-17-day sessions, over a 2-year period. The home ranges of 61 C. penicillatus were estimated using the minimum convex polygon (MCP) and fixed kernel (K95% and K50%) methods. There were no significant differences in home-range size among the … Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…Data were initially tested using Levene's test for homoscedasticity and Shapiro Wilk's test for normality, v 2 and t tests were used for subsequent comparisons. Following Firth et al (2006) the K95/K50 ratios (the proportion of the general area that were most intensively used) between colonies were log 10 transformed and then compared using t tests. We report data as mean ± standard deviation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Data were initially tested using Levene's test for homoscedasticity and Shapiro Wilk's test for normality, v 2 and t tests were used for subsequent comparisons. Following Firth et al (2006) the K95/K50 ratios (the proportion of the general area that were most intensively used) between colonies were log 10 transformed and then compared using t tests. We report data as mean ± standard deviation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The pattern of decline across species from a reasonably wide taxonomic and ecological range suggests that there might be multiple, interacting causes. The strongest evidence demonstrates that many mammal species are detrimentally affected by contemporary fire regimes (Pardon et al 2003; Woinarski et al 2004b; Firth et al 2006b; Legge et al 2008; Firth et al 2010; Woinarski et al 2010). There is reasonable support for negative impacts of pastoralism, as demonstrated by destocking experiments and cross‐fence comparisons of grazed and ungrazed treatments (Woinarski & Ash 2002; Legge et al in press).…”
Section: Causesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Introduced R. rattus and R. norvegicus were radio-tracked in New Zealand and Australian studies (Dowding & Murphy 1994;Hooker & Innes 1995;Cox et al 2000;Leung & Clark 2005;Pryde et al 2005;Russell et al 2005) and various Rattus species were radio-tracked in Malaysia and Indonesia (Sanderson & Sanderson 1964;Buckle et al 1997;Tristiani et al 2003). For endangered native rodents, radio-tracking studies can provide valuable information about their ecology (e.g., Firth et al 2006;Harris & Macdonald 2007), which is necessary for any conservation effort. However, being rodents, rats are very efficient at destroying radio-transmitters, which might discourage researchers from embarking on such relatively expensive research.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%