| Manuela has started looking at human-wildlife interactions and movement of swamp wallabies on Phillip Island as part of her PhD research. So far, she’s caught 35 wallabies, 14 of which were suitable for equipping with GPS collars. She's particularly interested in how wallabies use space and move between different vegetation patches in human-modified and heterogeneous landscapes such as Phillip Island. Please contact Manuela for more information on her PhD research. |
8 Comments
Pete C
11/5/2015 12:07:32 pm
The day shot of the wobbly looks as if it's camping and the day shot looks as if it's an extra for a zombie film. Night of the living wobbly II
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Pete C
11/5/2015 01:31:13 pm
That's a shitload of wobblies, well done to all.
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1/6/2017 11:06:56 pm
Philippians island is good way to search the animals and it famous because it has many more animals. Mostly peoples go out for see them but it can be dangerous for us.
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13/6/2018 04:06:14 pm
I’d would rather use some together with the content in my weblog no matter whether you don’t mind.
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22/2/2020 08:56:44 pm
Protection of ecology and biodiversity is the only way to conserve nature. This is a very good website.
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2/3/2020 06:01:27 pm
I have been looking for educative posts such as this one. Thank you for sharing this.
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11/1/2022 09:53:27 pm
Philippians Island is a fantastic place to look for animals and is well-known for having a large number of them. The majority of people go out to view them, but it can be risky for us.
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AuthorFire Ecology and Biodiversity at UniMelb Archives
July 2022
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