Peer-reviewed Publications
Lambert, K.T.A. and Leishmann, A. (2019). Colonisation of a site by despotic bell miners: dispersal, establishment and diversity influences of banded birds Pacific Conservation Biology https://doi.org/10.1071/PC19013
Wright, P.E., Lambert, K.T.A. and McDonald, P.G. (2018). The role of Lantana camara in areas of bell miner (Manorina melanophrys) associated dieback and its implications for terrestrial mammal and insectivorous bat populations. Australian Mammology. https://doi.org/10.1071/AM17003
Lambert, K.T.A. and McDonald, P.G. (2018). How dependent are Bell Miners (Manorina melanophrys) on Lantana (Lantana camara) as part of their habitat? Wildlife Research 44(8): 613-622 https://doi.org/10.1071/WR17024
Lambert, K.T.A.,Reid, N. and McDonald, P.G. (2017). Does the removal of Lantana camara influence eucalypt canopy health, soil nutrients and site occupancy of a despotic species? Forest Ecology and Management 394: 104-110. here
Lambert, K.T.A. and Ford, H.A. (2016). Habitat use by Grey-crowned Babblers, Pomatostomus temporalis temporalis, in an urban environment. Pacific Conservation Biology, 23:88-94. here
Lambert, K.T.A.,Kumar, L., Reid, N. and McDonald, P.G. (2016). Habitat selection by a despotic passerine, the Bell Miner (Manorina melanophrys): when restoring habitat through Lantana (Lantana camara) removal is not enough. Ecological Management and Restoration, 17: 81-84. here
Lambert, K.T.A. and Blackmore, C. (2016). Morphological sexing of babblers: a response to Totterman Corella, 40 (3): 76 here
Lambert, K.T.A. and Blackmore, C. (2015). Morphological sexing of Grey-crowned Babblers Pomatostomus temporalis temporalis: near enough is not quite good enough. Corella 39:81-86 here
Leseberg, N.P., Lambert, K.T.A. and McDonald, P.G. (2014). Fine-scale impacts on avian biodiversity due to a despotic species, the bell miner (Manorina melanophrys): Impact of bell miners on avian diversity. Austral Ecology, 40 (3): 245–254
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Lambert, K.T.A., Andrew, N.R. and McDonald, P.G. (2014). The influence of avian biodiversity and a weedy understorey on canopy arthropod assembly. Open Journal of Ecology, 4 (16): 1003-1013 here
Lambert, K.T.A. and McDonald, P.G. (2014). A low-cost, yet simple and highly repeatable system for acoustically surveying cryptic species. Austral Ecology, 39 (7): 779–785 here
Lambert, K.T.A., Geering, D. and Ford, H. (2013). Group size and composition in the Grey-crowned Babbler Pomatostomus temporalis in an urban environment. Corella, 37 (3): 57-61 here
Lambert, K.T.A. (2008). The momentous survival and evolution of the Australian values originating in the colonial era. Australian Folklore 23: 205-209. here
Popular Science Articles: Online news and blogsBlack kites circling Darwin apartments show a unique symbiosis with the built environment. ABC Radio Darwin, September 2018 link
Is that selfie really worth it? Why face time with wild animals is a bad idea. The Conversation, May 2018 link Blocks or flocks: why are some bird species so successful in cities? The Conversation, June 2016 link Why we ‘hate’ certain birds, and why their behaviour might be our fault. The Conversation, February 2016 link 5 Reasons to travel into the wild. We are Wildness, November 2015 link Stop the miners: you can help Australia’s birds by planting native gardens. The Conversation, November 2015 link Hold the spray: some garden weeds are helping native wildlife. The Conversation, October 2015 link Media |
Conference PapersBell miner behavioural ecology. September 2016 talk. LEE Seminar UNE, Armidale, New South Wales, Australia.
Bell Miners and their ecological impact. January 2016 talk. Australian Bird Study Association, Penrith, New South Wales, Australia. Forest dieback in disturbed wet sclerophyll forests due to tri-trophic interactions: can management of Lantana halt vegetative declines? October 2014 talk. International Union of Forestry Research Organisations, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. Monitoring cryptic species via quantified sound analysis, December 2012 talk. Ecological Society of Australia, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. |
Afternoons with James Valentine. Talking Birds. ABC 3 March 2016
Invasive weeds. Talking Plants. ABC 19 December 2015 link |
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