Environment & Conservation
Nature provides biological control of blackberry weed
Friday, 17 May 2013 10:00 Written by Nic White
A NEW strain of the deadly water mould Phytophthora may be the key to combating the spread of European blackberry – an invasive weed taking hold in the south-west.
WESTERN Australian research groups and conservationists are continuing to work together in the fight to conserve the Carnaby’s black cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus latirostris) which has long been recognised as the Swan Coastal Plain’s most iconic bird, once blackening Perth skies with countless flock sizes – now seriously endangered.
RESEARCHERS in the Kalahari Desert have found fledgling pied babblers put their lives at risk from predators in a bid to blackmail their parents to feed them more.
Public encouraged to be alert for damaging plant fungi
Wednesday, 08 May 2013 10:00 Written by Rashelle Predovnik
WESTERN Australian scientists are continually on alert for reported infestations of a fungus that could potentially cross the Nullarbor and devastate many important and unique plant species, if left unchecked.
A UWA ecologist says most benthic macro-invertebrate populations in Roebuck Bay’s intertidal zone have decreased significantly after blooms of the toxic blue-green algae Lyngbya majuscule.
PERTH Zoo is attracting international attention because of its breeding of short-beaked echidnas, with fauna experts there identifying that housing females away from other females and the separation of males from females after mating, as key factors in its success.
DNA barcoding pinpoints Acacia species for restoration
Saturday, 27 April 2013 05:15 Written by Jessica Theunissen
THE conservation and ecological restoration of Acacia species in the Mid West of Western Australia has had a breakthrough with new DNA barcoding research.
Reproduction in tammar wallaby populations explored
Friday, 26 April 2013 10:00 Written by Sarah Curran-Ragan
TAMMAR wallaby reproduction is influenced by individual variation in body condition as well as climate variation according to a new study.
Non-native debate: middle ground approach suggested
Tuesday, 23 April 2013 10:00 Written by Joshua Rampling
AN article by Western Australian and American environmental scientists is putting forward a new way of looking at the native versus non-native species debate and proposes species origin is no longer the best judgement tool in the ever-changing environment.
Fertiliser treatment success in Tuart forest revegetation
Friday, 19 April 2013 10:00 Written by Sarah Curran-Ragan
ADDING nutrients beneath planted seedlings can improve rehabilitation success in revegetation efforts, according to a Murdoch University study.








