Elise Dewar

Elise Dewar
Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water & Environment, Hobart, Australia · Biosecurity Tasmania

BSc (Wildlife & Conservation Biology) with Honours in Zoology

About

9
Publications
531
Reads
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9
Citations

Publications

Publications (9)
Article
Full-text available
The ability to detect the incursion of an invasive species or destroy the last individuals during an eradication program are some of the most difficult aspects of invasive species management. The presence of foxes in Tasmania is a contentious issue with recent structured monitoring efforts, involving collection of carnivore scats and testing for fo...
Data
Supplementary information for Ramsey et al (2017) Ecology and Evolution 2017:1-12. Detecting rare carnivores using scats: Implications for monitoring a fox incursion into Tasmania
Data
Supplementary information for Ramsey et al (2017) Ecology and Evolution 2017:1-12. Detecting rare carnivores using scats: Implications for monitoring a fox incursion into Tasmania
Data
Supplementary information for Ramsey et al (2017) Ecology and Evolution 2017:1-12. Detecting rare carnivores using scats: Implications for monitoring a fox incursion into Tasmania
Data
Supplementary information for Ramsey et al (2017) Ecology and Evolution 2017:1-12. Detecting rare carnivores using scats: Implications for monitoring a fox incursion into Tasmania
Data
Supplementary information for Ramsey et al (2017) Ecology and Evolution 2017:1-12. Detecting rare carnivores using scats: Implications for monitoring a fox incursion into Tasmania
Data
Supplementary information for Ramsey et al (2017) Ecology and Evolution 2017:1-12. Detecting rare carnivores using scats: Implications for monitoring a fox incursion into Tasmania
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Tasmania supports a number of native Australian mammals whose mainland counterparts have severely declined or disappeared since European settlement. This provides a unique opportunity to study ecosystem changes occurring through the ongoing collapse of the Tasmanian devil (Sarcophilus harrisii) population along with the recent introduction of the f...
Poster
Full-text available
Understanding how mammal populations interact with each other and their immediate environment is of critical importance to predicting responses to environmental change while knowledge on diet and distribution of emerging invasive species is vital to management efforts. However, estimating species distributions, let alone interactions among them, ha...

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