Peer-reviewed
Wallach A.D., Bekoff M., Batavia C., Nelson M.P., Ramp D. (2018)
Summoning compassion to the challenge of conservation Conservation Biology DOI: 10.1111/conl.12565. PDF Wallach A.D., Ramp D., Ripple W.J., Lundgren J. E. (2018) Invisible megafauna Conservation Biology DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13116. PDF Lundgren J. E., Ramp D., Ripple W.J., and Wallach A.D. (2017) Introduced megafauna are rewilding the Anthropocene Ecography DOI:10.1111/ecog.03430. PDF Wallach A.D., Ramp D. and O'Neill A.J. (2017) Cattle mortality on a predator-friendly station in central Australia Journal of Mammalogy 98: 33-34. PDF O'Neill A.J., Cairns K.M., Kaplan G. and Healy E. (2017) Managing dingoes on Fraser Island: culling, conflict, and an alternative Pacific Conservation Biology 23: 4-14. PDF Wallach A.D., Dekker A.H, Lurgi M., Montoya J.M., Fordham D.A. and Ritchie E.G. (2016) Trophic cascades in 3D: Network anaylysis reveals how apex predators structure ecosystems. Methods in Ecology and Evolution 8: 135-142. PDF Ripple W.J., Chapron G. ...Wallach A.D., Wolf C., Woodroffe R., Young H. and Zhang L. (2016) Saving the World's Terrestrial Megafauna BioScience 66: 807-812. PDF Johnson C.N. and Wallach A.D. (2016) The virtuous circle: predator-friendly farming and ecological restoration in Australia. Restoration Ecology. 24: 821-826. PDF Wallach A.D., Bekoff M., Nelson M.P. and Ramp D. (2015) Promoting predators and compassionate conservation. Conservation Biology 29: 1481-1484. PDF Wallach A.D., Ripple W.J. and Carroll S.P. (2015) Novel trophic cascades: apex predators enable coexistence. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 30: 146-153. PDF Newsome T.M., Ballard G.A., Crowther M.S., Dellinger J.A., Fleming P.J., Glen A.S., Greenville A.C., Johnson C.N., Letnic M., Moseby K.E., Nimmo D.G., Nelson M.P., Read J.L., Ripple W.J., Ritchie E.G., Shores C.R., Wallach A.D., Wirsing A.J. and Dickman C.R. (2015). Resolving the value of the dingo in ecological restoration. Restoration Ecology 23: 201-208. PDF Wallach A.D., Izhaki I., Toms J., Ripple W.J. and Shanas U. (2015) What is an apex predator? Oikos 124: 1453-1461. PDF Dickman C.R., Glen A.S., Jones M.E., Soule M.E., Ritchie E.G., Wallach A.D. (2014) Strongly Interactive Carnivore Species: Maintaining and Restoring Ecosystem Function. Pages 301-322 in: Carnivores of Australia Past Present and Future (Eds. Glen A. and Dickman C.), CSIRO Publishing. PDF Johnson C.N., Crowther M.S., Dickman C.R., Letnic M.I., Newsome T.M., Nimmo D.G., Ritchie E.G. and Wallach A.D. (2014). Experiments in no-impact control of dingoes: comment on Allen et al. 2013. Frontiers in Zoology 11: 17 PDF Ripple W.J., Estes J.A., Beschta R.L., Wilmers C.C., Ritchie E.G., Hebblewhite M., Berger J., Elmhagen B., Letnic M., Nelson M.P., Schmitz O.J., Smith D.W., Wallach A.D., Wirsing A.J. (2014). Status and ecological effects of the world’s largest carnivores. Science 343: 1241484. PDF Wallach A.D., Johnson C.N., Ritchie E.G. and O’Neill A.J. (2010). Predator control promotes invasive dominated ecological states. Ecology Letters 13: 1008–1018. PDF Wallach A.D., Ritchie E.G., Read J. and O'Neill A.J. (2009). More than mere numbers: the impact of lethal control on the social stability of a top-order predator. PLoS ONE 4(9): e6861. PDF Wallach A.D. and O'Neill A.J. (2009). Artificial water points: hot-spots of extinction or biodiversity? Biological Conservation 142: 1253-1254. PDF Wallach A.D., Murray B.R. and O'Neill A.J. (2009). Can threatened species survive where the top predator is absent? Biological Conservation 142: 43-52. PDF Wallach A.D. and O’Neill A.J. (2009). Threatened species indicate hotspots of top-down regulation. Animal Biodiversity and Conservation 32.2: 127–133. PDF |
Coauthor links
Chris Dickman Chris Johnson Daniel Ramp Euan Ritchie Marc Bekoff Michael P. Nelson Mike Letnic Scott Carroll Tom Newsome Uri Shanas William Ripple |