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Heather Neilly

Researcher at James Cook University

Publications -  14
Citations -  239

Heather Neilly is an academic researcher from James Cook University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Grazing & Rangeland. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 12 publications receiving 173 citations.

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Interactions between a Top Order Predator and Exotic Mesopredators in the Australian Rangelands

TL;DR: The results support anecdotal evidence that dingoes may suppress exotic mesopredators, particularly foxes, and outline further research required to determine if this suppression translates into a net benefit for threatened prey species.
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Balancing Biodiversity and Food Production: A Better Understanding of Wildlife Response to Grazing Will Inform Off-Reserve Conservation on Rangelands☆

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the current knowledge on the impact of grazing by domestic livestock on terrestrial vertebrate fauna in rangelands, highlighting the relative lack of research on the effect of grazing regimes between the extremes and argue that more detailed understanding of vertebrate responses to different grazing intensities is required.
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Arboreality increases reptile community resistance to disturbance from livestock grazing

TL;DR: Arboreal reptile species were resistant to the impact of grazing, whereas terrestrial reptiles were negatively affected by heavy grazing, and the importance of retaining trees in rangelands for both terrestrial and arboreal microhabitats is highlighted.
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Profitable and Sustainable Cattle Grazing Strategies Support Reptiles in Tropical Savanna Rangeland

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of different livestock grazing strategies on biodiversity, in relation to their performance in terms of profitability and land condition, was evaluated. And the authors concluded that there was no trade-off between economic performance and reptile abundance and diversity.
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The impact of cattle grazing regimes on tropical savanna bird assemblages

TL;DR: It is found that while ground-foraging guilds were more responsive to grazing treatment, individual species dynamics within a foraging guild could be contradictory and measures examining the responses of individual species are more useful than assemblage measures to describe the impacts of anthropogenic disturbance.