Wildlife Australia  |  Wildlife Australia Spring 2018
Our Universe plays host to innumerable miniscule organisms in a microcosm that remains largely hidden. Many exist on the nanometric scale, too tiny to detect. Now, powerful electron- and ion microscopes are enabling scientists to explore these minute, delicate structures that are just a few atoms wide, explains Annalena Wolff.
Many of Charles Darwin’s insights about evolution and natural selection stemmed from the way islands seem to generate natural evolutionary experiments. But it was only in the 1960s that scientists got rigorous about asking why large animals get smaller and small animals get larger on islands, writes Vicki Thomson.
Sarcoptic mange outbreaks have been pinpointed as the cause for population-scale declines in wombat populations. Alynn Martin explains the methods used to monitor and treat affected individuals.
The Great Victoria Desert is among Australia’s last truly remote wildernesses, writes Greg Harm.
Lost or abandoned fishing equipment continues to entangle sea creatures even once it is no longer under human control, making ‘ghost gear’ a significant marine debris issue, explains Junior Reporter Shalise Leesfield.
Wild Tasmanian devil populations have declined by 80% since Devil Facial Tumour Disease began ravaging populations in the mid 1990s. Karin Cox explores how private reserves, captive breeding programs, and new immunotherapy research are clawing this unique carnivore back from the brink.
Aphids, mealybugs and scale insects in the superfamily Coccoidea are parasitic garden or agricultural pests we spend a lot of time and money trying to eradicate. Yet not all species are pests, writes Manu Saunders, so what other roles do they play within ecosystems?
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