Western Wildlife and Wildlife Notes Index

Western Wildlife and Wildlife Notes Index
By Topic
This index covers Western Wildlife volumes 1 to 17 and Wildlife Notes 1 to 17. WW refers to the article
appearing in Western Wildlife Newsletters (i.e. WW1.4(10) is Newsletter volume 1, number 4, page 10). WN
refers to the Wildlife Note series (i.e. WN3 is Wildlife Note number 3).
A
Aboriginal Heritage
Learning about country – WW14.2(19)
min-min lights – WW3.2(17)
story of Muja the WA Christmas tree –
WW3.2(8)
why mankind tells stories – WW3.2(8)
wild grapes bush tucker – WW12.1(14)
Acacias
Acacia nilotica has reached the Kimberley! WW7.1(14)
Acacia nilotica on the Durack River WW8.1(19)
Acacia paradoxa: native or alien? –
WW9.3(18)
Acacia saligna genetics and invasiveness –
WW16.4(14)
local acacia seeds for human consumption WW8.1(14)
most Australian wattles likely to remain
Acacia – WW8.4(4)
value of prickles - WW8.1(9)
wattle I plant – WW3.4(10)
wattle pancakes for lunch – WW5.2(14)
wattle – symbol of a nation – WW9.3(12)
Wellstead – almost wattled out! – WW8.3(5)
when is a wattle not an Acacia – when it‟s a
Racosperma!
Allocasuarinas – see Trees
Ancient fauna
explaining Australia‟s Pleistocene extinctions
– WW13.4(1)
why did the megafauna become extinct? –
WW11.2(10)
Animal ethics
Legal aspects of trapping feral animals –
WW6.3(12)
Ants – see Invertebrates
ANZECC Working Group
visit to WA – WW2.1(15)
Aquatic Invertebrates – see Invertebrates
Australian Flora
root clusters of Western Australian plants: a
curiosity in context – WW9.2(1)
B
Balgas
balga flowering – WW12.2(16)
how long before balgas
WW10.2(17)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
flower?
–
loss to parrots – WW1.3(10)
parrot proofing – WW1.4(10)
surviving the Dinosaurs- the Dasypogonaceae
- WW11.4(16)
Bandicoots – see Mammals (native)
Banksias
banksia, propeller: a methuselah among
plants! – WW15.5(11)
banksia woodlands in Western Australia –
animal responses to fire in – WW16.3(1)
banksias – Are you lost in the bush? Let a
Banksia help you out! – WW11.3(12)
banksias, bardies and cockies – WW1.3(11)
banksias – impact of groundwater use and
decreased rainfall – WW12.2(6)
banksias – rare plant survival – WW12.3(18)
using the timing of flowering by Banksias to
monitor climate change – WW16.4(10)
Bats – see Mammals (native)
Bees – see Invertebrates
Bilbies – see Mammals (native)
Biodiversity
biodiversity and farm forestry – WN12
biodiversity of the Carnarvon Basin WW6.3(14)
biodiversity of an economic hotspot, the
Pilbara Biological Survey – WW13.3(6)
bushfire diversity can promote biodiversity –
WW9.3(8)
bushland heritage – WW14.3(14)
celebrating biodiversity on your block –
WW14.2(8)
do human observers appreciate plant
diversity? – WW15.1(6)
economic aspects – WW4.1(16)
global warming – adversely affect „global
biodiversity hotspots‟ – WW10.4(12)
habitat islands - WW2.1(5)
hybridisation in nature – WW16.4(6)
International
Year
of
Biodiversity
–
WW14.2(8)
tree planting in Western Australia: enhancing
the opportunities for conservation of
biodiversity - WW5.4(14)
Warwick Bushland, biodiversity of
–
WW14.3(4)
Biological Control (see also: Weeds)
blackberries – WW3.3(20)
blackberry rust arrives in Denmark –
WW13.2(6)
bridal creeper – WW1.4(10), WW4.1(17)
1
Paterson‟s curse – WW1.4(10)
Biosecurity
nursery plants – risk of pests and soilborne
pathogens – WW10.4(7)
Birds (see also: Nests)
attracting them to your backyard – WW3.2(18)
Australasian Bittern project – WW15.4(19)
barn owl or min-min lights – WW3.2(17)
beautiful bird – for a parrot! – WW16.3 (7)
bird pollinator observations in carnivorous
plants - WW8.1(10)
bird‟s-eye view (Carnaby‟s cockatoos) –
WW14.3(11)
birds of Rottnest Island – WW13.4(16)
birds on farms project – WW1.1(6)
birds on farms update – WW2.2(2)
birds in the eastern Wheatbelt – WW3.3(18)
birds on roadsides – WW5.3(14)
Bittern Australasian – things that go „boom!‟ in
the night – WW16.1(1)
black cockatoo in banksias – WW1.3(11)
black cockatoos, hungry – WW10.2(8)
black cockatoo research at the wildlife
genetics lab – WW12.2(12)
blue-breasted fairy-wrens and vegetation
corridors – WW3.2(9)
bush stone-curlew – WW2.4(6)
bush stone-curlews and homesteads –
WW9.1(7)
bustards – what‟s the story? – WW9.4(3)
Carnaby‟s cockatoo, conserving – WW3.4(13)
Carnaby's black-cockatoo - a cocky in crisis WW6.3(4)
Carnaby‟s cockatoo – two families in one
year! – WW11.2(7)
Carnaby‟s cockatoo release – WW12.3(17)
„cockatoo care‟ – a public programme –
WW9.4(11)
cockie capers – WW14.2(9)
cockie hunting (Carnaby‟s cockatoos) –
WW14.3(11)
courteous cockies – WW14.3(18)
crow or raven? – WW14.4(5)
cuckoo pallid, out and about in the bush –
WW15.4(12)
cuckoos – WW5.3(8)
cuckoos, caterpillars and cape lilacs WW7.3(13)
de bait debate – WW17.2(18)
diet analysis of malleefowl - WW7.4(3)
DIY bird hide – WW9.2(12)
Don‟t walk where seabirds burrow –
WW14.1(16)
eagles, nest observing – WW3.2(13)
effects of climate on breeding in Australian
birds – WW8.4(10)
emu eggs, jewels in the crown – WW14.2(16)
evolution of conservation – “cockatubes” –
WW11.4(15)
future of Australia‟s birds – WW4.1(1)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
honeyeaters,
competition
between
–
WW2.2(15)
honeyeaters, nectar nomads a natural history
of – WW15.4(1)
increase in stock watering points in rangeland
ecosystems leads to a decline in native bird
populations – WW14.3(17)
inland dotterel – WW14.2(10)
in tree belts through farmland in Frankland –
WW2.2(1)
leg flags on waders – WW3.1(17)
listen to the birds – WW12.3(20)
lorikeets, on the look-out for – WW12.2(8)
magpie, Australian – WW5.2(1)
making farms less attractive to galahs, little
corellas and ringneck parrots – WW4.4(14)
malleefowl – WW2.1(1)
malleefowl, diagnosing the decline using
sightings data – WW10.2(12)
malleefowl, marvellous – WW14.2(15)
malleefowl in Merredin Peak Reserve –
WW12.1(11)
malleefowl monitoring – WW16.1(10)
monitoring for the past and the future WW7.3(14)
mulga parrots (outback death trap) –
WW17.1(3)
natural pest control – WW1.3(9)
nectar nomads:
a natural history of
honeyeaters – WW15.4(1)
needs of bird-watching tourists – WW14.3(16)
nesting in the wheatbelt - yellow-rumped
thornbill, Acanthiza chrysorrhoa - WW7.3(17)
New Atlas of Australian Birds – WW3.2(12)
noisy scrub-bird in Darling Range – WW4.3(1)
our scaly friend – WW17.2(18)
owl, sub-fossil deposits reveal small mammal
decline – WW14.3(13)
owl survey – a community group first in WA –
WW5.1(7)
owl survey update - WW6.2(11)
owls, boobooks chirruping – WW14.2(14)
owls in the south west of WA – WW5.1(5)
paddock trees, value to birds – WW14.4(11)
pardalotes at our door – WW15.1(4)
parliament of crows – WW1.2(9)
parrots, effect on balgas – WW1.3(10)
piebald cockie – WW13.3(13)
practical bird feeder – WW3.1(10)
ravens in Perth – WW4.1(12)
rainbow bee-eaters (chasing rainbows) –
WW17.2(17)
rainbow lorikeets – WW4.2(7)
rainbow lorikeets at Katanning – WW16.3(19)
raptors and rabbits – WW15.2(9)
red-eared firetails, courtship – WW14.2(11)
red-tailed black cockatoos on the move –
WW14.3(18)
ring-neck parrots, plan your counterattack
against marauding - WW10.1 (11)
2
rufous treecreeper, wings in the wheatbelt –
WW9.3(22)
shearwaters at Rottnest - WW8.1(1)
shearwaters, right footed – WW13.2(12)
shorebirds
–
observers
needed
–
WW12.3(16)
small land birds in salt affected areas in the
northeastern wheatbelt – WW5.1(10)
stream corridors for bird movement – WN2
swallows – WW13.3(15)
swans on the swan – WW12.2(3)
tawny frogmouth – WW14.2(19)
thick-billed grasswrens – WW4.2(6)
waterbird survey, Perth area – WW2.3(9)
western ground parrot - WW7.4(16)
western ground parrot – WW9.1(14)
western ground parrot – native seed-eating
fauna – WW12.1(10)
western ground parrots distinct from eastern
ground parrots – WW13.3(17)
wedge-tailed eagle life-cycle – powerful
predators and passionate parents
–
WW12.3(1)
wings of change – what the birds are telling
us – WW12.3(10)
wonderful woodswallows - WW6.2(8)
woodlands through a treecreeper's eyes WW6.4(1)
wrestling wrens – WW3.1(17)
Bloodroots (Haemodorum spp.)
bloodroots – WW4.4(18)
Bobtails – see Reptiles
Boodies – see Mammals
Bracken
bracken - WW7.3(5)
Bridal Creeper – see Weeds
Bushcare
funding 1997/98 – see Natural Heritage Trust
National Vegetation Initiative – WW2.1(11)
developing a project – WW2.1(12)
Bush Detective
adder's tongue - WW7.4(8)
antlion – WW3.4(13)
bag-shelter moth – WW4.2(15)
banksia cone eaten by Carnaby‟s cockatoos –
WW8.2(8)
Barrow Island, guess the reason for a
management action - WW6.4(11)
burrowing crayfish – WW11.1(2)
bloodwood apple - WW7.2(3)
casemoths, types of case – WW2.3(7)
cuckoo-spit – WW3.3(7)
cup moth – WW4.1(11)
doublegee – WW4.3(19)
gravel nodules - WW8.1(23)
egg case, whose is it – WW3.1(16)
faceted rocks - WW7.1(24)
feathers – WW8.4(5)
feral bee hive - WW6.3(3)
fossil bee‟s nest – WW1.3(7)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
hawkmoth caterpillar – WW10.4(2)
honkey nuts, who ate them – WW1.1(2)
house centipede – WW9.2(6)
lichens – WW3.2(16)
lizard trap – WW12.3(13)
mangrove seedling – WW9.1(3)
marris, damaged bark – WW2.1(19)
marron mushrooms? – WW13.2(9)
mimicry – hakea fruit and caterpillar –
WW11.2(10)
more honkey nuts – WW1.4(6)
mudlark couple – who‟s who? – WW4.4(2)
nature‟s potter (potter wasp) – WW9.4(7)
patterns in the litter (trapdoor spider)
– WW11.4(7)
pink-eared duck - WW5.4(2)
proteoid root or buried bottlewashers –
WW2.2(8)
puffball – WW12.1(8)
quillwort – WW5.3(18)
scats, who left them – WW1.2(13)
spitfires – WW13.1(9)
spot the bird - WW6.1(10)
strange diggings – WW14.3(5)
swan‟s nest – WW5.1(12)
termite clay trumpets - WW7.3(7)
tracks - WW6.1(17)
trapdoor spider silken sock – WW12.4(13)
velvet worm – WW10.2(13)
what‟s attacked this tree? (black cockatoos) –
WW13.4(15)
who ate these honkey nuts? – WW11.3(5)
who built this? (wolf spider) – WW8.3(7)
who made these droppings? – WW15.1(15)
who made this? – WW13.3(4)
who made this trail? – WW12.2(13)
who‟s poo? And what‟s the large thing
contained in it? – WW5.2(13)
witches broom – WW9.3(15)
Bush tucker
wild grapes – bush tucker – WW12.1(14)
Butterflies – see Invertebrates
C
Calandrinias
Calandrinias – spectacular succulents –
WW11.4 (4)
Calothamnus
Calothamnus gracilis –shrub layer is vital
habitat – WW14.2(10)
Calothamnus – when its OK to be one-sided –
WW15.5(4)
Carnivorous plants
bird pollinator observations in carnivorous
plants - WW8.1(10)
fire, flowers and sundews - WW7.4(8)
pollinator observations in carnivorous plants
and associated species - WW7.4(6)
Cats
declared protected in 1921 – WW2.3(12)
3
gone wild in 1921 – WW2.3(12)
have you seen a big cat? – WW12.4(6)
innovative cat trap - WW6.2(15)
leafy
sundew,
Drosera
stolonifera,
WW10.2(19)
make your own cat trap – WW5.2(12)
predation and control – WW1.2(7)
someone‟s pet in your bushland? –
WW12.3(18)
Chamelaucium
Wembley Wax – WW13.2(13)
Changes to Scientific Names
marri becomes Corymbia – WW1.1(10)
marri changes back to Eucalyptus –
WW3.2(13)
when is a wattle not an Acacia – when it‟s a
Racosperma!
Chuditch – see Mammals
Climate change
Australia gets warmer – WW10.2(19)
climate change – WW10.4(13)
did the first Australians contribute to the
desertification of Australia? – WW9.4 (19)
dispersal mechanisms and revegetation with
WA plants – WW4.3(4)
effects of climate on breeding in Australian
birds – WW8.4(10)
fauna moves higher up mountains to keep
cool – WW17.2(19)
guinea pigs in a laboratory for climate
change? - WW7.2(12)
how does rising temperature affect ants? –
WW17.2(20)
impact on distribution of genus Dryandra –
WW4.2(8)
new climate change report – WW17.1(12)
Permo-Carboniferous glaciation of
Gondwana: its impact on Western Australia WW7.1(1)
phylogeography - how genetic data can help
understand climate change impacts on
biodiversity – WW12.4(13)
profitable farming, perennials and climate
change – a new study – WW16.4(14)
thinking beyond today: a global perspective
for local action – WW5.1(23)
using the timing of flowering by Banksias to
monitor climate change – WW16.4(10)
white-striped bats – bellwethers of climate
change? – WW14.4(4)
your carbon footprint – WW13.1(10)
Corridors
(see
also:
Revegetation
and
Restoration of Habitat)
checklist for design – WW3.1(19)
linking bush remnants – WW4.3(10)
trees and bird movement – WW2.3(1)
Covenants
CALM Covenants – create your own private
reserve – WW5.3(7)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
Covenanting celebration morning tea –
Merredin – WW13.2(9)
nature conservation covenants – further tax
concessions – WW8.3(13)
Creeks – see Rivers
CSIRO
past and present research in WA –
WW3.1(15)
Cycads
Cycads – WW15.4(16)
Cypress (Cupressaceae)
Cypress-pines in WA – WW15.1(12)
Cypress-pines and birds – WW15.2(6)
persistence of Callitris in a flammable
heathland – WW16.2(6)
D
Daisies
everlastings – WW4.4(6)
everlastings, preserving – WW4.4(15)
native gerbera – Trichocline spathulata –
WW14.2(13)
Dalgytes – see Mammals (native)
Direct seeding
in low rainfall areas – WW4.1(8)
on farm in York – WW3.2(19)
Drains (see also: Rivers)
deep drainage options to „reduce uncertainty‟
– WW11.3(14)
living drains – WW3.3(14)
Dryandra
different species – WW2.4(1)
Dryandras are Banksias! – WW12.3(6)
Dryandras don‟t have to be Banksias! –
WW12.4(3)
history of name – WW2.4(2)
hybridisation in nature – WW16.4(6)
impact of climate change – WW4.2(8)
Dung Beetles – see Invertebrates
Dunny bugs
dunny-bugs - WW7.2(15)
E
Echidna
echidna, widespread but seldom seen
resident – WW14.2(12)
living with echidnas – WN8
Economics (see also: Ecotourism)
Agonis sp. coarse teatree oil potential –
WW4.2(5)
Agonis fragrans essential oil - an update! WW6.1(9)
Australian native Platysace tubers: from the
bush to your shopping basket - WW7.3(15)
Bugs in the bushes – how oil mallees are
contributing to biodiversity in the Wheatbelt –
WW12.1(1)
Busselton Shire offers rate rebates on LFW
sites - WW7.1(15)
4
Busselton Shire biodiversity incentive strategy
– WW11.3(3)
carbon storage of native plants on
unproductive soils examined – WW14.4(7)
Commercialising native flora profitably –
WW9.3(10)
Developing native perennial legumes as
pasture species for the WA Wheatbelt –
WW12.4(4)
farmland and bush care - an expense or an
investment in productivity? - WW6.2(4)
get paid for storing carbon in the soil –
WW11.4(14
growers working together to develop the
sandalwood industry – WW9.3(7)
is continual economic growth the ideal to aim
for? – WW12.2(11)
local Acacia seeds for human consumption WW8.1(14)
management guidelines for remnant
vegetation being harvested for cutflowers –
WN7
nature-based farm tourism – making it
happen! – WW8.2(1)
nature conservation covenants – further tax
concessions – WW8.3(13)
new booklet on managing private native forest
– WW9.2(11)
new mallee harvester launched –
WW14.3(10)
oil mallee – the quiet achievers – WW11.1(17)
profitable farming, perennials and climate
change – a new study – WW16.4(14)
salinity - some pluses - WW6.4(6)
sandalwood-a tree crop for the future –
WW5.2(13)
tax concessions now available with the Nature
Conservation Covenant Program WW8.1(20)
the SEARCH project - Melaleucas - WW6.1(3)
tourist radio – WW11.1(17)
using our native trees and shrubs to supply
new industries - WW7.1(11)
wattle pancakes for lunch – WW5.2(14)
what's in a name? - a marketing dilemma WW7.4(9)
Ecotourism
bed and breakfast – WW1.2(5)
nature-based farm tourism – making it
happen! – WW8.2(1)
so you want to get involved in ecotourism? –
WW5.1(13)
would groups of tourists like your block? WW6.3(11)
Edge Effects
wildlife and edges – WW2.1(18)
Eremophilas
eremophilas - emu bushes, poverty bushes WW6.4(4)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
80 years of grazing, fencing, then - an exciting
discovery! (Eremophila koobabbiensis) WW7.3(9)
Growing Eremophilas in the wheatbelt –
WW16.2(1)
Eucalypts
puzzle for the Eucalypt buffs – WW16.4(8)
F
Fauna safety
simple device to prevent small vertebrate
animals from drowning in swimming pools –
WW3.4(7)
Fauna Surveys – see Surveys
Fencing
cheaper fencing for remveg and reveg –
WW2.1(13)
electric fencing to protect remnant vegetation
- WW5.4(10)
so you want to build a fence, do you? –
WW5.3(12)
through NHT grants – see Bushcare
vermin proof fencing - WW6.1(12)
Feral animals
are you dining in tonight? – WW8.2(19)
Asian house geckos on the move – WW8.4(7)
camels – managing Australia‟s feral camels –
WW16.1(8)
cane toad - a potential threat in WA –
WW3.3(5)
cane toads cause mass freshwater crocodile
deaths in Victoria River NT – WW13.1(12)
cane toads cause mass mortality in native
tadpoles – WW13.2(7)
cats caught on candid camera – WW15.4(7)
European wasp trap, adopt a – WW16.4(9)
feral bees and how we coped with them WW7.4(10)
feral control Jerramungup style – WW4.1(13)
feral deer – WW11.1(13)
feral pigs in the South West – WW8.4(6)
feral pig eradication: Santa Cruz Island,
California – WW15.1(6)
fox DNA project – can you help? –
WW10.3(13)
foxes decline, feral cats increase –
WW14.3(17)
have you seen a big cat? – WW12.4(6)
honeybees – space invaders – WW12.2(9)
honeybees – pollinator or nectar thief? –
WW15.1(7)
honeybees and varroa mites – WW15.1(7)
Indian palm squirrel – WW13.1(12)
innovative cat trap - WW6.2(15)
invasive birds – starlings – WW10.4(8)
laughing kookaburras are not wanted in WA WW7.4 (5)
legal aspects of trapping feral animals WW6.3(12)
5
live Chinese beetles in imported wooden
articles – WW12.4(12)
lorikeets, on the look-out for – WW12.2(8)
make your own cat trap – WW5.2(12)
more on big cats in WA – WW13.2(14)
more on the pesky fox – a foxymoron? –
WW9.3(20)
natural vermin control – WW4.2(14)
“nowhere to run, and nowhere to hide” coordinated fox baiting and shooting March
2004 – WW8.2(19)
parakeets feral in the UK – WW13.2(7)
pesky fox – WW9.2(15)
pigs - WW4.1(12)
rabbits - WW4.1(13)
rabbits, control options
rabbits, permanent bait stations – WW4.1(13)
rabbitscan – WW13.3(19)
red card for the red fox – WW9.3(21)
red card for the red fox – WW10.2(14)
red-eared sliders near Brisbane – WW8.3(15)
red imported fire ants update – WW14.1(15)
sliders – vigilance is vital – WW10.3(12)
spreading weeds – the hidden costs of rabbits
and foxes – WW13.4(10)
starlings forensic fingerprinting – WW9.1(9)
starlings – invasive birds – WW10.4(8)
tapeworms in sheep – another good reason to
poison foxes – WW10.3(13)
Field Days (LFW)
acid saline – seeps workshop – ooze and
goop – WW10.4(11)
Albany celebration – WW10.4(3)
botanical monitoring day at Wagin Lakes –
WW12.1(14)
bushland management with friends, York &
Bindoon – WW13.1(14)
bushland trails workshop – WW14.4(14)
celebration at Margaret River – WW11.1(10)
Chittering coffee morning – WW12.1(15)
fauna monitoring training at Yelverton Brook
Eco Resort – WW13.2(11)
gardening for wildlife workshop – WW17.2(10)
granite outcrops, Tammin – WW3.1(1)
great biodiversity bus tour – WW12.1(12)
Heron Lake Vineyard LFW celebration
afternoon – WW11.3(15)
Jerramungup‟s „old man emu‟ makes it to the
show! – WW13.1(9)
joint celebration! 10 years of Land for Wildlife,
100 years of farming – WW11.1(9)
Koobabbie, Director General visits –
WW15.2(16)
managing granite outcrops, „Rock On!‟–
WW5.2(17)
Margaret River coffee morning – WW11.1(11)
Mawson field day – WW13.1(8)
nature photography workshop – WW11.1(11)
Perup fauna weekend – WW11.1(5)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
Pinjarra morning tea and bush walk –
WW13.2(15)
praise for LFW members (Harry & Merle
Bardwell) – WW15.1(11)
profitable revegetation with sandalwood WW6.1 (18)
propagating bushland plants training day –
WW13.1(13)
Regan‟s Ford wildflowers – WW15.1(11)
south coast LFW celebrating the International
Year of Biodiversity – WW15.1(14)
south coast LFW „Reveal the Plant Challenge‟
– WW12.4(10)
Toodyay coffee morning – WW13.4(18)
using fire in bushland - why and how –
WW15.1(10)
Wagin Woolorama – WW14.2(7)
walk on wild horse hills – WW10.4(3)
Waroona Show – WW13.2(14)
western ringtail possums at Wonnerup House
– WW13.2(11)
wonderful Wongan wildlife – WW13.3(20)
Wubin bird watching day – WW11.3(11)
Fire
Animal responses to fire in Banksia
woodlands in Western Australia – WW16.3(1)
bushfire diversity can promote biodiversity –
WW9.3(8)
effect of fire on butterflies - WW7.4(1)
fire and recovery – WW16.2(10)
fire, flowers and sundews - WW7.4(8)
Fraus (Ghost moth) and Cord Rush –
WW4.2(1)
fire-stimulated flowering, 45 million years of –
WW16.3(8)
fungi respond to bushfires – WW13.2(1)
impact of fire on honey possum food plants –
WW12.4(13)
management of hills firebreaks – WW5.2(9)
monitoring fire and nature on your property –
WW17.2(14)
past fire intervals in Fitzgerald River National
Park - WW7.1(10)
quokka habitat management and fire in the
south-west – WW10.3(1)
use of fire in small remnants – WN17
wildlife rescue after Bridgetown and Balingup
fires – WW13.2(4)
Fish
fish ladder – WW9.1(15)
freshwater fishes of south-western Australia –
WW8.4(16)
salamanderfish – WW2.3(4)
Flat-topped Yate – see Trees
Flora
botanical collecting in Western Australia –
WW11.1(1)
hybridisation in nature – WW16.4(6)
what would your Kojonup bushland grow-40
million years ago? – WW10.4(16)
Flora Surveys – see Surveys
6
Floras
Dryandra Woodland vascular flora –
WW16.3(19)
floras past and present - WW6.4(10)
how I came to produce a book - WW7.1(9)
Forestry
biodiversity and farm forestry – WN12
Fox – see Feral animals
Frogs
cane toad threat – WW3.3(5)
chytrid fungus in south-west frogs –
WW13.4(3)
does traffic noise affect calling frogs? –
WW13.2(12)
frog matters - WW7.4(13)
frog Watching – WW4.3(18)
future of southwestern frogs – WW3.3(3)
green frog in my boot (poem) – WW16.2(13)
how well do you know your neighbours? (The
Western Spotted Frog story) – WW8.2(6)
kerb too high - WW6.3(1)
mating systems in Australian frogs:
the
quacking frog – WW9.4(6)
motorbike – noisy frogs – WW14.2(19)
what kind of frog? – WW4.3(14)
Funding
auction for landscape recovery – new
environmental conservation program –
WW8.2(20)
Australian Bush Heritage Fund – WW3.4(1)
Bushcare and NHT – see Natural Heritage
Trust
Envirofund – WW10.2(20)
Gordon Reid Foundation – WW1.1(12),
WW1.2(15)
Healthy Wetland Habitats – WW11.1(20)
new funding opportunity for high conservation
value properties in the south-west –
WW9.3(24)
Fungi
Armillaria root disease - WW5.4(8)
don‟t forget the fungi! – WW14.2(12)
fungi respond to bushfires – WW13.2(1)
ghoul fungus – WW4.3(17)
hairy stereum, is it a lichen? – WW14.2(17)
larger fungi – WW2.2(3)
luminous fungi – WW3.2(17)
morel – WW4.2(13)
mycorrhizal fungi and rehabilitation –
WW2.2(8)
myxomycetes: the slime moulds - WW7.3(4)
new fungi website launched – WW12.3(12)
Perth Urban Bushland Fungi Project –
WW8.3(6)
role of fungi in woodlands – WW3.3(6)
truffles & Fungimap Conference – WW5.2(4)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
G
Galls
plant galls: the diverse abnormal growths on
plants resulting from their intimate
associations with parasitic organisms –
WW17.2(11)
Geology – see Landscapes
Granite outcrops
gnammas and their aquatic life – WW3.3(1)
granite landforms of the wheatbelt – a brief
review – WW8.2(10)
granitites – a plant of the „forever hills‟ –
WW11.2(13)
how art the mighty fallen! Pygmy clubmoss –
WW11.2(13)
life on the rocks – a cracking good place to
live – WW14.3(6)
use of granite outcrops by the yellow admiral
– WW2.4(3)
Grasses
Grass Patch Farm – WW4.1(19)
identification of major groups – WW3.1(6)
making your native grasses grow –
WW5.1(20)
managing native grasses as pasture: a
Kojonup example - WW6.4(14)
native grasses in regeneration – WW2.1(13)
native grasses and fire – WW12.3(19)
new native grass species – WW14.2(7)
notes on growing native grasses –
WW14.2(3)
notes on growing native grasses: Pt 2 –
WW14.3(8)
summer active native grasses – WW4.2(4)
wattle grass-Acacia anomala – WW10.4(17)
Grasstrees – see Balgas
Green Corps
bridal creeper control – WW2.4(10)
Hills Forest Project – WW2.4(9)
South coast Biodiversity Protection Project –
WW5.2(16)
Grevillea
Corrigin Grevillea recovery plan - WW1.1(7)
Corrigin Grevillea: 12 years of recovery –
WW10.2(1)
great Grevillea hunt - WW5.4(4)
great Grevillea hunt (part 2) - WW6.1(7)
grevilleas are made for birds – WW14.2(15)
grevilleas in the northern agricultural region –
WW15.4(11)
Groundwater – see Water
Groups
Australian Trust for Conservation Volunteers
– WW1.2(15)
Birds Australia – WW2.2(16)
Equestrian Landcare Association – WW1.2(9)
Friends of the Western Ground Parrot WW7.2(15)
Green Corp – WW2.4(9)
7
Green Corps south coast Biodiversity
Protection Project – WW5.2(16)
Land Management Society – WW3.2(20)
Malleefowl Preservation Group (Inc) –
WW2.1(19)
Moora Woodlands, working with a Shire –
WW14.2(12)
Northampton Environmental Group
congratulations – WW15.2(20)
Stack-Cooper Reserve, Moora, official
opening – WW14.2(7)
Waterbird Conservation Group Inc –
WW2.3(10)
Western Australian Native Orchid Study and
Conservation Group – WW1.2(15)
Western Australian Society of Amateur
Herpetologists – WW1.4(14)
Western Banders Association – WW1.1(10)
H
Habitat
creekline revegetation for wildlife – WN1
biodiversity and farm forestry – WN12
dead wood and wildlife – WN14
habitat for the red-tailed phascogale –
WW17.2(1)
old trees and wildlife – WN13
paddock trees and wildlife – WN16
requirements for native mammals – WN11
tree hollows and wildlife – WN15
Habitat Construction (see Revegetation and
Restoration of Habitat)
Hakeas
Hakeas – WW4.4(10)
Managing tar spot disease of Myrtle Hakea –
WW14.1(4)
Herbaria
what wildflower is that? – WW10.3(16)
Herbicides
are the substances added to herbicides toxic
to humans? – WW17.2(19)
Fusilade®, be careful with – WW13.4(16)
selective herbicides and weed control in direct
seeding areas – WW1.3(12)
triazine resistant wild radish– WW4.3(13)
Horses
horses and bushcare – WW1.2(9)
horses helping the conservation cause –
WW17.2(19)
Hydrology
comparison of changes to water levels in
deep bores – 1975 to 2004 – Helena
Catchment, WA – WW8.4(9)
groundwater
trends
in
the
northern
agricultural region – WW9.4(17)
impact of groundwater use and decreased
rainfall on Banksia – WW12.2(6)
impact of trees on groundwater levels in
Merredin catchment – WW3.2(10)
Hypoxis
tiny stars – WW12.3(12)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
I
Insectivorous plants
Albany pitcher plant – truly extraordinary plant
– WW14.2(19)
fire, flowers and sundews - WW7.4(8)
pollinator observations in carnivorous plants
and associated species - WW7.4(6)
International
Tiritiri Matangi – a success story –
WW12.2(16)
Interstate
cradling the NW coast of Tasmania –
WW14.3(15)
Invertebrates
ants, African big-headed in a Perth bushland
– WW14.3(17)
ants as bio-indicators of disturbance in urban
bush - summary of a case study - WW7.3(10)
ants as defence force? - WW7.3(11) ants in
your remnant – WW3.1(2)
ants in your remnant – WW3.1(2)
ants – how does rising temperature affect
ants? – WW17.2(20)
aquatic invertebrates and river health –
WW1.3(13)
aquatic invertebrates, gnammas and their –
WW3.3(1)
aquatic invertebrates in gnammas, species
richness (did you know?) – WW17.2(19)
avoiding kangaroo ticks - WW6.3(18)
bag-shelter moth – WW4.2(15)
bees, native – WW1.3(6)
bees in my bamboo! – WW8.3(10)
beetle „push-ups‟, mystery animal „droppings‟
– WW13.3(16)
beetles like logs – WW14.3(12)
bird dropping spider – masters of disguise –
WW16.4 (3)
borer damage – WW14.4(15)
bugs in the bushes – how oil mallees are
contributing to biodiversity in the Wheatbelt –
WW12.1(1)
butterflies, effect of fire on - WW7.4(1)
butterflies in urban bushlands around Perth –
WW13.4(8)
butterfly, spotted jezebel – WW14.2(10)
Capillosa has a new bee species – WW16.4
(1)
crayfish, burrowing – WW11.1(2)
crayfish, burrowing – thanks for your help! –
WW12.1(3)
cuckoo bee – WW17.2(13)
cuckoos, caterpillars and cape lilacs WW7.3(13)
butterfly, yellow admiral – WW2.4(3)
casemoth larvae – WW2.3(7)
caterpillars on Cape Lilacs - WW7.2(18)
Christmas spiders – WW4.1(16)
cicadas - WW7.1 (18)
8
cossid moths – WW2.3(13)
dances with wolves – Australian wolf spiders
– WW13.3(1)
dung beetles – WW2.2(7)
dung beetles, ecosystem services provided by
– WW13.2(5)
earwig flies? Ancient and mysterious insects –
WW12.1(5)
flying dragons or dragonflies – WW14.4(8)
ghost moth and cord rush – WW4.2 (1)
golden orb weaver spider – WW16.2(11)
grasshopper – giant green slantface –
camouflage - WW16.3(9)
insects – plant galls – WW17.2(11)
introduced earthworms bury lime in acid soils
– WW13.2(7)
invertebrates in your remnant – WW1.1(4)
jewel bug on Pimelea argentea – WW14.2(18)
ladybirds – WW14.1(14)
lessons from ants and small creatures –
WW11.1(16)
marron mushrooms? – WW13.2(8)
mites, soil – WW11.3(1
mole crickets – WW8.4(1)
moths, mallee – WW4.3(6)
moths, studying – WW14.2(11)
moths, whistling – WW14.2(9)
no bull about Myrmecia ants! – WW8.3(1)
pie-dish beetles - WW8.1(19)
returning the forgotten animals – bugs –
WW8.3(8)
sandgropers - WW7.2(1)
sandgropers, unearthing the secrets of –
WW11.4(6)
scorpions – ancient life forms in Western
Australia – WW14.3(1)
shield shrimp – WW13.4(18)
some invertebrates can survive eating cane
toad eggs – WW17.1(12)
spineless wonders – WW5.1(21)
spider wasps – WW15.1(9)
spiders – huntsman – WW14.1(8)
spiders – natural pest control – WW5.1(16)
spiders and woodlands go together –
WW8.3(11)
termites and 'clay trumpets' - WW7.3(16)
termites and you – WW11.2(1)
ticks, species and biology – WW3.1(8)
toad bugs – WW13.2(4)
velvet ant – WW12.2(14)
wanderer butterfly – WW10.2(17)
wasp, hairy flower – WW16.4 (3)
wasp, smart little - WW7.2(6)
wasps - sex, murder and deception – the
private lives of thynnine wasps – WW15.2(1)
white butterflies - WW5.4(11)
wasp, hairy flower – WW16.2(9)
woolly bear caterpillar - WW7.3(12)
Irrigation
from the Moore River in 1900‟s – WW3.1(14)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
J
Jacksonias
use in revegetation – WW3.1(10)
discovering DRF – Jacksonia velveta –
WW5.3(16)
K
Kangaroos – see Mammals
Kangaroo paws
red and green kangaroo paw: a floral emblem
of grace and beauty – WW17.2(6)
Kingia
Kingia‟s remarkable roots – WW13.1(1)
surviving
the
dinosaurs
–
the
dasypogonaceae – WW11.4(16)
Koalas – see Mammals
Korthalsella
strange parasite – WW8.4(8)
L
Lakes - see also: Wetlands
landholders and recovery planning: Toolibin
Lake catchment – WW9.1(8)
salt lakes, is there life in our inland –
WW4.4(4)
Lambertia
Lambertia – Wild Honeysuckle – WW10.4(1)
Landcare
1999 State Landcare Awards – WW4.1(20)
2001 State Landcare Awards - WW wins WA
section Sigma Landcare Media Award WW5.4(15)
cooperation pays off! – WW9.2(8)
Jenny Dewing runner-up in SLCC Landcare
Professional Award - WW5.4(15)
landcare and researchers working together –
WW9.2(7)
thinking beyond today: a global perspective
for local action – WW5.1(23)
Land for Wildlife
Celebrate! 250,000 ha of Land for Wildlife
Sites – WW12.4(1)
celebrating 30 years of protecting and
enhancing wildlife habitats (Victoria) –
WW15.5(10)
th
celebration of the 2000
registration –
WW13.3(3)
th
Land for Wildlife celebrates 1000 registration
- WW7.1(3)
LFW Victoria: 30 year celebration forum –
WW16.3(3)
logo for WA – WW1.2(2)
official launch in WA – WW1.2(1)
origins of – WW1.1(3)
th
presentation of the 600 sign - WW5.4(1)
visitor from New Zealand – WW16.3(5)
welcome to – WW1.1(1)
9
Landscapes and soils
acid scalds, identifying and managing on your
property – WW9.4(14)
carbon storage of native plants on
unproductive soils examined – WW14.4(7)
changing Greenough Flats - WW6.4(12)
coastal considerations - WW8.1(6)
devil's soils: the soils that bite back WW8.1(12)
granite landforms of the wheatbelt – a brief
review – WW8.2(10)
how South-West WA‟s landscapes formed –
WW5.3(4)
identifying and managing acid scalds on your
property – WW9.4(14)
iron-stone gravels and native vegetation WW5.4(3)
Permo-Carboniferous glaciation of
Gondwana: its impact on Western Australia WW7.1(1)
reconstructing links in a fragmented
landscape – WW9.3(19)
reference soils of south-western Australia –
WW10.3(6)
Landuse
conservation planning in the southwest
Australia ecoregion – where to allocate limited
resources? – WW15.5(15)
dams on the Ord River – a photo history –
WW17.1(6)
planning using LUPIS – WW1.4(11)
LUPIS – see Landuse
Legal
legal aspects of trapping feral animals WW6.3(12)
so - you want to keep a pet reptile do you?
Well, you can now! - WW7.3(22)
Lichens
competition is a fact of life – WW12.3(19)
coral lichens – ocean or outcrop? –
WW17.2(16)
mystic lichens - WW7.2(4)
Local plants
learning about local plants – WW4.1(15)
Locust – see Pests
M
Mammals (native)
bat listening project gets under way –
WW15.4(3)
bats can live in very small hollows! –
WW4.4(13)
bats, insect eaters – WW1.1(3)
bats of the Ord River area – WW10.2(11)
bats, tracking in rural landscapes –
WW15.5(14)
bats, white-striped – bellwethers of climate
change? – WW14.4(4)
black-flanked wallabies return to the Avon
Valley -–WW5.3(10)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
boodies – ecosystem engineers in the arid
shrublands – WW12.2(15)
boodies and bilbies, ecosystem engineering –
WW12.3(15)
boodie rats – WW13.3(12)
can rock wallabies disperse across farmland?
- WW7.3(7)
dalgytes are on the way back! – WW5.3 (1)
even more dibblers released at Peniup! –
WW8.2(15)
demise of the dalgyte - WW6.4(9)
bilby, chocolate for Easter – WW1.2(15)
chuditch-proof your chook pen! – WW10.2(10)
echidnas, living with – WN8
honey possum drowned – WW1.3(14)
honey possums, impact of fire on food plants
– WW12.4(13)
hopping soil! Woylies dig up a treat in our
remnant woodlands – WW5.1(3)
how ancient DNA was able to identify the
extinct rock-wallaby on Depuch Island WW7.3(6)
honey possum, impact of fire on the endemic
– WW9.1(1)
kangaroo herbivory secrets of – WW9.2(9)
kangaroo grazing preferences after fire at
Whiteman Park – WW10.2(6)
kangaroos, a contraceptive for – WW10.4(5)
kangaroos disperse canola seeds
–
WW12.2(11)
kangaroos – 2 joeys in 1 pouch – seeing
double – WW14.1(12)
koalas much more common than they have
been in the past? – WW9.3(13)
mammals, requirements for native – WN11
mardo as part of the household – WW15.5(8)
nest boxes for wildlife – WN3
numbat country, this is – WW16.4(15)
numbats – living next door to Boyagin –
WW11.3(10)
numbat (wild girl) – WW16.2(3)
pebble-mound mice – WW13.3(9)
phascogale
friendly
place,
Wagin
–
WW10.2(15)
phascogales, at home with brush-tailed –
WW17.1(1)
phascogale red-tailed, habitat for the –
WW17.2(1)
possum highway – WW14.3(12)
possum, pygmy – WW14.2(18)
possum ringtail – information wanted in
Albany – WW12.3(13)
possums, encouraging – WN6
possums, fencing out! – WW15.4(8)
possums, living with (brochure) – May 2009
potoroos on Bald Island – WW10.1(3)
potoroos on Bald Island – update –
WW14.4(15)
quendas, encouraging – WN5
quendas, living with (brochure) – July 2005
10
quenda safe houses – WW3.3(17)
quokka habitat management and fire in the
south-west – WW10.3(1)
relict bettong warrens in Western Australia‟s
pastoral lands – WW5.1(18)
remote cameras spot chuditch at Dryandra –
WW13.4(13)
requirements for native mammals – WN11
small mammal decline, sub-fossil owl deposits
reveal – WW14.3(13)
spider wasp – WW15.1(9)
understanding
ring-tailed
possums
–
WW8.3(4)
wallabies, tammar declared vermin in 1921 –
WW2.1(16)
wallabies, tammar & black-gloved under the
spotlight – WW12.3(13)
wambenger story – WW13.3(15)
water rats (Hydromys chrysogaster) –
WW14.3(13)
water rats (what is that lurking in the creek?) –
WW15.1(1)
western pygmy possum, value of oil mallees
as foraging habitat for – WW14.1(1)
western ringtail possum – a resilient species
or another taxon on the decline? – WW9.3(4)
western ringtail possum (Part 2) – WW9.4(1)
wetlands and fencing field day – WW17.1(14)
whale beachings at Busselton – WW9.3(1)
what is that lurking in the creek? – WW15.1(1)
woylie, emergency conservation action to help
save the – WW13.4(16)
woylie, good result – WW15.3(1)
woylie sandalwood story - hopping into a
bright future - WW7.3(1)
woylies find new Land for Wildlife homes –
WW5.1(1)
Mardo – see Mammals (native)
Melaleucas
broombush complex – WW11.4(8)
marvellous melaleucas – WW5.3(18)
semi-aerial roots on paperbarks – a glimpse
of the „hidden half‟ – WW15.4(10)
the SEARCH project - Melaleucas - WW6.1(3)
using the broombush key – increasing the
options for revegetation – WW12.1(13)
Members' page
acacias of the Wellstead District –
WW10.4(18)
Acacia saligna after fire – WW9.3(20)
albino Scarlet Robin - WW6.1(10)
antics – WW13.3(12)
apprehensive-looking
youngster
(brown
falcon) – WW13.4(17)
beautiful bird – for a parrot! – WW16.3(7)
bird dropping spider – masters of disguise –
WW16.4(3)
birds and extreme heat – WW11.2(9)
blazed tree on „Ardgowan Farm‟ –
WW16.3(11)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
blazed tree questions lead to more questions
– WW16.3(11)
boodie rats – WW13.3(12)
bridal creeper York High School - WW6.1(10)
bush meringue? – WW15.2(9)
bush stone-curlews and homesteads –
WW9.1(7)
bush stone-curlews revisited – WW13.2(10)
bushwalk in Boya – WW13.4(19)
CALM bush rangers at Albany Senior High
School - WW5.4(19)
carpet python returns to Gidgegannup –
WW8.4(15)
children take their voices to Canberra
(Baldivis Primary School) – WW14.1(13)
classroom in the bush - WW8.1(22)
community science in action – WW15.5(7)
creating wildlife corridors – WW15.5(6)
daft – or not? (dotterels) – WW17.1(10)
different flowering times of jarrah at Morangup
– WW17.2(7)
dugite in the garden – WW17.1(15)
eagle yarn – WW9.2(14)
eliminating bridal creeper – spreading the rust
– WW9.1(11)
exciting invasion (quendas) - WW6.3(17)
Ferreira family - WW6.1(10)
fire and recovery – WW16.2(10)
first harvest - oil mallees on 'sun valley' WW7.1(16)
first Moora cocky count – WW16.3(6)
Flinders Park students visit Balijup farm –
WW17.1(15)
fungal oddities – WW15.2(9)
ghostly image – WW13.4(12)
Goldfields swift moth – WW8.4(15)
Gould's monitor - the hunter! - WW7.4(14)
Great orchid hunt – WW11.4(13)
Grevilleas in the northern agricultural region –
WW15.4(11)
"hail to thee, blythe spirit" - WW7.4(15)
happy taddy tale! – WW9.4(18)
honey possum heaven! - WW6.3(20)
honey possums galore! – WW12.3(14)
how much can one roo drink? – WW15.2(13)
how much can you eat? (Rosenberg‟s monitor
eating rabbits) – WW17.2(3)
importance of long-term weather observations
– WW17.1(14)
intriguing plant at Northampton – WW17.1(11)
I spy…! – WW16.3(9)
joy of revegetation – WW13.1(14)
King‟s skinks, a 20-year period of
observations in a suburban garden–
WW16.1(14)
Kitto 50,000:Nature 5,000,000! – WW11.4(10)
LFW at „Bilingurr‟ – a Broome perspective –
WW10.2(3)
little white bat – Leucism – WW10.4(9)
11
looking through the phone book –
WW13.3(14)
masked woodswallow migration – WW17.1(9)
meet a bee-fly! – WW17.1(11)
minnows, save the – WW16.1(13)
more about cape lilacs and caterpillars WW7.4(18)
more about snottygobble seedlings –
WW5.3(16)
more on the pesky fox – a foxymoron? –
WW9.3(20)
moth, Helena Gum Moth (do you know this
moth? – WW14.4(13)
murdering animal – or, a case of biting off
more than you can chew (red-tail phascogale)
– WW13.3(18)
nature appreciation in natural areas –
WW15.1(5)
nature red in tooth and claw! - WW7.4(14)
Nell‟s block restoration – WW13.4(19)
nest too small – WW16.2(12)
new Grevillea named after Mary Squires WW7.2(16)
new idea for coping with ticks – WW8.2(13)
out and about in the bush: the pallid cuckoo –
WW15.4(12)
outsmarting Australia's most skillful feral WW7.4(15)
pesky fox – WW9.2(15)
Phascogale, it‟s tiring work being a –
WW13.4(17)
phone tower radiation and wildlife health –
WW11.2(9)
piebald cockie – WW13.3(13)
poetry from „Writing the Wild‟ at Perup –
WW8.2(17)
Porongurup morning glory – WW14.4(12)
proof is in the witnessing – WW17.1(9)
pygmy possums saved – WW12.3(14)
python on the rafters – WW11.4(11)
reptiles in the hills – WW15.2(12)
salmon gum bolete – is this the biggest? –
WW15.4(11)
sacred kingfishers – WW8.4(14)
seeing double – WW14.1(12)
semi-aerial roots on paperbarks – a glimpse
of the „hidden half‟ – WW15.4(10)
sharing with wildlife – the grapefruit puzzle –
WW4.1(18)
short circuit (welcome swallow)– WW17.1(10)
should tadpoles be moved when the pond
dries up? – WW9.2(14)
skinks – woodland – WW10.4(18)
slipper orchid – what plant is this? –
WW15.1(15)
slipper orchid – flower from those unknown
leaves – WW15.2(13)
slow down for fauna! – WW8.4(15)
snakes in the roof! – WW14.1(5)
sometimes nature needs a helping hand! –
WW15.1(5)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
Squire Mary, congratulations on Order of
Australia – WW13.2(10)
story of red-tailed black cockatoos WW8.1(18)
tall tale but true – happy taddy tales part 2 –
WW10.2(18)
termite release tower – WW11.2(9)
things that go bump in the day - WW13.4(14)
tiger snake for tea! – WW8.4(14)
those dam swans! – WW11.2(14)
Twang‟s story – WW16.1(5)
very warm night, a paved patio and three frog
species – WW17.2(16)
wambenger story – WW13.3(14)
water rats (Hydromys chrysogaster) –
WW14.3(13)
wealth of experience and knowledge –
WW17.1(15)
web takes over the mailbox - WW8.1(23)
weedy success story! (rust on bridal creeper)
– WW9.1(10)
white New Holland honeyeater – WW12.2(14)
wild girl – WW16.2(3)
woylies at Wildwater - WW6.1(10)
"writing the wild" at Perup - an inspiring
weekend - WW8.1(22)
young pallid cuckoo and yellow-rumped
thornbills - WW7.4(18)
Mice – see Mammals
Micro-organisms
Lake Clifton thrombolite community listed as
critically endangered – WW14.2(6)
Scumbook! – WW9.3(14)
stromatolites – living fossils – WW10.3(9)
Mistletoe
friend or foe – WW3.2(5)
mistletoe – friend not foe! – WW11.1(8)
Monitoring
information for camera trapping –
WW17.1(12)
I spy …! – WW16.3(9)
monitoring fire and nature on your property –
WW17.2(14)
monitoring for the past and the future WW7.3(14)
photographic monitoring of vegetation - WN9
sand pads - using tracks to monitor fauna WN10
value of old photographs - WW6.3(8)
Monotremes
Echidnas, living with – WN8
Moths – see Invertebrates
N
Nardoo
– Nardoo – the clover-leaved fern - WW9.1(6)
Native Grasses – see Grasses
Natural Heritage Trust
funding 1997/98 – WW1.4(16)
funding 1998/99 – WW2.4(12)
12
introduction and principles – WW2.1(9)
overview – WW2.1(10)
Nature Observation
WA Naturalists Club, Yunderup Nature
Observatory – WW1.2(14)
Nests
Carnaby‟s cockatoo – WW1.1(5)
Evolution of conservation – “cockatubes” –
WW11.4(15)
watching nests – WW2.2(13)
watching an eagle nest – WW3.2(13)
nest boxes for wildlife – WN3
nest box observations – WW3.3(16)
osprey nesting platform construction –
WW2.4(8)
quenda safe houses – WW3.3(17)
Networking
Neighbourhood days – WW4.1(14)
Numbats – see Mammals
O
Obituaries
Serventy, Vincent – WW13.1(15)
Observation bores
preserving observation bores – WW10.3(7)
Oil Mallee – see Trees
Orchids
love potion – WW1.3(4)
rare
orchid
(Caladenia
bryceana)
–
WW14.2(16)
underground orchid, keep your eyes peeled
for the – WW11.3(18)
Western Australian orchids – the masters of
deceit (Part 1) – WW12.1(6)
Western Australian orchids – the masters of
deceit (Part 2) – WW12.2(1)
Western Australian underground orchid,
towards the conservation of – WW8.4 (13)
Western Australian underground orchid,
unlocking the dark secrets – WW8.2(14)
wheatbelt remnant – WW1.3(3)
P
Palaeodrainage
ancient rivers in the wheatbelt – WW4.4(1)
Paterson’s Curse – see Weeds
Peas
discovering DRF – Jacksonia velveta –
WW5.3(16)
Gompholobium genus – glorious but littlestudied legumes – WW13.3(10)
Hoveas – WW15.2(18)
Jacksonia use in revegetation – WW3.1(10)
prostrate flame flower: the long road to
recovery – WW12.4(8)
recovery of a Sandplain Standout! (Daviesia
euphorbioides) - WW11.3
Sturt‟s Desert Pea – WW3.4(12)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
Pest control
mouse control in crops – a natural alternative
(somebody should give a hoot!) – WW9.3(6)
natural borer control – WW15.1(9)
natural pest control – WW5.1(16)
locust – severe threat 2006 – WW10.4(12)
Phascogales – see Mammals
Photography
photographic monitoring of vegetation – WN9
Phytophthora – see Plant diseases
Pimeleas
original Banksias! - WW6.2(6)
Planning (see Landuse)
Plant communities
assessing changes in plant communities –
WW8.3(12)
Plant diseases
armillaria root disease - WW5.4(8)
beware of Eucalyptus (Guava) Rust –
WW10.3(12)
canker disease in Corymbia calophylla (Marri)
- WW6.3(16)
canker marri – WW10.4(5)
dieback caused by Phytophthora cinnamomi:
what is at risk and what can we save? –
WW9.3(16)
dieback found at Moorine Rock - WW1.4(10)
dieback plant pathogen - WW3.3(12)
dieback workshops in Busselton Shire –
WW15.5(14)
does prickly moses suppress Phythophthora
dieback - WW10.4(6)
flooded gum - WW3.4(3), WW4.1(10)
marri decline:
possible causes and
implications – WW15.2(10)
plant pathogen – WW3.3(12 )
rural tree dieback (diagram) – WW5.2(19)
rust threat to our native bush - WW6.4(18)
tar spot disease of Myrtle Hakea – WW14.1(4
Pollination
bird pollinator observations in carnivorous
plants - WW8.1(10)
bush picnic pollinators and plants –
WW4.1(14)
by native animals – WW1.3(7)
pollination – WW4.4(8)
pollinator observations in carnivorous plants
and associated species - WW7.4(6)
pollinator - or nectar thief? – WW15.1(7)
Possums – see Mammals (native)
Potoroos – see Mammals (native)
Primrose
Primrose family in WA – WW16.3(16)
Propagation
Australian scientists make world first
discovery in seed germination – WW9.1(13)
snottygobble – WW4.1(19)
using heat to break dormancy of WA legume
and non-legume species – WW5.2(5)
13
Pythons – see Reptiles
Q
Quendas – see Mammals (native)
Questionnaire
results of reader questionnaire Jan 2000 –
WW4.2(2)
results of LFW questionnaire Jan 2005 –
WW9.2(2)
Quiz
for volume 1 of WW – WW2.1
answers to volume 1 quiz – WW2.2(11)
for volume 2 of WW – WW3.1
Quokkas – see Mammals (native)
R
Rabbits – see Feral animals
Rangelands
increase in stock watering points in rangeland
ecosystems leads to a decline in native bird
populations – WW14.3(17)
Rare Flora
Oh No!! Rare Flora!! - WW6.4(16)
prostrate flame flower: the long road to
recovery – WW12.4(8)
rediscovery of Haloragis platycarpa –
WW10.3(17)
Recovery Plan
Corrigin grevillea – WW1.1(7)
Regional Herbaria
volunteer program – WW2.1(17)
Remnant Vegetation
Ecological imperatives for conservation and
management of native vegetation - WW6.1(1)
Fitzgerald
Biosphere
Reserve
project
WW1.2(12)
linking bush remnants – WW4.3(10)
management
guidelines
for
remnant
vegetation being harvested for cutflowers –
WN7
multiple values of – WW2.2(10)
Reptiles
black tailed monitor – WW4.2(15)
bobtails as scavengers – WW2.2(2)
carpet python – WW1.4(3)
difficult meal (snake swallowing bobtail) –
WW13.1(2)
Jan‟s banded snake – WW3.3(13)
King‟s skinks, a 20-year period of
observations in a suburban garden –
WW16.1(14)
natural vermin control (Varanus tristis) –
WW4.2(14)
oblong turtle, nestwatch project – WW12.3(8)
pythons for mouse control – WW1.4(4)
Rosenberg‟s monitor eating rabbits –
WW17.2(3)
secret life of bobtail lizards – WW11.4(1)
south-western sandplain worm lizard –
WW3.2(13)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
so - you want to keep a pet reptile do you?
Well, you can now! - WW7.3(22)
snakes in the roof! – WW14.1(5)
Research
ants as bio-indicators of disturbance in urban
bush - summary of a case study - WW7.3(10)
biodiversity of the Carnarvon Basin WW6.3(14)
biodiversity of an economic hotspot, the
Pilbara Biological Survey – WW13.3(6)
black cockatoo research at the wildlife
genetics lab – WW12.2(12)
cats caught on candid camera – WW15.4(7)
CSIRO bird and vegetation surveys in the
Buntine-Marchagee Recovery Catchment WW7.2(11)
Diagnosing the decline of malleefowl using
sightings data – WW10.2(12)
discovering our flora's hidden diversity WW6.3(6)
how ancient DNA was able to identify the
extinct rock-wallaby on Depuch Island WW7.3(6)
kangaroo grazing preferences after fire at
Whiteman Park – WW10.2(6)
large woody debris – WW2.3(14)
legumes in native bush & agriculture –
WW4.3(8)
past fire intervals in Fitzgerald River National
Park - WW7.1(10)
seedy gap in nature – WW14.4(6)
sustaining Gondwana initiative – WW11.3(17)
synaphea populations wanted – WW1.3(15)
threatened flora populations wanted –
WW2.2(12)
using heat to break dormancy of WA legume
and non-legume species – WW5.2(5)
using our native trees and shrubs to supply
new industries - WW7.1(11)
value of old photographs - WW6.3(8)
viability and persistence of small isolated
populations of rare and threatened flora. Is
there hope? - WW5.4(12)
woolly bear caterpillar - WW7.3(12)
Restoration of Riparian Zone – see
Revegetation and Restoration of Habitat
Revegetation and Restoration of Habitat
80 years of grazing, fencing, then - an exciting
discovery! - WW7.3(9)
alley farming in low rainfall areas – try it – it
works! – WW11.1(6)
are we working for nature? – WW3.4(14)
climate change, dispersal mechanisms –
WW4.3(4)
connecting the Stirling Range to the southwest forests – WW10.3(10)
creating wildlife corridors – WW15.5(6)
creekline revegetation for wildlife – WN1
cyanide, more about – WW16.4(16)
decline in a remnant of salmon gum and york
gum woodland, 1978 to 1997 – WW9.4(8)
14
does population size affect tree seed? –
WW12.3(18)
drain restoration to habitat – WW3.3(14)
erosion control on Kings Park scarp WW5.4(18)
eucalypts for use in saline revegetation WW7.1(6)
fire, use of in small remnants – WN17
flora road for Waddy Forest - WW7.2(10)
Gondwana link – ecological restoration at the
scale this country needs – WW8.4(17)
great Nambling salt flat wheelbarrow muster WW7.1(19)
Greening Challenge - helping environment,
helping community - WW6.3(22)
growing Juncus pallidus from seed –
WW4.4(14)
habitat construction on rock outcrops using
paving slabs – WW4.1(12)
healthy ecosystems – inland wandoo
woodland case study Wyalkatchem Nature
Reserve – WW10.3(14)
imitating nature – WW2.1(13)
implementing a biodiversity revegetation
project – WW8.2(3)
jacksonias in – see Jacksonias
magic of moisture – how can we make the
most of it? – WW9.2(5)
managing disturbance – a component of
remnant restoration – WW14.4(1)
managing native grasses as pasture: a
Kojonup example - WW6.4(14)
landholders and recovery planning: Toolibin
Lake catchment – WW9.1(8)
native grasses in – see Grasses
oil mallee in – see Trees
positive „Search Project‟ results – WW9.1(4)
putting the fungi back - kick start your reveg! WW6.3(18)
reconnections, a new landscape-scale
revegetation project on the south coast –
WW8
regenerating woodlands – WW4.1(20)
regenerating woodlands – similar to growing a
crop! – WW4.2(12)
revegetation for biodiversity – WW14.2(13)
revegetation - from plans to implementation WW5.4(6)
riparian restoration – WW2.1(13)
salt in Lake CY O‟Connor – WW12.4(14)
saltland rehabilitation – WW1.2(13)
sandalwood nuts – preparing Australian
agriculture for rising energy costs and water
insecurity – WW11.1(4)
search for carbon neutral planting sites –
WW11.1(20)
seedballs - WW7.4(17)
seed collection for revegetation – WW14.1(6)
seed collection from native plants – WN4
seed store and top soil, value of – WW11.2(5)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
shelterbelts
in
agricultural
landscapes
suppress invertebrate pests – WW11.1(7)
sheoaks in – see Trees
smoke for broad-scale application –
WW5.2(15)
smoke
germination
chemical
named:
Karrikinolide – WW14.2(6)
soil seed banks – a tool to conserve and
manage ecosystems against weed invasion –
WW13.4(6)
stream corridors for bird movement – WN2
Talbot Hall Reserve regeneration project –
WW10.4(14)
thinking beyond today: a global perspective
for local action -–WW5.1(23)
time to plant a future - WW7.4(17)
use of sandbags in riparian restoration –
WW3.2(14)
using heat to break dormancy of WA legume
and non-legume species – WW5.2(5)
Valema Farms - putting sustainability to the
test - WW8.1(8)
value of prickles - WW8.1(9)
wetting agents, penetrants, aren‟t they the
same thing? – WW11.4(12)
whole-farm corridors – WW3.2(1)
yes, it works! - WW7.3(8)
Riparian Vegetation (see also: Wetlands;
Revegetation and Restoration of Habitat)
Rivers (see also: Revegetation and Restoration of
Habitat)
ancient rivers in the wheatbelt – WW4.4(1)
aquatic invertebrates and river health –
WW1.3(13)
creekline revegetation for wildlife – WN1
dams on the Ord River – a photo history –
WW17.1(6)
drain restoration to habitat – WW3.3(14)
irrigation from the Moore River in 1900‟s –
WW3.1(14)
large woody debris – WW2.3(14)
riffles, importance of – WW2.1(8)
riparian restoration – WW2.1(13)
river, poem – WW14.2(15)
stream corridors for bird movement – WN2
Roadsides
flora road for Waddy Forest - WW7.2(10)
flora roads, vegetation surveys and roadside
conservation – WW16.2(8)
roadsides demonstrate original understorey –
WW3.4(10)
values of roadside vegetation – WW1.4(1)
when is a road a Flora Road? – WW9.1(12)
Rodents
growing sandalwood for native rodents? WW7.2(14)
water rats (Hydromys chrysogaster) –
WW14.3(13)
Rushes and sedges (see also: Wetland flora;
Revegetation and Restoration of Habitat)
cord rush – WW4.2(1)
15
pale rush Juncus pallidus growing from seed
– WW4.4(14)
Reedia – a very extraordinary sedge –
WW11.3(6)
wetland rushes – WW2.3(11)
S
Sagittaria – see Weeds
Salinity
coping with salt - the iceplant way –
WW12.4(11)
Salinity Action Plan biological survey of the
agricultural zone – WW1.2(11)
salinity: its effect on roads - WW5.4(16)
salinity - some pluses - WW6.4(6)
salt creek – WW14.2(11)
salt in Lake CY O‟Connor – WW12.4(14)
secondary salinity also cause increased
acidity
in
groundwater
discharge
–
WW17.2(20)
Salmon Gum – see Trees
Samphire
salacious samphires – WW5.2(6)
growing samphire - WW7.2(8)
WA plant makes top 10 new species list
(Tecticornia bibenda) – WW13.2(13)
Sandalwood – see Trees
Schools
Flinders Park students visit Balijup farm –
WW17.1(15)
formation of “Friends” group – WW3.3(9)
Latham Primary School native seed collection
and identification excursion – WW17.1(13)
nesting platform – WW2.4(8)
planting for the future – WW14.2(17)
tree planting – WW2.4(8)
wildlife projects – WW1.3(14)
Sedges (see also: Wetlands; Revegetation and
Restoration of Habitat)
wetland sedges – WW2.3(11)
Seed Collection
Botherling Springs Catchment Group project –
WW2.1(14)
seed collection for revegetation – WW14.1(6)
seed collection from native plants – WN4
secrets and mysteries of seed collection WW7.3(18)
Sustainable Seed Banks Project – WW4.1(7)
Sharp rush – see weeds
Sheoaks – see Trees
Snails and slugs –
snails and slugs in the bush - WW3.4(4)
native snails – WW4.2(13)
Snakes – see Reptiles
Snottygobble
what‟s in a name? – snottygobble –
WW13.2(8)
Social & historical
are we losing our hard-won „sense of place‟?
– WW14.1(10)
bushland heritage – WW14.3(14)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
Soils – see Landscapes
Spiders – see Invertebrates
Streams – see Rivers
Stromatolites – see Micro-organisms
Surveys
bushland plant survey project – WW2.2(13)
bushland plants survey program in bushland
at Bodallin – WW3.1(13)
community fauna survey – Lowlands Coastal
Reserve – WW11.1(14)
fauna in the Fitzgerald Biosphere Reserve –
WW17.1(12)
horses helping the conservation cause –
WW17.2(19)
northern wheatbelt flora survey – WW9.2(10)
owl survey – a community group first in WA –
WW5.1(7)
Wellstead district – WW1.2(10)
Sustainable Productivity
restoration of riparian vegetation – see
Revegetation and Restoration of Habitat
sustainability or extinction? – WW4.1(5)
Valema Farms - putting sustainability to the
test - WW8.1(8)
T
The Way We Were …
big tree on the banks of the Swan River in
1697 – WW11.4(18)
boodie rat wall – WW8.2(14)
changing times - wandoo for tannin WW7.4(12)
direct seeding on farm in York – WW3.2(19)
domestic cat gone wild – WW2.3(12)
hints to settlers on tree preservation –
WW3.3(19)
introduction of cats to the bush - WW6.4(9)
irrigation from the Moore River in 1900‟s –
WW3.1(14)
out and about with Tommy and me –
WW14.1(19)
ringbarking – why did this big tree die –
WW10.4(19)
the fauna and flora of the State Barrier Fence
– WW5.3(13)
visit to Newcastle by Marianne North in 1880
– WW4.4(19)
wagyl – reality in the myth? – WW11.4(18)
wallabies and tammars declared vermin –
WW2.1(16)
wildflowers (Emily Pellow) – WW16.2(15)
Ticks – see Invertebrates
Timber (see also: Trees)
craftwood story – WW4.4(12)
marri – WW1.1(9)
sheoak – WW3.4(6)
Toads – see Frogs
Tortoises & turtles
great relocate - WW6.2(14)
oblong turtle - WW6.4(8)
oblong turtle, nestwatch project – WW12.3(8)
16
Translocations
black-flanked wallabies return to the Avon
Valley -–WW5.3(10)
woylies find new Land for Wildlife homes –
WW5.1(1)
woylie good result! – WW15.5(1)
Trees (see also: Timber)
blazed tree, questions lead to more questions
– WW16.3(11)
canker disease in Corymbia calophylla (Marri)
- WW6.3(16)
corridors for birds – WW2.3(1)
Cypress-pines in WA – WW15.1(12)
dead trees have a role in your remnant –
WW16.3(10)
flat-topped yate decline – WW3.3(10)
flooded gum dieback – WW4.1(10)
flooded gum, is this the biggest? –
WW14.3(16)
gimlet, twistiest in the world – WW14.3(16)
growers working together to develop the
sandalwood industry – WW9.3(7)
growing and managing swamp sheoak for
multipurpose land use – WW16.1(6)
growing sandalwood for native rodents? WW7.2(14)
heritage trees and land management WW6.2(1)
hopping into a bright future - the woylie
sandalwood story - WW7.3(1)
impact on groundwater levels in Merredin
catchment – WW3.2(10)
Jilakin Jarrah – WW16.3(12)
marri as a timber – WW1.1(9)
marri decline:
possible causes and
implications – WW15.2(10)
more on trees with sunstroke – WW12.1(9)
Nuytsia floribunda – 45 Million years of firestimulated flowering! – WW16.3(8)
oil mallee, use in revegetation – WW2(1)
oil mallees, value as foraging habitat for the
Western Pygmy Possum – WW14.1(1)
old trees and wildlife – WN13
paddock trees and wildlife – WN16
paddock trees, value to birds – WW14.4(11)
peppermints WA, decline in – WW15.2(17)
red tingle, recruitment after fire – WW4.3(18)
restoring the canopy health of declining native
trees – WW17.2(9)
rural tree dieback – WW5.2(19)
salmon gum study – WW3.2(16)
salmon gum and york gum woodland, decline
in a remnant, 1978 to 1997 – WW9.4(8)
sandalwood–a tree crop for the future –
WW5.2(13)
sheoak – got writer‟s block? Let a sheoak
whisper to you! – WW12.2(9)
sheoak serenity – WW14.2(16)
sheoak, how turn a sheoak tree into a sheoak
bush! – WW16.3(13)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
sheoaks, how they got their name –
WW1.4(12); using sheoak timber WW3.4(6)
sheoaks, use in revegetation – WW1.4(13)
sheoaks, what they are – WW1.4(12)
social benefits on farms – WW2.2(6)
tree hollows and wildlife – WN15
tree planting in Western Australia: enhancing
the opportunities for conservation of
biodiversity - WW5.4(14)
trees in decline, why are many? –
WW12.2(15)
trees with sunstroke? – WW11.2(8)
tuart, tree of life and death – WW14.2(18)
what is happening with wandoo? - WW7.3(20)
wandoo, five years caring for – WW13.1(6)
wandoo, treasuring – a partnership in mutual
learning – WW14.4(10)
wandoo woodlands workshop – WW4.1(15)
wandoo worries - WW7.1(17)
water use – WW5.1(11)
wattle pancakes for lunch – WW5.2(14)
york gum and salmon gum woodland, decline
in a remnant, 1978 to 1997 – WW9.4(8)
U
V
Veld Grass – see Weeds
Verticordias
bush cauliflower conservation – WW1.4(7)
Christmas morrison pollination – WW1.4(9)
how I came to produce a book - WW7.1(9)
Verticordia staminosa (Life on the Rocks – a
cracking good place to be) – WW14.3(6)
what they are – WW1.4(5)
W
Wallabies – see Mammals (native)
Water
areas of secondary salinity also cause
increased acidity in groundwater discharge –
WW17.2(20)
drain restoration – WW3.3(14)
how much water do trees use? – WW5.1(11)
pH testing kit – make your own – WW10.4(13)
Waterbirds – see Birds
Watsonia – see Weeds
Weeds
Acacia nilotica has reached the Kimberley! WW7.1(14)
Acacia nilotica on the Durack River WW8.1(19)
Acacia paradoxa:
native or alien? –
WW9.3(18)
action plan for weed control – WW3.2(15)
African boxthorn can be a nasty problem –
WW16.3(14)
are the substances added to herbicides toxic
to humans? – WW17.2(19)
arum lilies, sale banned – WW10.3(18)
17
bindweed, newly-naturalised at Busselton –
WW13.3(19)
blackberry, biological control – WW3.3(20)
blackberry control – WW12.3(18)
blackberry rust arrives in Denmark –
WW13.2(6)
bluebell creeper – a native plant goes feral –
WW15.1(8)
bridal
creeper,
biological
control
–
WW1.4(10), pest of bridal creeper released –
WW3.4(8), bio control - WW4.1(17)
branched broomrape – WW5.1(6)
CALM Herbarium‟s weed information network
(WIN) – WW5.2(12)
Canola seeds, roos disperse – WW12.2(11)
castor oil rust – WW4.1(17)
caterpillars on your Cape Lilacs? - WW7.2(18)
common Heliotrope killing wombats in South
Australia – WW16.4(14)
coping with salt - the iceplant way –
WW12.4(11)
creating a guide to Esperance Weeds –
WW15.5(12)
designing windbreaks to trap blowing weed
seeds – WW5.2(10)
does your backpack transport weed seeds? –
WW14.1(15)
dune onion weed kills horses – WW5.2(11)
eliminating bridal creeper – spreading the rust
WW9.1(11)
false yellowhead (sticky stinkwort) Dittrichia
viscosa – WW8.3(14)
Fusilade®, be careful with – WW13.4(16)
gamba grass, say no to! – WW12.2(10)
giant reed – WW11.1(13)
has Kochia been eradicated? – WW8.4(7)
horehound – WW9.1(11)
it was no accident – weeds introduced by
Government agencies – WW11.1(13)
locusts the trees – WW16.2(14)
Mimosa pigra found near Kununurra –
WW14.1(9)
Montpelier broom – WW9.2(13)
natural weed suppression – WW2.4(9)
Parthenium weed found at Karratha –
WW16.1(12)
Paterson‟s curse, biological control –
WW1.4(10)
Paterson's curse - WW6.3(10)
Roadside weeds – a world-wide problem –
WW14.1(15)
sagittaria – WW1.2(8)
scarlet pimpernel, more about – WW16.4(7)
selection of additional Weeds of National
Significance – WW16.4(12)
selective herbicides and weed control in direct
seeding areas – WW1.3(12)
sharp rush – WW10.4(10)
siam weed – WW4.2(11)
skeleton weed review – WW13.2(7)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
soil seed banks – a tool to conserve and
manage ecosystems against weed invasion –
WW13.4(6)
Sollya heterophylla – WW9.1(11)
Spreading weeds – the hidden costs of
rabbits and foxes – WW13.4(10)
Swan Weeds database – WW13.3(19)
tagasaste environmental problem – WW3.4(9)
tree mallow invades islands – WW10.2(16)
tropical soda apple – WW16.1(12)
typha at lake Mealup - WW7.1(12)
veld grass – WW3.1(11)
watch out for Dolichos pea! – WW8.3(14)
watercress - WW7.4(11)
watsonia – WW1.2(9), WW2.4(10)
weed of the year – watsonia and gladiolus –
WW3.2(15)
weeds, are you the problem? - WW5.4(17)
weedy natives in Western Australia –
WW13.1(4)
weedy success story! (bridal creeper) –
WW9.1(10)
Western Australia‟s State Weed Plan –
WW4.1(6)
wet season stimulates weed growth –
WW1.1(8)
wild oats among native grasses in York
gum/jam woodland – WW4.3(12)
wild radish, triazine resistant – WW4.3(13)
Western Shield
what it does – WW1.3(1)
Western Shield - reviewed - WW8.1(16)
Wetland flora
arrowgrass – the Triglochins – WW10.3(8)
cord rush – WW4.2(1)
new
salt
lake
endemic
wildflower
(Tribonanthes) – WW11.4(9)
pale rush Juncus pallidus growing from seed
– WW4.4(14)
rare plants – WW2.3(6)
Reedia – a very extraordinary sedge –
WW11.3(6)
rushes and sedges – WW2.3(11)
wetland rushes – WW2.3(11)
Wetlands
brackish wetlands can still have value for
wildlife – WW12.4(3)
creation of – WW2.3(1)
creation of – WW2.3(8)
creekline revegetation for wildlife – WN1
is there life in our inland salt lakes? –
WW4.4(4)
peat – to burn or not to burn? - WW3.3(8)
Ramsar sites – WW4.4(5)
stream corridors for bird movement – WN2
transforming farm dams into wetlands for
wildlife – WW11.2(6)
Whales – see Mammals
Wildflower industry
commercial production – WW2.4(4)
18
management
guidelines
for
remnant
vegetation harvested for cutflowers – WN7
Wildflowers
autumn colours - WW6.2(12)
summer wildflowers of southern Western
Australia – WW5.1(8)
Windbreaks
designing windbreaks to trap blowing weed
seeds – WW5.2(10)
windbreaks are worth creating – WW5.2(10)
Wood
dead wood and wildlife – WN14
Woodlands
fungi, role in woodlands of – WW3.3(6)
hopping soil! Woylies dig up a treat in our
remnant woodlands -–WW5.1(3)
wandoo woodlands workshop – WW4.1(15)
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
WWF focusing on wheatbelt woodlands –
WW4.4(11)
Woylies – see Mammals
X
Xanthorrhoeas, regeneration of – WW15.4(6)
Y
Yams
Warrine – the local yam – WW8.2(9)
Z
19
Western Wildlife and Wildlife Notes Index
By Author
This index covers Western Wildlife volumes 1 to 13 and Wildlife Notes 1 to 17. WW refers to the article
appearing in Western Wildlife newsletters (i.e. WW1.4 is newsletter volume 1, number 4). WN refers to the
articles appearing in Wildlife Notes (i.e. WN3 is note number 3)
A
Abbott, Ian – WW3.4 “Dieback” in Flooded Gum
Abbott, Ian – WW6.4 The Demise of the Dalgyte
Abbott, Ian – WW12.2 Balga Flowering
Achour, Pierre-Ulric – WW7.3 Ants as Bio-indicators of Disturbance in Urban Bush - Summary of a Case
Study
Achour, Pierre-Ulric – WW8.3 No Bull About Myrmecia Ants!
Adamson, Heather – WW3.1 Jacksonias for Revegetation
Adamson, Heather – WW3.3 Bird Report – Eastern Wheatbelt
Adamson, Heather – WW4.2 Summer Active Native Grasses Support Agriculture and Wildlife
Adamson, Heather – WW5.2 Make Your Own Cat Trap
Adamson, Heather – WW7.3 Nesting in the Wheatbelt - Yellow-rumped Thornbill, Acanthiza chrysorrhoa
Adamson, Heather – WW17.2 Chasing Rainbows
Adamson, Heather – WW17.2 A Cuckoo Bee
Aplin, Ken – WW3.3 Southwestern Frogs – from Ancient Past to Uncertain Future
Appleyard, Steve – WW8.1 The Devil's Soils: the Soils That Bite Back
Appleyard, Steve – WW9.4 Identifying and Managing Acid Scalds on Your Property
Appleyard, Steve – WW10.4 Make Your Own pH Testing Kit
Armstrong, Roger – WW3.3 Dieback – Plant Pathogen
Ashburner, Jessica – WW15.4 Cats Caught on Candid Camera
Atkins, Ken – WW6.4 Oh No!! Rare Flora!!
Atkins, Ken – WW7.3 Yes, It Works (revegetation)
B
Baker, Katherine – WW13.1 Kingia‟s Remarkable Roots
Bancroft, Wes & Garkaklis Mark - WW8.1 Shearwaters at Rottnest
Barber, Paul – WW17.2 Restoring the Canopy Health of Declining Native Trees
Barblett, Pat – WW5.1 So You Want to Get Involved in Ecotourism?
Barker, Caril – WW15.5 Creating Wildlife Corridors
Barnett, Jay – WW8.2 A New Idea for Coping With Ticks
Barrett, Brent – WW9.1 A Riddle is No Joke
Barrow, Jim – WW5.3 How South-West WA‟s Landscapes Formed
Barrow, Jim – WW5.4 Iron-stone Gravels and Native Vegetation
Bartle, John – WW9.1 Positive „Search Project‟ Results
Bartle, John – WW14.3 New Mallee Harvester Launched
Batini, Frank – WW8.4 Comparison of Changes to Water Levels in Deep Bores – 1975 to 2004 – Helena
Catchment, Western Australia
Batley, Michael – WW16.4 Capillosa Has a New Bee Species
Batty, Andrew, Mark Brundrett, Jeremy Bougoure, Kingsley Dixon – WW8.4 Towards the Conservation
of the Western Australian Underground Orchid
Baxter, Avril – WW2.1 Riffles as Part of River Habitat
Baxter, Avril – WW2.4 Bridal Creeper – Everybody‟s Problem
Baxter, Avril – WW3.1 Managing Granite Outcrops
Baxter, Avril – WW3.1 Native Grasses – the Unsung Heroes
Baxter, Avril – WW3.4 Are We Working for Nature?
Baxter, Avril – WW4.1 Direct Seeding Does Work in Low Rainfall Areas
Baxter, Avril – WW4.2 Summer Active Native Grasses Support Agriculture and Wildlife
Baxter, Avril – WW4.2 Regenerating Woodlands – Similar to Growing a Crop!
Baxter, Avril – WW5.2 Sandalwood – A Tree Crop for the Future
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
1
Baxter, Avril & Dewing, Jenny - WW6.4 Managing Native Grasses as Pasture: A Kojonup Example
Baxter, Avril – WW7.4 Changing Times - Wandoo for Tannin
Baxter, Avril – WW8.1 Valema Farms - Putting Sustainability to the Test
Baxter, Avril – WW8.1 The Classroom in the Bush
Baxter, Avril – WW8.2 A Boodie Rat Wall
Baxter, Avril – WW9.1 Bush Stone-Curlews and Homesteads
Baxter, Avril – WW9.1 Eliminating Bridal Creeper – spreading the rust
Baxter, Avril & Carl Beck – WW9.2 Cooperation pays off!
Baxter, Avril & Hussey, Penny – WN17 The Use of Fire in Small Remnants
Baxter, Avril – WW11.2 – Trees With Sunstroke?
Baxter, Avril & Friend, Tony – WW11.3 Living Next Door to Boyagin
Baxter, Avril & Kitto, Grantham – WW11.4 Kitto 50,000 : Nature 5,000,000!
Baxter, Avril – WW12.1 Botanical Monitoring Day at Wagin Lakes
Baxter, Avril – WW13.1 Great Tips on Beautiful Plants
Baxter, Avril – WW13.1 Vincent Serventy – An Inspiration to Many
Baxter, Avril – WW13.3 The Murdering Animal – or, a Case of Biting Off More Than You Can Chew
Baxter, Avril – WW14.1 Snakes in the Roof!
Baxter, Avril – WW14.3 Bushland Heritage
Baxter, Avril – WW17.2 How Much Can You Eat?
Bayly, Ian – WW3.3 Gnammas and their Aquatic Life
Bayly, Whispie – WW16.3 I Spy …!
Beatty, Stephen & Morgan, Dave – WW8.4 Freshwater Fishes of South-Western Australia
Beatty, Peter – WW9.2 New Booklet on Managing Private Native Forest
Beecham, Brett – WW2.4 Bush Stone-curlew
Beecham, Brett – WW3.4 Are We Working for Nature?
Bell, Una – WW14.2 Some Notes on Growing Native Grasses
Bell, Una – WW14.3 Notes on Growing Native Grasses: Pt 2
Bendtsen, Kim – WW6.2 The Great Relocate
Berhane, Dawit – WW3.2 The Impact of Trees on Groundwater Levels in a Discharge Area of the
Merredin Catchment
Berry, Oliver – WW10.3 The Fox DNA Project – Can You Help?
Blanchard, Ed & Linda – WW5.1 Making Your Native Grasses Grow
Blyth, John – WN2 Stream Corridors for Bird Movement
Blyth, John – WW6.2 Wonderful Woodswallows
Boniface, Julia – WW9.1 Weedy Success Story!
Bougher, Neale – WW3.3 Fungi Work for Healthy Trees, Shrubs and Soil 24 Hours a Day; Wheatbelt
Woodlands are Rich in Fungi
Bougher, Neale & Tommerup, Inez - WW6.3 Putting the Fungi Back - Kick Start Your Reveg!
Bougher, N & Hart R – WW 8.3 Perth Urban Bushland Fungi Project
Bousfield, Greg – WW2.3 The Creation of Awatukee Wetland
Bousfield, Julie – WW2.3 The Creation of Awatukee Wetland
Bradby, Keith & Morris, Vicky – WN4 Seed Collection from Native Plants
Bradby Keith – WW8.4 Gondwana Link – Ecological Restoration at the Scale this Country Needs
Bradshaw, Wendy – WW11.1 Mistletoe – Friend not Foe!
Bramwell, Emma – WN5 Encouraging Quendas
Bramwell, Emma – WN6 Encouraging Possums
Bramwell, Emma – WW2.1 Visit to WA of ANZECC Working Group on Nature Conservation on Private
Land
Bramwell, Emma – WW3.2 Attracting Birds to your Backyard
Bramwell, Emma – WW3.3 Living Drains
Bramwell, Emma & Moller, Sophie – WW9.3 New Funding Opportunity for High Conservation Value
Properties in the South-West
Breen, David & O‟Dwyer, Alison – WW10.4 Talbot Hall Reserve Regeneration Project
Bremner, Mary – WW4.1 Sharing With Wildlife – the Grapefruit Puzzle
Bremner, Mary – WW5.1 Small Land Birds in Salt Affected Areas in the Northeastern Wheatbelt
Brims, Margaret – WW7.3 Myxomycetes: the Slime Moulds
Brooker, Belinda – WW4.2 Thick-billed Grasswrens
Brooker, Michael & Lesley – WW3.2 Blue-breasted Fairy-wrens Depend on Vegetation Corridors
Brooker, Michael & Lesley – WW5.3 Cuckoos
Brooker, Lesley – WW9.2 DIY Bird Hide
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
2
Brown, Andrew – WW1.3 Orchids of a Small Bushland Remnant in the Wheatbelt
Brown, Andrew – WW12.1 Western Australian Orchids – the Masters of Deceit
Brown, Andrew – WW12.2 Western Australian Orchids – the Masters of Deceit (Part 2)
Brown, Kate – WW4.3 Managing Wild Oats Among Native Grasses in a York Gum/Jam Woodland
Brown, Liz – WW1.3 Pollinate or Perish
Burbidge, Allan – WW6.3 Biodiversity of the Carnarvon Basin
Burbidge, Allan – WW13.3 Western Ground Parrots Distinct From Eastern Ground Parrots
Burrows, Neil – WW9.3 Bushfire Diversity Can Promote Biodiversity
Burrows, Neil – WW17.2 Horses Helping the Conservation Cause
Butcher, Ryonen – WW1.3 Wanted – New Populations of Synaphea!
Butler, Roy – WW16.4 More About the Scarlet Pimpernel
Byrne, Margaret – WW6.3 Discovering Our Flora's Hidden Diversity
Byrne, Margaret – WW11.4 The Broombush Complex
Byrne, Oonagh – WW16.4 Please Help - Adopt a European Wasp Trap
C
Cale, Belinda – WW3.4 Conserving Carnaby‟s Cockatoo
Canham, Caroline – WW16.4 Using the Timing of Flowering by Banksias to Monitor Climate Change
Carr, Ann – WW1.2 B&B and Farm Bushland
Carter, Marie – WW16.3 The First Moora Cocky Count
Chambers, Jane – WW9.3 Scumbook!
Chapman, Tamra & Pitman, Helen – WW10.2 Hungry Black Cockatoos
Cherriman, Simon – WW12.3 Powerful Predators and Passionate Parents – the Life Cycle of a Wedgetailed Eagle
Cherriman, Simon – WW17.1 Outback Death Trap
Chinnock, Bob – WW6.4 Eremophilas - Emu Bushes, Poverty Bushes
Clarke, Karen – WW14.3 Biodiversity of Warwick Bushland
Clarke, Mike – WW14.4 Carbon Storage of Native Plants on Unproductive Soils Examined
Clarke, Wayne & Desrae – WW7.3 Monitoring for the Past and the Future
Coate, Kevin – WW6.3 Would Groups of Tourists Like Your Block?
Coates, David & Yates, Colin – WW5.4 Viability and Persistence of Small Isolated Populations of Rare
and Threatened Flora. Is There Hope?
Coates, Dave, Phil Ladd & Colin Yates – WW14.3 Life on the Rocks – a Cracking Good Place to Live
Collins, Kathy – WW16.2 A Green Frog in My Boot (poem)
Collins, Kevin – WW11.3 Are You Lost in the Bush? – Let a Banksia Help You Out!
Colmer, Tim – WW15.4 Semi-aerial Roots on Paperbarks – a glimpse of the „hidden half‟
Commander, Philip – WW4.4 Ancient Rivers in the Wheatbelt
Common, Ian – WW4.3 Mallee Moths
Cook, Glenn – WW17.1 Importance of Long-term Weather Observations
Cooper, Don – WW7.1 Using Our Native Trees and Shrubs to Supply New Industries
Cranfield, Ray – WW7.2 Mystic Lichens
Cranfield, Ray – WW8.4 Strange Parasite
Crombie, Stuart – WW5.1 How Much Water Do Trees Use?
Crowe, Fleur – WW13.1 Your Carbon Footprint => Measure => Policy => Reduce => Switch => Off-set
=> Communicate
D
Dadd, Claire – WW16.2 Growing Eremophilas in the Wheatbelt
Dadour, Ian – WW2.2 Dung Beetles
Danks, Alan – WW4.3 Noisy Scrub-bird in the Darling Range
Davies, Carol – WW4.4 Preserving Everlastings
Davies, Murray – WW1.4 Hay Sheds and Heart Attacks
Davies, Peter – WW2.3 Large Woody Debris are Important Habitat in Rivers
Davies, Stephen – WW9.2 Northern Wheatbelt Flora Survey
Davies, Stephen – WW13.3 Pebble-mound Mice
Davis, Mick – WW13.4 Remote Cameras Spot Chuditch at Dryandra
Davis, Robert – WW8.2 How Well Do You Know Your Neighbours? (The Western Spotted Frog Story)
Davison, Elaine – Unwanted Hitchhikers
Davison, Elaine – WW14.1 Managing Tar Spot Disease of Myrtle Hakea
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
3
Day, John - WW7.4 What's in a Name? - A Marketing Dilemma
de Burgh-Day, Geraldine – WW3.1 Irrigation from the Moore River
de Burgh-Day, Geraldine – WW15.4 Fencing Possums Out!
Dennings, Susanne – WW2.1 The Marvellous Malleefowl – It‟s Gnow or Never!
De Tores, Paul, Nadine Guthrie, Jennifer Jackson & Ian Bertram – WW9.3 The Western Ringtail Possum
– a Resilient Species or Another Taxon on the Decline?
De Tores, Paul, Susanne Rosier, Nadine Guthrie, Jennifer Jackson & Ian Bertram – WW9.4 The
Western Ringtail Possum (Part 2)
Dewing, Jenny – WW3.2 Sand Bags: a Technique for Establishing Fringing Vegetation in Boggy Sites
Dewing, Jenny – WW3.2 Weed Action Plan
Dewing, Jenny – WW4.1 A Method for Propagating Snottygobble
Dewing, Jenny – WW4.3 Linking Bush Remnants
Dewing, Jenny – WW5.1 Owl Survey – A Community Group First in WA
Dewing, Jenny – WW5.4 Revegetation - From Plans to Implementation
Dewing, Jenny – WW6.2 Update on the Community Owl Survey
Dewing, Jenny & Baxter, Avril - WW6.4 Managing Native Grasses as Pasture: A Kojonup Example
Dixon, Bob – WW3.1 Veld Grass – Friend or Foe?
Dixon, Bob & Moonie, Peter - WW5.4 Erosion Control on Kings Park Scarp
Dixon, Bob & Krauss, Siegy – WW10.2 The Corrigin Grevillea: 12 Years of Recovery
Dixon, Kingsley – WW1.1 The Corrigin Grevillea Recovery Plan
Dixon, Kingsley – WW5.2 Using Heat to Break Dormancy of WA Legume and Non-legume Species
Dixon, Kingsley – WW7.4 Fire, Flowers and Sundews
Dixon, Kingsley – WW8.2 Unlocking the Dark Secrets of the Western Australian Underground Orchid
Dixon, Kingsley – WW9.1 Australian Scientists Make World First Discovery in Seed Germination
Doley, Alison – WW6.4 Salinity - Some Pluses
Doley, Alison – WW7.3 80 Years of Grazing, Fencing, Then - an Exciting Discovery!
Doley, Alison – WW9.2 Should Tadpoles be Moved When the Pond Dries Up?
Doley, Alison – WW10.3 Preserving Observation Bores
Doley, Alison – WW10.3 Tapeworms in Sheep – Another Good Reason to Poison Foxes
Dowling, Eliza – WW1.1 Wet Season Stimulates Weed Growth
Dowling, Eliza – WW2.2 Rabbit Control – or Blast the Bunnies!
Dunlop, Nic – WW15.4 Bat Listening Project Gets Under Way
Dufty, Prue – WW12.1 Using the Broombush Key – Increasing the Options for Revegetation
Dugand, Alison – WW14.3 Cradling the NW Coast of Tasmania
Dunlop, Nic – WW12.3 Wings of Change – What the Birds Are Telling Us
Dunlop, Nic and Bob Bullen – WW14.4 White-striped Bats – Bellwethers of Climate Change?
E
Edmonds, Aaron – WW11.2 Sandalwood Nuts: preparing Australian agriculture for rising energy costs
and water insecurity
Elliott, Alan – WW11.4 The Evolution of Conservation – “Cockatubes”
Elsasser, Emily – WW16.3 How to Turn a Sheoak Tree Into a Sheoak Bush!
Emmott, Tim & Woodall, Geoff – WW9.3 Growers Working Together to Develop the Sandalwood
Industry
English, Brian – WW13.3 Boodie rats
Erickson, Rica – WW1.4 Memories of Roadsides
Everaardt, Annika – WW9.1 The Impact of Fire on the Endemic Honey Possum
F
Falconer, Fiona – WW5.1 Thinking Beyond Today: A Global Perspective for Local Action
Falconer, Fiona – WW7.2 Flora Road for Waddy Forest
Falconer, Fiona – WW13.3 Antics
Falconer, Fiona – WW15.2 Director General Visits “Koobabbie”, Coorow
Falconer, Fiona – WW15.5 Night Moves – Tracking Bats in Rural Landscapes
Falconer, Fiona – WW15.4 Out and About in the Bush: the pallid cuckoo
Farr, Janet – WW3.3 Flat-topped Yate – What is Rural Tree Decline?
Fisher, Judy – WW1.3 Your Local School and Land for Wildlife
Fisher, Judy – WW13.4 Soil Seed Banks – a Tool to Conserve and Manage Ecosystems Against Weed
Invasion
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
4
Flaherty, Chloe – WW16.2 Persistence of Callitris in a Flammable Heathland
Framenau, Volker – WW13.3 Dances With Wolves – Australian Wolf Spiders
French, Malcolm & Nicolle, Dean – WW7.1 Eucalypts for Use in Saline Revegetation
Friend, Tony – WW5.3 Dalgytes Are on the Way Back!
Friend, Tony – WW8.2(15) Even More Dibblers Released at Peniup!
Friend, Tony – WW10.3 Potoroos on Bald Island
Friend, Tony & Baxter, Avril – WW11.3 Living Next Door to Boyagin
Froend, Ray – WW12.2 Impact of Groundwater Use and Decreased Rainfall on Banksia
G
Gardiner, Bruce & O'Connor, Michael – WW6.4 The Changing Greenough Flats
Gardiner, Cameron – WW3.4 Australian Bush Heritage Fund
Garkaklis, Mark – WW5.1 Hopping Soil! Woylies Dig Up a Treat in Our Remnant Woodlands
Garkaklis, Mark & Murphy, Marie – WW 7.3 Hopping Into a Bright Future - the Woylie Sandalwood Story
Garkaklis, Mark & Bancroft, Wes – WW8.1 Shearwaters at Rottnest
Gathe, Jan – WW2.1 Community Regional Herbaria Volunteer Program
Gentle, Robin – WW15.4 Regeneration of Xanthorrhoeas
George, Alex – WW5.1 Summer Wildflowers of Southern Western Australia
George, Alex –WW6.2 Autumn Colours
George, Alex – WW15.5 Calothamnus – When Its OK to be One-sided
George, Elizabeth – WW1.4 Verticordias: What Are They, Where Can They Be Found and Why Do They
Need Protection?
George, Elizabeth – WW7.1 How I Came to Produce a Book
Gibbs, Heather – The Effects of Climate on Breeding in Australian Birds.
Giles, Jacqueline – WW6.4 The Oblong Turtle
Gill, Wayne – WW12.1 The „Great Biodiversity Bus Tour‟
Gill, Wayne – WW13.4 Things That Go Bump in the Day
Gill, Wayne – WW15.5 Creating a Guide to Esperance Weeds
Gill, Wayne – WW16.2 A Nest Too Small
Gole, Cheryl – WW3.2 Mapping the Birds of Rural Landscapes: Where Are Our Birds Now?
Griffin, Susan and Greg – WW14.3 Bird‟s-eye View
Griffiths, Mike – WW7.3 Termites and 'Clay Trumpets'
Griffiths, Mike – WW12.4 Have You Seen a Big Cat?
Griffiths, Mike – WW13.2 More on Big Cats in WA
Griffiths, Sharon – WW10.2 LFW at „Bilingurr‟ – a Broome perspective
Grist, Alan – WW1.3 Weed Control in Direct Seeding Areas – Selective Herbicides
Gunby, Chris – WW8.3 Understanding Ring-tailed Possums
Gunness, Ann – WW2.2 Bushland Plant Survey Project
H
Haight, Ruth – WW11.4 The Secret Life of Bobtail Lizards
Hall, Claire – WW5.2 Windbreaks Are Worth Creating
th
Hall, Claire – WW7.1 Land for Wildlife Celebrates 1000 Registration
Hall, Claire – WW9.3 Wattle – Symbol of a Nation
Hall, Claire – WW10.3 Stromatolites – Living Fossils
Hall, Claire – WW12.2 Space invaders!
Hall, Claire – WW12.3 Listen to the Birds
Hall, Claire – WW14.4 Flying Dragons – or Dragonflies
Hall, Claire & Sylvia Leighton – WW16.3 LFW Victoria: 30 year celebration forum
Hall, Claire – WW17.2 Red and Green Kangaroo Paw: a floral emblem of grace and beauty
Hamilton-Brown, Sheila – WW2.2 Was Baron Von Mueller the Last Person to See the Native Vegetation
at Greenough Flats?
Hampton, Jordan – WW8.4 Feral Pigs in the South West
Hare, D – WW9.2 An Eagle Yarn
Harper, Mal – WW11.1 Alley Farming in Low Rainfall Areas – try it – it works!
Harper, Mal – WW12.1 Malleefowl in Merredin Peak Reserve
Harper, Mal – WW13.1 Mawson Field Day
Harris, Richard – WW14.4 Managing Disturbance – a Component of Remnant Restoration
Hart, Quentin – WW16.1 Managing Australia‟s Feral Camels
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
5
Hart, Roz & Bougher, Neale - WW8.3 Perth Urban Bushland Fungi Project
Harvey, Mark – WW14.3 Scorpions – Ancient Life Forms in Western Australia
Hassell, Cleve - WW7.1 Past Fire Intervals in Fitzgerald River National Park
Hercock, Marion – WW6.2 Heritage Trees and Land Management
Hercock, Marion – WW16.3 Questions About a Blazed Tree Lead to More Questions
Herpich, Melissa – A Native Plant Goes Feral – Bluebell Creeper
Heterick, Brian – WW3.1 Ants in Your Remnant
Heterick, Brian – WW11.2 Termites and You
Heydenrych, Barry – WW 8.4 Reconnections, a New Landscape-scale Revegetation Project on the
South Coast
Hingston, Bob – WW16.1 Growing and Managing Swamp Sheoak for Multipurpose Land Use
Hobbs, Richard – WW3.1 CSIRO‟s Past and Present Research in Western Australia
Hopper, Stephen – WW4.3 Climate Change, Dispersal Mechanisms and Revegetation With WA Plants
Horwitz, Pierre – WW3.3 Wetlands in Southwestern Australia and their Organic Material – to Burn or Not
to Burn?
Houston, Terry – WW1.3 Native Bees
Houston, Terry – WW7.2 Can You Find a Sandgroper?
Houston, Terry – WW8.4 Mole Crickets
Houston, Terry – WW11.4 Unearthing the Secrets of Sandgropers
Houston, Terry – WW13.3 Mystery Animal „Droppings‟ are Beetle „Push-ups‟
Howat, Sheila – WW13.2 Wildlife Rescue After Bridgetown and Balingup Fires
Howat, Sheila – WW13.3 A Piebald Cockie!
Huggett, Andrew – WW7.2 CSIRO Bird and Vegetation Surveys in the Buntine-Marchagee Recovery
Catchment
Hussey, Penny – WN1 Creekline Revegetation for Wildlife
Hussey, Penny – WN3 Nest Boxes for Wildlife
Hussey, Penny – WN9 Photographic Monitoring of Vegetation
Hussey, Penny & Mawson, Peter – WN11 Requirements for Native Mammals
Hussey, Penny – WN13 Old Trees and Wildlife
Hussey, Penny – WN14 Dead Wood and Wildlife
Hussey, Penny – WN15 Tree Hollows and Wildlife
Hussey, Penny – WN16 Paddock Trees and Wildlife
Hussey, Penny & Baxter, Avril – WN17 The Use of Fire in Small Remnants
Hussey, Penny – WW1.2 Minister Launches Land for Wildlife
Hussey, Penny – WW1.3 Disaster – Drowned Honey Possum
Hussey, Penny – WW2.1 Biodiversity Revegetation – Habitat Islands
Hussey, Penny – WW3.2 Luminous Fungi
Hussey, Penny – WW3.3 The Curse of the Everlastings
Hussey, Penny – WW3.4 Wattle I Plant?
Hussey, Penny – WW3.4 Roadsides Demonstrate Original Understorey
Hussey, Penny – WW3.4 What‟s in a name…? (Sturt‟s Desert Pea)
Hussey, Penny – WW4.1 Christmas Spiders
Hussey, Penny – WW4.1 A Grass Patch
Hussey, Penny – WW5.2 Dune Onion Weed Kills Horses
Hussey, Penny – WW4.4 Bloodroots
Hussey, Penny – WW5.4 The White Butterflies
Hussey, Penny – WW7.1 Cicadas
Hussey, Penny – WW8.2 Warrine – The Local Yam
Hussey, Penny – WW9.1 Nardoo – the Clover-Leaved Fern
Hussey, Penny – WW10.3 Arrowgrass – the Triglochins
Hussey, Penny – WW10.4 Sharp Rush
Hussey, Penny – WW10.4 What Would Your Kojonup Bushland Grow – 40 million years ago?
Hussey, Penny – WW10.4 The way we were
Hussey, Penny – WW11.2 Why Did the Megafauna Become Extinct?
Hussey, Penny – WW11.2 How Art the Mighty Fallen!
Hussey, Penny – WW11.3 Granitites – a Plant of the „Forever Hills‟
Hussey, Penny – WW11.4 Surviving the Dinosaurs – the Dasypogonaceae
Hussey, Penny – WW12.1 More on Trees with Sunstroke
Hussey, Penny – WW12.2 Say No to Gamba Grass!
Hussey, Penny – WW12.2 Roos Disperse Canola Seeds
WWIndex_Topic&Author_Apr_2013
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Hussey, Penny – WW12.3 Tiny Stars
Hussey, Penny – WW12.4 Coping With Salt – the Iceplant Way
Hussey, Penny – WW12.4 Salt in Lake CY O‟Connor
Hussey, Penny – WW13.2 Ecosystem Services Provided by Dung Beetles
Hussey, Penny & Walley, Trevor – WW13.2 What‟s In a Name? – Snottygobble
Hussey, Penny – WW13.3 Wonderful Wongan Wildlife!
Hussey, Penny – WW14.1 Ladybirds
Hussey, Penny – WW15.1 Cypress-pines in WA
Hussey, Penny – WW15.2 Hoveas
Hussey, Penny – WW15.4 Cycads
Hussey, Penny – WW16.3 Primrose Family in WA
Huston, Bob – WN8 Living With Echidnas
Huston, Bob – WW2.3 Curious Cossids
Huston, Bob – WW3.3 Jan‟s Banded Snake
Huston, Bob – WW3.3 Quenda Safe Houses
I
Irwin, Anne – WW11.2 Carnaby‟s Cockatoo – Two Families in One Year!
J
Jackson, Kate – WW9.1 When is a Road a Flora Road?
Jasper, Rosemary – WW7.2 Growing Sandalwood for Native Rodents?
Jasper, Rosemary – WW8.1 The Value of Prickles
Jasper, Rosemary – WW8.3 Spiders and Woodlands Go Together
Jasper, Rosemary – WW9.2 The Magic of Moisture – How Can We Make the Most of it?
Jayasekera, Aruni – WW10.4 Does Prickly Moses suppress Phytophthora dieback
Jenkins, Sommer – WW9.2 Landholders and Researchers Working Together
Johnson, Peter – WW15.5 Celebrating 30 Years of Protecting and Enhancing Wildlife Habitats (LFW
Victoria)
Johnstone, Ron and Tony Kirkby – WW9.4 „Cockatoo Care‟ – a Public Programme
Jones, Anthea – WW8.3 Nature Conservation Covenants – Further Tax Concessions
K
Kammann, Alice – WW2.1 Riparian Restoration Improves Whole Farm Productivity
Keating, Colma – WW3.1 Bushland Plants Survey Program – Buddy Kent‟s Bushland at Bodallin
Keighery, Greg – WW1.2 Salinity Action Plan – Biological Survey of the Agricultural Zone
Keighery, Greg – WW13.1 Weedy Natives in Western Australia
Kemp, Cherie & Switzer, Carolyn – WW7.1 Shire of Busselton Offers Rate Rebates on LFW Sites
Kemp, Cherie – WW9.3 Whale Beachings at Busselton
Kemp, Cherie & John McKinney – WW11.3 Busselton Shire Biodiversity Incentive Strategy
Kemp, Cherie – WW15.2 Decline in WA Peppermints
Kemp, Cherie – WW15.5 Dieback Workshops in Busselton Shire
Kennewell, Mathew – WW16.3 African Boxthorn Can Be a Nasty Problem
Kinnear, Adrianne – WW11.3 Soil Mites
Kirby, Peta & Gerry – WW7.1 The First Harvest – Oil Mallees on 'Sun Valley'
Kitto, Johnson – WW6.3 Legal Aspects of Trapping Feral Animals
Kitto, Grantham & Baxter, Avril – WW11.4 Kitto 50,000 : Nature 5,000,000!
Kivell, Zara – WW12.1 Bushland Management with Friends! LFW Coffee Morning at Chittering
Kivell, Zara – WW12.2 Tiritiri Matangi – a Success Story
Kivell, Zara – WW12.3 Carnaby‟s Cockatoo Release
Kivell, Zara – WW13.1 Bushland Management with Friends, York and Bindoon
Knight, Jan & Wilmot Peter – WW7.1 Typha at Lake Mealup
Krauss, Siegy & Dixon, Bob – WW10.2 The Corrigin Grevillea: 12 Years of Recovery
L
Ladd, Phil, Colin Yates & Dave Coates – WW14.3 Life on the Rocks – a Cracking Good Place to Live
Ladyman, Bill – WW5.4 Electric Fencing to Protect Remnant Vegetation
Lambeck, Robert – WW1.4 LUPIS: A Decision-supporting Tool for Integrated Land-use Planning
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Lambers Hans, Michael W Shane & Erik J Veneklaas – WW9.2 Root clusters of Western Australian
plants: a curiosity in context
Lambie, John – WW9.2 Pesky Fox
Lamont, Byron – Banksias, Bardies and Cockies – a Finely-tuned Balance
Lamont, Byron & Rafferty, Christine – WW10.2 Kangaroo Grazing Preferences After Fire at Whiteman
Park
Lamont, Byron – 45 Million Years of Fire-stimulated Flowering! – WW16.3
Lamont, David – WW1.2 The Cat‟s Home, Al-cat-raz
Lamont, David – WW4.2 The Weed with Wings: Rainbow Lorikeets
Lamont, David – WW5.4 Salinity: Its Effect on Roads
Lander, Nicholas – WW4.4 Everlastings
Langlands, Peter – WW7.3 The Woolly Bear Caterpillar
Leighton, Sylvia – WN12 – Biodiversity and Farm Forestry
Leighton, Sylvia – WW3.2 Yewben – a Wigwam for a Goose‟s Bridle
Leighton, Sylvia – WW4.4 A Craftwood Story
Leighton, Sylvia – WW5.1 Natural Pest Control
Leighton, Sylvia – WW5.1 Spineless Wonders
Leighton, Sylvia – WW5.2 Rock On!
Leighton, Sylvia – WW7.2 Land for Wildlife Goes Sailing
Leighton, Sylvia – WW8.1 The Web Takes Over the Mail Box
Leighton, Sylvia – WW9.1 A Fish Ladder
Leighton, Sylvia – WW9.3 Reconstructing Links in a Fragmented Landscape
Leighton, Sylvia – WW10.3 Connecting the Stirling Range to the South-west Forests
Leighton, Sylvia – WW11.1 Community Fauna Survey – Lowlands Coastal Reserve
Leighton, Sylvia – WW11.1 Lessons from Ants and Small Creatures
Leighton, Sylvia – WW11.2 The Value of Seed Store and Top Soil
Leighton, Sylvia – WW12.4 South Coast LFW „Reveal the Plant Challenge‟
Leighton, Sylvia – WW13.1 Jerramungup‟s „Old Man Emu‟ Makes it to the Show!
Leighton, Sylvia – WW14.1 Are We Losing Our Hard-won „Sense of Place‟?
Leighton, Sylvia & Claire Hall – WW16.3 LFW Victoria: 30 year celebration forum
Leighton, Sylvia & McQuoid, Nathan – WW16.4 A Puzzle for the Eucalypt Buffs
Lewis, Elaine, Catherine Baudains & Caroline Mansfield – WW12.3 Nestwatch Project: the Oblong
Turtle
Lloyd, Sandy – WW1.2 Weed Alert!
Lloyd, Sandy – WW4.1 Western Australia‟s State Weed Plan: A New Strategy in the War on Weeds
Lowrie, Allen – WW7.4 Pollinator Observations in Carnivorous Plants and Associated Species
Lowrie, Allen – WW8.1 Bird Pollinator Observations in Carnivorous Plants
Luck, Gary – WW2.1 Wildlife and Edges
Luck, Gary – WW6.4 Woodlands Through a Treecreeper's Eyes
Lyons, Anita – WW12.1 Bugs in the Bushes
M
MacIver, Jessie – WW13.3 Looking Through the Phone Book
Maesepp, Ella – WW9.3 Red Card for the Red Fox
Main, Bert – WW4.2 Fire, Fraus and the Cord Rush
Majer, Jonathan – WW1.1 Invertebrates in Your Remnant
Majer, Jonathan – WW3.1 Ants in Your Remnant
Majer, Jonathan & Recher, Harry – WW5.4 Tree Planting in Western Australia: Enhancing the
Opportunities for Conservation of Biodiversity
Majer, Jonathan & Stehlik, Daniela; Haslam McKenzie, Fiona; & Zhang, Dong-Ke – WW11.3 The
Sustaining Gondwana Initiative
Majer, Jonathan – WW16.3 Dead Trees Have a Role in Your Remnant
Malavisi, Peter – WW14.3 Possum Highway
Malcolm, Clive – WW7.2 Growing Samphire
Manning, Liz & Smith, Teagan – WW10.3 Healthy Ecosystems – Inland Wandoo Woodland Case Study
Wyalkatchem Nature Reserve
Manning, Liz – WW13.1 Five Years Caring for Wandoo
Manning, Liz – WW14.4 Treasuring Wandoo – a Partnership in Mutual Learning
Manning, Liz & Dennings, Suzanne – WW16.1 Malleefowl Monitoring
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Mantle, Kellie – WW12.1 Thanks for Your Help! (burrowing crayfish)
Marbus, Cielito – WW15.2 Marri Decline: Possible Causes and Implications
Marchant, Neville – WW5.2 The CALM Herbarium‟s Weed Information Network (WIN)
Marriott, Neil – WW5.4 The Great Grevillea Hunt
Marriott, Neil – WW6.1 The Great Grevillea Hunt (Part 2)
Massam, Marion – WW3.3 - Cane Toad – a Potential Threat in WA
Massam, Marion – WW4.1 Feral Pig Problems
Massam, Marion & Wright, Lisa – WW12.2 On the Look-out for Lorikeets
Maslin, Bruce & Orchard, Tony – WW8.4 Most Australian Wattles Likely to Remain Acacia
Masters, Carolina – WW16.1 a 20-year Period of Observations of King‟s Skinks Living Freely in a
Suburban Garden
Masters, Jim – WW2.3 Farmtree Corridors and Dams Bringing Birds Back to the Barnyard
Mathwin, Kath – WW3.4 Tagasaste – Environmental Problem
Mawson, Peter & Orell, Peter - WN10 Sand Pads - Using Tracks to Monitor Fauna
Mawson, Peter & Hussey, Penny – WN11 Requirements for Native Mammals
Mawson, Peter – WW7.3 So - You Want to Keep a Pet Reptile Do You? Well, You Can Now!
Mawson, Peter – WW9.3 Mouse Control in Crops – A Natural Alternative (Somebody Should Give a
Hoot!)
Maxwell, Marika – WW10.3 Quokka Habitat Management and Fire in the South-west
McArthur, Bill – WW8.3 Assessing Changes in Plant Communities
McArthur, Bill – WW10.3 Reference Soils of South-western Australia
McCrum, Eric – WW4.4 Pollination
McElroy, Robyn – WW3.3 Warwick SHS Bushland
McEvoy, Sarah – WW1.4 Biodiversity Conservation and Wildflower Production of Bush Cauliflower
(Verticordia eriocephala) – Conflict or Compatibility?
McFarlane, Terry – WW3.1 Native Grasses – the Unsung Heroes
McKinney, John & Kemp, Cherie – WW11.3 Busselton Shire Biodiversity Incentive Strategy
McLaughlin, Sue – WW4.3 Frog Watching
McMahon, Leonie – WW6.3 Carnaby's Black-Cockatoo: A Cocky in Crisis
McNee, Shapelle – WW1.3 Loss of Grasstrees in Remnant Vegetation
McQuoid, Nathan & Leighton, Sylvia – WW16.4 A Puzzle for the Eucalypt Buffs
Meney, Kathy – WW2.3 Wetland Rushes and Sedges
Mercer, Jack – WW7.3 What is Happening With Wandoo?
Millar, Melissa – WW14.1 Seed Collection for Revegetation: guidelines for determining the requirement
for local seed
Millard, Blondie – WW10.4 Acacias of the Welstead District
Miller, Kennedy – WW6.2 Farm Land and Bush Care - an Expense or an Investment in Productivity?
Miller, Kingsley – WW1.1 Even a Stump Will Do!
Mills, Helena – WW14.3 The Twistiest Gimlet in the World!
Moir, Margaret – WW8.3 Returning the Forgotten Animals – Bugs
Moir, Margaret – WW8.3 Bees in My Bamboo!
Moller, Sophie & Bramwell, Emma – WW9.3 New Funding Opportunity for High Conservation Value
Properties in the South-West
Moonie, Peter & Dixon, Bob - WW5.4 Erosion Control on Kings Park Scarp
Moore, Susan & Munro, Jennifer – WW9.1 Landholders and Recovery Planning: Toolibin Lake
Catchment
Morgan, Dave & Beatty, Stephen – WW8.4 Freshwater Fishes of South-Western Australia
Morris, Cliff – WW6.3 Greening Challenge - Helping Environment, Helping Community
Morris, Vicky & Bradby, Keith – WN4 Seed Collection from Native Plants
Morton, Lincoln & Robinson Chris - WW8.1 Local Acacia Seeds for Human Consumption
Moulton, Brian – WW2.2 Social Benefits of Trees on Farms
Mueller, Otto – WW1.2 Escape to an Island
Munro, Jennifer & Moore, Susan – WW9.1 Landholders and Recovery Planning: Toolibin Lake
Catchment
Murphy, Chris – WW16.2 Wild Girl
Murphy, Marie & Garkaklis, Mark – WW7.3 Hopping Into a Bright Future - the Woylie Sandalwood Story
Murphy, Mike – WW14.1 Seeing Double
Murphy White, Susie – WW8.2 Implementing a Biodiversity Revegetation Project
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N
Newbey, Brenda – WW1.1 Birds on Farms
Newbey, Brenda – WW2.2 Birds on Farms – Update
Newbey, Brenda – WW5.3 Birds on Roadsides
Newbey, Brenda – WW7.4 Western Ground Parrot
Newbey, Steve – WW11.2 Transforming Farm Dams into Wetlands for Wildlife
Nicol, Dion & Ryan, Megan – WW12.4 Developing Native Perennial Legumes as Pasture Species for the
WA Wheatbelt
Nicolle, Dean & French, Malcolm – WW7.1 Eucalypts for Use in Saline Revegetation
Noble, Jim – WW5.1 Relict Bettong Warrens in Western Australia‟s Pastoral Lands
O
Obbens, Frank – WW11.4 Calandrinias – Spectacular Succulents
O'Connor, Michael & Gardiner, Bruce – WW6.4 The Changing Greenough Flats
O‟Donoghue, Mike – WW2.3 Rare Plants in Wet Areas
O‟Donoghue, Mike – WW2.4 It‟s Blooming Flowers
O‟Dwyer, Alison & Breen David – WW10.4 Talbot Hall Reserve Regeneration Project
Oldfield, Barrie – WW7.1 The Great Nambling Salt Flat Wheelbarrow Muster
Orchard, Tony and Maslin, Bruce – WW8.4 Most Australian Wattles Likely to Remain Acacia
Orell, Peter & Mawson, Peter – WN10 Sand Pads - Using Tracks to Monitor Fauna
P
Paap, Trudy – WW6.3 Canker Disease in Corymbia calophylla (Marri)
Page, Kimberley – WW17.2 Coral Lichens – Ocean or Outcrop?
Parsons, Blair – WW10.2 Diagnosing the Decline of Malleefowl Using Sightings Data
Pate, John – WW4.3 Legumes in Native Bush and Agriculture: Potential Roles in Fixation and Cycling of
Nitrogen?
Pate, John – WW15.5 A Mardo as Part of the Household
Pate, John – WW17.1 At Home with Brush-tailed Phascogales
Patrick, Sue – WW2.2 Multiple Values of Remnant Vegetation, an Example from the Avon District
Paine, Gordon – WW3.1 Ticks
Parlevliet, Gerry – WW9.3 Commercialising Native Flora Profitably
Parsons, Michael, Carol Lander & Bryon Lamont – WW9.2 Secrets of Kangaroo Herbivory
Payne, Joan – WW2.3 Mary Carroll Park Wetland from a Waterbird Conservation Group Perspective
Payne, Wendy – WW5.3 CALM Covenants – Create Your Own Private Reserve
Pearson, David – WW1.4 Scaly Friends – Carpet Pythons
Penna Anne-Marie – WW10.4 Invasive Birds- Starlings and their impacts
Phillips, Ryan – WW15.2 Sex, Murder and Deception – the Private Lives of Thynnine Wasps
Pickering, Robyn – WW15.4 The Australasian Bittern Project
Pickering, Robyn – WW16.1 Things That go „Boom!‟ in the Night – the Australasian Bittern
Pieroni, Margaret – WW2.4 Dryandras – They Are Not All Prickly Shrubs!
Pieroni, Margaret – WW16.4 Hybridisation in Nature
Pitman, Helen & Chapman, Tamra – WW10.2 Hungry Black Cockatoos
Pittman, Jan – WW 15.2 Reptiles in the Hills
Platt, Steve – WW 1.1 Origins of Land for Wildlife
Platt, Steve – WW17.2 Monitoring Fire and Nature on Your Property
Playford, Phillip – WW7.1 The Permo-Carboniferous Glaciation of Gondwana: Its Impact on Western
Australia
Podger, Frank – WW3.3 Dieback – Plant Pathogen
Porter, Bob – WW8.1 A Story of Red-tailed Black Cockatoos
Porter, Bob – WW15.4 Grevilleas in the Northern Agricultural Region
Porter, Fleur – WW8.2 Nature-based Farm Tourism – Making it Happen!
Potter, Shauna – WW16.4 Selection of Additional Weeds of National Significance
Pouliquen-Young, Odile – WW4.2 Impact of Climate Change on the Distribution of the Genus Dryandra
Powell, Robert – WW2.4 The Use of Granite Outcrops by the Yellow Admiral Butterfly
Powell, Robert – WW10.4 Bee Poles
Power, Vicki & Scarparolo, Daniel – WW16.4 This is Numbat Country
Price, Adrian – WW16.2 Locusts – the Trees
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Prideaux, Gavin – WW13.4 Explaining Australia‟s Pleistocene Extinctions
Prince, Geoff – WW7.2 A Smart Little Wasp
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R
Randall, Rod – WW5.4 Weeds, Are You the Problem?
Randall, Rod – WW11.4 Wetting Agents, Penetrants, Aren‟t They the Same Thing?
Rafferty, Christine & Lamont, Byron – WW10.2 Kangaroo grazing preferences after fire at Whiteman
Park
Recher, Harry – WW4.1 The Future of Australia‟s Birds: A Personal Opinion
Recher, Harry & Majer, Jonathan – WW5.4 Tree Planting in Western Australia: Enhancing the
Opportunities for Conservation of Biodiversity
Recher, Harry – WW15.2 Cypress-pines and Birds
Recher, Harry – WW15.4 Nectar Nomads: a natural history of honeyeaters
Redreau, Dorothy – WW13.2 Blackberry Rust Arrives in Denmark
Redreau, Dorothy – WW15.5 Community Science in Action
Reynolds, Steve – WW6.3 A Kerb Too High
Roberts, Dale – WW9.4 Mating Systems in Australian Frogs: the Quacking frogs
Riley, Karen & Dale Roberts – WW13.4 Chytrid Fungus in South-west Frogs
Rippey, Elizabeth – WW8.1 Coastal Considerations
Robinson, Chris – WW1.2 Fitzgerald Biosphere Reserve – Remnant Vegetation Project
Robinson, Chris – WW4.2 Agonis Oil and the Curse of Potential
Robinson, Chris – WW6.1 Agonis fragrans essential oil - an update!
Robinson, Chris – WW6.1 Field Day on Profitable Revegetation with Sandalwood Attracts Interest
Robinson, Chris & Morton, Lincoln – WW8.1 Local Acacia Seeds for Human Consumption
Robinson, Richard - WW5.4 Armillaria Root Disease
Robinson, Richard – WW13.2 Fungi Respond to Bushfires
Rohl, Liesl – WW 2.4 It‟s Blooming Flowers
Rohl, Liesl & Smith, Russell – WN7 Management Guidelines for Remnant Vegetation Being Harvested
for Cutflowers
Rossetto, Maurizio – WW1.1 The Corrigin Grevillea Recovery Plan
Rowley, Ian – WW5.2 The Australian Magpie
Rushton, Juliet – WW15.1 Pardalotes at Our Door
Rutherford, Bill – WW12.3 Shorebirds – Observers Needed
Ryan, Megan & Nicol, Dion – WW12.4 Developing Native Perennial Legumes as Pasture Species for the
WA Wheatbelt
Rye, Barbara – WW6.2 Pimeleas - the Original Banksias!
S
Sadler, Brian – WW7.2 Guinea Pigs in a Laboratory for Climate Change? Observing Our Own
Responses
Salter, Glenys – WW16.2 Our Piece of Paradise
Saunders, Denis – WW6.1 The Ecological Imperatives for Conservation and Management of Native
Vegetation
Saunders, Denis – WW9.4 Decline in a Remnant of Salmon Gum and York Gum Woodland, 1978 to
1997 – WW9.4(8)
Saunders, Denis – WW14.3 Cockie Hunting
Saunders, Kathy – WW5.3 The Fauna and Flora of the State Barrier Fence
Savage, Alan – WW4.4 Is There Life in Our Inland Salt Lakes?
Scarparolo, Daniel & Power, Vicki – WW16.4 This is Numbat Country
Schofield, Louise – WW7.4 Frog Matters
Seabrook, Joanna – WW1.2 A Parliament of Crows
Seabrook, Joanna – WW2.2 Moving House
Seabrook, Joanna – WW3.2 Direct Seeding
Seabrook, Joanna – WW7.1 Wandoo Worries
Seaman, Sue – WW6.3 An Exciting Invasion
Shea, Dr Syd – WW 1.1 Welcome to Land for Wildlife
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Shedley, Erica – WW10.3 What Wildflower is That?
Short, Jeff – WW17.2 Habitat for the Red-tailed Phascogale
Short, Marie – WW14.1 The Value of Oil Mallees as Foraging Habitat for the Western Pygmy Possum
Siemon, Graeme – WW1.1 Marri – The Forgotten Timber
Siemon, Graeme – WW3.4 Using Sheoak Timber
Singe, David – WW4.3 Linking Bush Remnants
Slack Smith, Shirley – WW3.4 Snails and Slugs in the Bush
Smart, Ann – WW1.3 Birds, Trees – and Fly Strike
Smart, Claire, Melissa Weybury and Peter Speldewinde – WW15.1 What is That Lurking in the Creek?
Smith, Mick – WW1.3 Aquatic Invertebrates and River Health
Smith, Russell & Rohl, Liesl – WN7 Management Guidelines for Remnant Vegetation Being Harvested
for Cutflowers
Smith, Teagan – WW9.3 Acacia paradoxa: Native or Alien?
Smith, Teagan – WW10.2 Chuditch-proof your chook pen!
Smith, Teagan – WW10.4 – Little White Bat
Smith, Teagan & Manning, Liz – WW10.3 Healthy Ecosystems – Inland Wandoo Woodland Case Study
Wyalkatchem Nature Reserve
Smithson, Ann – The Genus Gompholobium – Glorious But Little-studied Legumes
Speed, Russell – WW9.4 Groundwater Trends in the Northern Agricultural Region
Spencer, Peter – WW7.3 How Ancient DNA Was Able to Identify the Extinct Rock-wallaby on Depuch
Island
Spooner, Amanda – WW10.4 Lambertia – Wild Honeysuckle
Sprigg, Tricia – WW11.4 A Python on the Rafters!
Stack, Gillian – WW11.3 Recovery of a Sandplain Standout!
Standering, Allan and Julie – WW16.2(10) Fire and Recovery
Start, Tony – WW1.2 Bats, The Forgotten Insect Eaters
Start, Tony – WW3.2 Mistletoe – Friend or Foe?
Start, Tony & Handasyde Tricia – WW6.3 The Value of Old Photographs
Start, Tony – WW8.1 Western Shield – Reviewed
Start, Tony – WW17.1 Dams on the Ord River – a Photo History
Storey, Andrew – WW2.3 Large Woody Debris are Important Habitat in Rivers
Strauss, Monica – WW4.2 Natural Vermin Control
Strelein, Marie – WW11.3 Keep Your Eyes Peeled for the Underground Orchid
Sturis, Jana – WW16.2 Flora Roads, Vegetation Surveys and Roadside Conservation
Sutton, Carole – WW3.3 Bird Nesting Boxes
Sutton, Carole – WW7.4 Feral Bees and How We Coped With Them
Sweedman, Luke – WW11.1 Botanical Collecting in Western Australia
Switzer, Carolyn and Kemp, Cherie – WW7.1 Shire of Busselton Offers Rate Rebates on LFW Sites
Syme, Katrina – WW2.2 The Larger Fungi
Syme, Katrina – WW5.2 Truffles (and the Fungimap Conference)
T
Tauss, Cate – WW11.3 Reedia – A Very Extraordinary Sedge
Taylor, Jan – WW7.2 Dunny-bugs
Taylor, Neil & Gail – WW6.1 Vermin Proof Fencing
Thiele, Kevin – WW12.3 Dryandras are Banksias!
Thompson, Peter – WW1.3 Weed Control in Direct Seeding Areas – Selective Herbicides
Thompson, Graham – WW2.3 The Aestivating Salamanderfish – Where Do All the Fish Go?
Thygesen, Julie – WW4.1 Sustainable Seed Banks Project
Tieu, Anle – WW5.2 Using Heat to Break Dormancy of WA Legume and Non-legume Species
Titelius, Herbert – WW5.2 Management of Hills Firebreaks
Todd, Benson – WW12.4 Prostrate Flame Flower: the Long Road to Recovery
Tommerup, Inez – WW3.3 Fungi Work for Healthy Trees, Shrubs and Soil 24 Hours a Day; Wheatbelt
Woodlands are Rich in Fungi
Tommerup, Inez & Bougher, Neale – WW6.3 Putting the Fungi Back - Kick Start Your Reveg!
Tonkin, Margaret – WW16.1 Save the Minnows!
Tregonning, Jo – WW14.1 Children Take Their Voices to Canberra
True, Denise – WW1.4 Biodiversity Conservation and Wildflower Production of Bush Cauliflower
(Verticordia eriocephala) – Conflict or Compatibility?
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Turner, Shane – WW14.4 Seedy Gap in Nature
Twidale, CR & Bourne JA – WW8.2 Granite Landforms of the Wheatbelt – A Brief Review
Twigg, Laurie – WW13.4 Spreading Weeds – the Hidden Costs of Rabbits and Foxes
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V
Valentine, Leonie E & Wilson, Barbara – WW16.3 Animal Responses to Fire in Banksia Woodlands in
Western Australia
Valton, Pamela – WW5.3 So You Want to Build a Fence, Do You?
Valton, Pamela – WW8.1 "Writing the Wild" at Perup - an Inspiring Weekend
van der Waag, Jessica – WW7.4(3) Diet Analysis of Malleefowl
van Leeuwen, Stephen – WW13.3 Biodiversity of an Economic Hotspot, the Pilbara Biological Survey
Vear, Kevin – WW3.3 Dieback – Plant Pathogen
Vickridge, Peter – WW11.2 Those Dam Swans!
Vickridge, Peter – WW13.3 A Wambenger Story
W
Walley, Trevor – WW3.2 The Story of Muja
Walley, Trevor – WW3.2 Why Mankind Tells Stories
Walley, Trevor – WW12.1 Wild Grapes – Bush Tucker
Walley, Trevor – WW12.2 Got Writer‟s Block? – Let a Sheoak Whisper to You!
Walley, Trevor & Hussey, Penny – WW13.2 What‟s In a Name? - Snottygobble
Waterhouse, Barbara – WW4.2 Siam Weed – Coming Home With the Troops?
Watkins, Gareth – WW15.5 A Woylie Good Result!
Watkins, Rita – WW2.2 Study of Birds in Tree Belts Through Farmland at Frankland, Western Australia
Wells, Brice – WW9.3 Wings in the Wheatbelt – the Rufous Treecreeper
Wells, Shirley – WW13.1 The Joy of Revegetation
Wellstead Heritage Committee – WW8.3 Wellstead – Almost Wattled Out!
Wheeler, Ian – WW5.1 Owls in the South West of Western Australia
Wheeler, Judy – WW6.4 Floras Past and Present
White, Nicole – WW12.2 Black Cockatoo Research at the Wildlife Genetics Lab
Whitford, Kim – WW16.3 Jilakin Jarrah
Wildy, Jodi – WW13.3 Bush Detective – Who Made This? (wolf spider)
Williams, Matt – WW7.4 Effect of Fire on Butterflies
Williams, Matt – WW13.4 Butterflies in Urban Bushlands Around Perth
Williamson, Julie – WW15.2 How Much Can One Roo Drink?
Wills, Allan – WW12.1 Earwig Flies? Ancient and Mysterious Insects
Wills, Allan – WW17.2 Plant Galls: the diverse abnormal growths on plants resulting from their intimate
associations with parasitic organisms
Wilmot, Peter & Knight, Jan – WW7.1 Typha at Lake Mealup
Wilson, Barbara & Leonie E Valentine – WW16.3 Animal Responses to Fire in Banksia Woodlands in
Western Australia
Wilson, Meg – WW9.4 A Happy Taddy Tale!
Wilson, Meg – WW10.2 A Tall Tale But True – Happy Taddy Tales Part 2
Wilson, Paul – WW5.2 Salacious Samphires
Witham, Danielle – WW15.5 Conservation Planning in the Southwest Australia Ecoregion – Where to
Allocate Limited Resources?
Withers, Philip – WW2.3 The Aestivating Salamanderfish – Where Do All the Fish Go?
Woodall, Geoff – WW7.3 Australian Native Platysace Tubers: From the Bush to Your Shopping Basket
Woodall, Geoff & Emmott, Tim – WW9.3 Growers Working Together to Develop the Sandalwood
Industry
Woodburn, Tim – WW3.4 Pest of Bridal Creeper Released
Woodward, Mary – WW15.2 Here It Is – the Flower From Those Unknown Leaves!
Wyre, Gordon – WW1.3 Western Shield: What is it and What is it Doing?
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Yates, Colin & Coates, David – WW5.4 Viability and Persistence of Small Isolated Populations of Rare
and Threatened Flora. Is There Hope?
Yates, Colin, Phil Ladd & Dave Coates – WW14.3 Life on the Rocks – a Cracking Good Place to Live
Yeomans, Vanessa – WW4.1 Flooded Gum Dieback
Young, Jennifer – WW4.4 Hakeas
Young, Joanna – WW9.3 Dieback Caused by Phytophthora cinnamomi: what is at risk and what can we
save?
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Ziembicki, Mark – WW9.4 What‟s the Bustard‟s Story?
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