Publications by authors named "Emily Hynes"

Introduction: Translocation is a valuable and increasingly used strategy for the management of both threatened and overabundant wildlife populations. However, in some instances the translocated animals fail to thrive. Differences in diet between the source and destination areas may contribute to poor translocation outcomes, which could conceivably be exacerbated if the animals' microbiomes are unsuited to the new diet and cannot adapt.

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The Australian koala is an iconic marsupial with highly specific dietary requirements distributed across heterogeneous environments, over a large geographic range. The distribution and genetic structure of koala populations has been heavily influenced by human actions, specifically habitat modification, hunting and translocation of koalas. There is currently limited information on population diversity and gene flow at a species-wide scale, or with consideration to the potential impacts of local adaptation.

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Article Synopsis
  • The Australian continent has unique biogeographic patterns, but research on how Pleistocene climate changes affected Southern Hemisphere mesic environments is lacking.
  • The study focused on koalas' genetic health by analyzing mitochondrial DNA from 662 samples, revealing 53 unique haplotypes and indicating a single evolutionary unit with four distinct lineages linked to geographical clusters.
  • Current koala populations show increased genetic structure, likely due to habitat fragmentation, which hampers gene flow, underscoring the need for standardized data and integrated conservation strategies.
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Subcutaneous hormone implants are a useful method for managing overabundant marsupials in restricted enclosures in Australia. Levonorgestrel induces long-term infertility in the kangaroo, tammar wallaby and koala, although the contraceptive mechanism of levonorgestrel is unknown for any marsupial. In the present study, it was investigated if insertion of a single levonorgestrel or control implant at the time of reactivation of the diapausing blastocyst affected the subsequent post-partum oestrus or the preceding follicular development.

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The tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii) is a small, promiscuous, macropodid marsupial. Females usually produce a single young each year and there is a clear dominance hierarchy between adult males. The dominant male usually mates first and then guards the female to prevent access to her by other males.

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