Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T10:46:24.886Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

References

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2009

Patricia J. Armati
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Chris R. Dickman
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Ian D. Hume
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Marsupials , pp. 331 - 364
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbott, I. (2002). Origin and spread of the cat, Felis catus, on mainland Australia, with a discussion of the magnitude of its early impact on native fauna. Wildlife Research 29, 51–74CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abbott, I. and Burbidge, A. A. (1995). The occurrence of mammal species on the islands of Australia: a summary of existing knowledge. CALMScience 1, 259–324Google Scholar
Ahnelt, P. K., Hokoc, J. N. and Rohlich, P. (1995). Photoreceptors in a primitive mammal, the South American opossum, Didelphis marsupialis aurita: characterization with anti-opsin immunolabeling. Visual Neuroscience 12, 793–804CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aitkin, L. (1998). Hearing: the Brain and Auditory Communication in Marsupials. Berlin: SpringerCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Algar, D. and Kinnear, J. E. (1996). Secondary poisoning of foxes following a routine 1080 rabbit-baiting campaign in the Western Australian wheatbelt. CALMScience 2, 149–152Google Scholar
ANCA (1996). Draft Threat Abatement Plan for Predation by the European Red Fox. Canberra: Australian Nature Conservation Agency
Archer, M. (1982). Genesis: and in the beginning there was an incredible carnivorous mother. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, p. ⅶ–ⅹGoogle Scholar
Archer, M., Godthelp, H. and Hand, S. J. (1993). Early Eocene marsupials from Australia. In Kaupia: Dramstädter Beiträge zur Naturgeschichte. Monument Grube Messel: Perspectives and Relationships. Part 2 (ed. Schrenk, F. and Ernest, K.). Darmstadt: Hessisches Landesmuseum Darmstadt, pp. 193–200Google Scholar
Archer, M., Hand, S. J., Godthelp, H. and Creaser, P. (1997). Correlation of the Cainozoic sediments of the Riversleigh World Heritage fossil property. In Actes du Congrès Biochrom (ed. Aguiler, J.-P., Legendre, S. and Michaux, J.). Montpellier: École Pratique des Hautes Études, Institut de Montpellier, pp. 131–152Google Scholar
Archer, M., Arena, R., Bassarova, M.et al. (1999). The evolutionary history and diversity of Australian mammals. Australian Mammalogy 21, 1–45Google Scholar
Arrese, C., Archer, M., Runham, P., Dunlop, S. A. and Beazley, L. D. (2000). Visual system in a diurnal marsupial, the numbat (Myrmecobius fasciatus): retinal organization, visual acuity and visual fields. Brain Behaviour and Evolution 55, 163–175CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arrese, C. A., Hart, N. S., Thomas, N., Beazley, L. D. and Shand, J. (2002). Trichromacy in Australian marsupials. Current Biology 12, 657–660CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arrese, C. A., Oddy, A. Y., Runham, P. B.et al. (2005). Cone topography and spectral sensitivity in two potentially trichromatic marsupials, the quokka (Setonix brachyurus) and quenda (Isoodon obesulus). Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B 272, 791–796CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashworth, D. L. (1995). Female reproductive success and maternal investment in the euro (Macropus robustus erubescens) in the arid zone. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Ashworth, D. L. (1996). Strategies of maternal investment in marsupials: a comparison with eutherian mammals. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander Press, pp. 226–251Google Scholar
Aslin, H. (1974). The behaviour of Dasyuroides byrnei (Marsupialia) in captivity. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 35, 187–208CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atherton, R. G. and Haffenden, A. T. (1982). Observations on the reproduction and growth of the long-tailed pygmy possum, Cercartetus caudatus (Marsupialia: Burramyidae), in captivity. Australian Mammalogy 5, 253–259Google Scholar
Atramentowicz, M. (1982). Influence du milieu sur l'activité locomotrice et la reproduction de Caluromys philander (L). Revue Ecologie (Terre et Vie) 36, 373–395Google Scholar
Atramentowicz, M. (1986). Dynamique de population chez trois marsupiaux didelphides de Guyane. Biotropica 18, 136–149CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atramentowicz, M. (1988). La frugivore opportuniste de trois marsupiaux didelphides de Guyana. Revue Ecologie (Terre et Vie) 43, 47–57Google Scholar
Augee, M. L., Smith, B. and Rose, S. (1996). Survival of wild and hand-reared ringtail possums Pseudocheirus peregrinus in bushland near Sydney. Wildlife Research 23, 99–108CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Azara, F. (1802). Apuntamientos para la historia natural de los cuadrúpedos del Paraguay y Río La Plata. Republished New York, NY: Arno Press, 1978Google Scholar
Baillie, J. and Groombridge, B. (1996). 1996 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland: IUCNGoogle Scholar
Baker, M. W. C. and Croft, D. B. (1993). Vocal communication between the mother and young of the eastern grey kangaroo, Macropus giganteus, and the red kangaroo, M. rufus (Marsupialia: Macropodidae). Australian Journal of Zoology 41, 257–272CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bakker, H. R., Bradshaw, S. D. and McDonald, I. R. (1976). Gravity as the sole navigational aid to the newborn quokka. Nature 259, 42Google ScholarPubMed
Barboza, P. S. (1993). Digestive strategies of the wombats: feed intake, fiber digestion and digesta passage in two grazing marsupials with hindgut fermentation. Physiological Zoology 66, 983–999CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barboza, P. S. and Hume, I. D. (1992). Hindgut fermentation in the wombats: two marsupial grazers. Journal of Comparative Physiology B162, 561–566Google Scholar
Barboza, P. S. and Vanselow, B. A. (1990). Copper toxicity in captive wombats (Marsupialia: Vombatidae). 1990 Proceedings of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians, pp. 204–206
Barboza, P. S., Hume, I. D. and Nolan, J. V. (1993). Nitrogen metabolism and requirements of nitrogen and energy in wombats (Marsupialia: Vombatidae). Physiological Zoology 66, 807–828CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barker, S. (1960). The role of trace elements in the biology of the quokka (Setonix brachyurus, Quoy & Gaimard). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of Western AustraliaGoogle Scholar
Barnes, R. D. (1987). The special anatomy of Marmosa robinsoni. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Hunsaker, D. II). New York, NY: Academic Press, pp. 387–412Google Scholar
Baynes, A. (1987). The original mammal fauna of the Nullarbor and southern peripheral regions. In A Biological Survey of the Nullarbor region, South and Western Australia (ed. McKenzie, N. L. and Robinson, A. C.). Adelaide: Government Printer, pp. 139–152Google Scholar
Baynes, A. (1990). The Mammals of Shark Bay, Western Australia. In Research in Shark Bay (ed. Berry, P. F., Bradshaw, S. D. and Wilson, B. R.). Perth: Western Australian Museum, pp. 313–325Google Scholar
Beal, A. M. (1992). Relationships between plasma composition and secretory rates in the potoroine marsupials, Aepyprymnus rufescens and Potorous tridactylus. Journal of Comparative Physiology B162, 637–645CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bee, C. A. and Close, R. L. (1993). Mitochondrial DNA analysis of introgression between adjacent taxa of rock wallabies Petrogale species (Marsupialia, Macropodidae). Genetics Research 61, 21–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bekoff, M. and Byers, J. A., eds. (1998). Animal Play: Evolutionary, Comparative and Ecological Perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, W. J. (1991). Searching Behaviour: the Behavioural Ecology of Finding Resources. London: Chapman and HallGoogle Scholar
Belovsky, G. E., Schmitz, O. J., Slade, J. B. and Dawson, T. J. (1991). Effects of spines and thorns on Australian arid zone herbivores of different body masses. Oecologia 88, 521–528CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bennett, A. F. and Baxter, B. J. (1989). Diet of the long-nosed potoroo, Potorous tridactylus (Marsupialia: Potoroidae), in south-western Victoria. Australian Wildlife Research 16, 263–271CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bennett, A. F. and Dawson, W. R. (1976). Metabolism. In Biology of the Reptilia (ed. Gans, C. and Dawson, W. R.), Vol. 5. New York, NY: Academic Press, pp. 127–223Google Scholar
Bennett, J. H., Hayman, D. L. and Hope, R. M. (1986). Novel sex differences in linkage values and meiotic chromosome behaviour in a marsupial. Nature 323, 59–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biggins, J. G. (1979). Olfactory communication in the brushtailed possum, Trichosurus vulpecula, Kerr, 1792 (Marsupialia: Phalangeridae). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, Monash University
Biggins, J. G. (1984). Communication in possums: a review. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 35–57Google Scholar
Birkhead, T. R. and Hunter, F. M. (1990). Mechanisms of sperm competition. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 5, 48–52CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Birkhead, T. R. and M⊘ller, A. P. (1993). Female control of paternity. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 8, 100–104CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Birney, E. C., Jenness, R. and Hume, I. D. (1980). Evolution of an enzyme system: ascorbic acid biosynthesis in monotremes and marsupials. Evolution 34, 230–239CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bodel, N. (1996). Olfactory discrimination in the male red-necked pademelon, Thylogale thetis. Unpublished B. Sc Hons. thesis, University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Bolliger, A. (1944). The response of the sternal integument of Trichosurus vulpecula to castration and to sex hormones. Journal and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 78, 234–238Google Scholar
Boyce, M. S. (1988). Evolution of life histories: theory and patterns from mammals. In Evolution of Life Histories of Mammals (ed. Boyce, M. S.). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, pp. 3–30Google Scholar
Bradshaw, S. D., Morris, K. D., Dickman, C. R., Withers, P. C. and Murphy, D. (1994). Field metabolism and turnover in the golden bandicoot (Isoodon auratus) and other small mammals from Barrow Island, Western Australia. Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 29–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breed, W. G. (1996). Egg maturation and fertilization in marsupials. Reproduction, Fertility and Development 8, 617–643CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brooks, D. E., Gaughwin, M. and Mann, T. (1978). Structural and biochemical characteristics of the male accessory organs of reproduction in the hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus latifrons). Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B 201, 191–207CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broom, R. (1896). On the comparative anatomy of the organ of Jacobson in marsupials. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 21, 591–623CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, A. H. D., Young, A., Burdon, J.et al. (1997). Genetic Indicators for State of the Environment Reporting. Canberra: Environment AustraliaGoogle Scholar
Brown, B. E. (2004). Atlas of New World marsupials. Fieldiana: Zoology, new series 102, 1–308Google Scholar
Brown, G. D. and Main, A. R. (1967). Studies on marsupial nutrition. V. The nitrogen requirements of the euro, Macropus robustus. Australian Journal of Zoology 15, 7–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunner, H. and Coman, B. J. (1974). The Identification of Mammalian Hair. Melbourne: Inkata PressGoogle Scholar
Bryant, B. J. (1977). Lymphatic and immunohematopoietic systems. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Hunsaker, D. II). New York, NY: Academic Press, pp. 349–385Google Scholar
Buchmann, O. L. K. and Grecian, E. A. (1974). Discrimination-reversal learning in the marsupial Isoodon obesulus (Marsupialia: Peramelidae). Animal Behaviour 22, 975–981CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buddle, B. M. and Young, L. J. (2000). Immunobiology of mycobacterial infections in marsupials. Developmental and Comparative Immunology 24, 517–529CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Burbidge, A. A. (1971). The Flora and Fauna of the Monte Bello Islands. Perth: Department of Fisheries and FaunaGoogle Scholar
Burbidge, A. A. (1989). Australian and New Zealand Islands: Nature Conservation Values and Management. Perth: Department of Conservation and Land ManagementGoogle Scholar
Burbidge, A. A. (1995). Conservation of Australian mammals. In The Mammals of Australia (ed. Strahan, R.). Chatswood: Reed Books, pp. 26–29Google Scholar
Burbidge, A. A. and George, A. S. (1978). The flora and fauna of Dirk Hartog Island, Western Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 60, 71–90Google Scholar
Burbidge, A. A. and McKenzie, N. L. (1989). Patterns in the modern decline of Western Australia's vertebrate fauna: causes and conservation implications. Biological Conservation 50, 143–198CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burbidge, A. A., Johnson, K. A., Fuller, P. J. and Southgate, R. I. (1988). Aboriginal knowledge of the mammals of the central deserts of Australia. Australian Wildlife Research 15, 9–39CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burk, A., Westerman, M. and Springer, M. S. (1998). The phylogenetic position of the musky rat-kangaroo and the evolution of bipedal hopping in kangaroos (Macropodidae: Diprotodontia). Systematic Biology 47, 457–474CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Byers, J. A. (1999). The distribution of play behaviour among Australian marsupials. Journal of Zoology (London) 247, 349–356CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calaby, J. H. (1960). Observations on the banded anteater Myrmecobius f. fasciatus Waterhouse (Marsupialia), with particular reference to its food habits. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 135, 183–207CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calaby, J. H. (1971a). Man, fauna and climate in Aboriginal Australia. In Aboriginal Man and Environment in Australia (ed. Mulvaney, D. J. and Golson, J.). Canberra: Australian National University Press, pp. 80–93Google Scholar
Calaby, J. H. (1971b). The status of Australian Macropodidae. Australian Zoologist 16, 17–29Google Scholar
Calaby, J. H. (1984). Foreword. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney. Australian Mammal Society, pp. ⅲ–ⅳGoogle Scholar
Caraman, P. (1976). The Lost Paradise: the Jesuit Republic in South America. New York, NY: Seabury PressGoogle Scholar
Cassidy, G. and Cabana, T. (1993). The development of the long descending propriospinal projections in the opossum, Monodelphis domestica. Developmental Brain Research 72, 291–299CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cassidy, G., Boudrias, D., Pflieger, J. F. and Cabana, T. (1994). The development of sensorimotor reflexes in the Brazilian opossum Monodelphis domestica. Brain Behaviour and Evolution 43, 244–253CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ceballos, G. and Simonetti, J. A., eds. (2002). Diversidad y Conservación de los Mamíferos Neotropicales. Distrito Federal, Mexico: Comisión Nacional para el Conocimiento y Uso de la BiodiversidadGoogle Scholar
Charles-Dominique, P., Atramentowicz, M., Charles-Dominique, M.et al. (1981). Les mammifères frugivores arboricoles nocturnes d'une forêt guyanaise: interrelations plantes-animaux. Revue Ecologie (Terre et Vie) 35, 342–435Google Scholar
Chilcott, M. J. and Hume, I. D. (1985). Coprophagy and selective retention of fluid digesta: their role in the nutrition of the common ringtail possum, Pseudocheirus peregrinus. Australian Journal of Zoology 33, 1–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chivers, D. J. and Langer, P. (1994). The Digestive System of Mammals: Food, Form and Function. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christensen, P. and Burrows, N. (1995). Project Desert Dreaming: experimental reintroduction of mammals to the Gibson Desert, Western Australia. In Reintroduction Biology of Australian and New Zealand Fauna (ed. Serena, M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 199–207Google Scholar
Christensen, P. E. R. (1980). A sad day for native fauna. Forest Focus 23, 3–12Google Scholar
Cisternas, P. A. and Armati, P. J. (1999). Development of the thymus, spleen, lymph nodes and liver in the marsupial, Isoodon macrourus (northern brown bandicoot, Peramelidae). Anatomy and Embryology, Berlin 200, 433–443CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cisternas, P. A. and Armati, P. J. (2002). Immune system cell markers in the northern brown bandicoot, Isoodon macrourus. Developmental and Comparative Immunology 24, 771–784CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clancy, T. F. (1989). Factors influencing movement patterns of the euro (Macropus robustus erubescens) in the arid zone. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Clancy, T. F. and Croft, D. B. (1991). Differences in habitat use and grouping behavior between macropods and eutherian herbivores. Journal of Mammalogy 72, 441–449CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claridge, A. W. and Cork, S. J. (1994). Nutritional value of two species of hypogeal fungi for the long-nosed potoroo (Potorous tridactylus), a forest-dwelling mycophagous marsupial. Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 701–710CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claridge, A. W., Cunningham, R. B. and Tanton, M. T. (1993). Foraging patterns of the long-nosed potoroo (Potorous tridactylus) for hypogeal fungi in mixed-species and regrowth eucalypt forest stands in southeastern Australia. Forest Ecology and Management 61, 75–90CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, J. L., Jones, M. E. and Jarman, P. J. (1989). A day in the life of a kangaroo: activities and movements of eastern grey kangaroos Macropus giganteus at Wallaby Creek. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 611–618Google Scholar
Close, R. L. and Bell, J. N. (1997). Fertile hybrids in two genera of wallabies: Petrogale and Thylogale. Journal of Heredity 88, 393–397CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clutton-Brock, T. H. (1991). The Evolution of Parental Care. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University PressGoogle Scholar
Cockburn, A. (1990). Life history of the bandicoots: developmental rigidity and phenotypic plasticity. In Bandicoots and Bilbies (ed. Seebeck, J. H., Brown, P. R., Wallis, R. M. and Kemper, C. M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 285–292Google Scholar
Cockburn, A. (1997). Living slow and dying young: senescence in marsupials. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 163–171Google Scholar
Cockburn, A., Scott, M. P. and Scotts, D. J. (1985). Inbreeding avoidance and male-biased natal dispersal in Antechninus spp. (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae). Animal Behaviour 33, 908–915CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colagross, A. M. L. and Cockburn, A. (1993). Vigilance and grouping in the eastern grey kangaroo, Macropus giganteus. Australian Journal of Zoology 41, 325–334CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coleman, L. A., Harman, A. M. and Beazley, L. D. (1987). Displaced retinal ganglion cells in the wallaby Setonix brachyurus. Vision Research 27, 1269–1277CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Collet, C., Joseph, R. and Nicholas, K. (1989). Molecular cloning and characterization of a novel marsupial milk protein gene. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 164, 1380–1383CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Collins, L. R. (1973). Monotremes and Marsupials: a Reference for Zoological Institutions. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution PressGoogle Scholar
Coman, B. J. (1996). Fox Vulpes vulpes. In The Mammals of Australia (ed. Strahan, R.). Chatswood: Reed, pp. 698–699Google Scholar
Cone, A. L. and Cone, D. M. (1970). Operant conditioning of Virginia opossum. Psychological Reports 26, 83–86CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, D. W. and McKenzie, L. M. (1997). Genetics of tammar wallabies. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 120–131Google Scholar
Cooper, D. W., Johnston, P. G., VandeBerg, J. L., Maynes, G. M. and Chew, G. K. (1979). A comparison of genetic variability at X-linked and autosomal loci in kangaroos, man and Drosophila. Genetics Research 33, 243–252CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cooper, D. W., Johnston, P. G., Graves, J. A. M. and Watson, J. M. (1993). X-inactivation in marsupials and monotremes. Seminars in Developmental Biology 4, 117–128CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, S. J. and Hope, R. M. (1993). Evolution and expression of a beta-like globin gene of the Australian marsupial Sminthopsis crassicaudata. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 90, 11777–11781CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cooper, S. J., Murphy, R., Dolman, G., Hussey, D. and Hope, R. M. (1996). A molecular and evolutionary study of the beta-globin gene family of the Australian marsupial Sminthopsis crassicaudata. Molecular Biology and Evolution 13, 1012–1022CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cork, S. J. (1991). Meeting the energy requirements for lactation in a macropodid marsupial: Current nutrition versus stored body reserves. Journal of Zoology (London) 225, 567–576CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cork, S. J. and Dove, H. (1986). Milk consumption in late lactation in a marsupial, the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Proceedings of the Nutrition Society of Australia 11, 93Google Scholar
Cork, S. J. and Dove, H. (1989). Lactation in the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). II. Intake of milk components and maternal allocation of energy. Journal of Zoology (London) 219, 399–409CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cork, S. J., Hume, I. D. and Dawson, T. J. (1983). Digestion and metabolism of a natural foliar diet (Eucalyptus punctata) by an arboreal marsupial, the koala (Phascolarctos cinereus). Journal of Comparative Physiology B153, 181–190CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coulson, G. (1989). Repertoires of social behaviour in the Macropodoidea. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 457–473Google Scholar
Coulson, G. (1996). Anti-predator behaviour in marsupials. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 158–186Google Scholar
Coulson, G. (1997). Repertoires of social behaviour in captive and free-ranging grey kangaroos, Macropus giganteus and Macropus fuliginosus (Marsupialia: Macropodidae). Journal of Zoology (London) 242, 119–130CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coulson, G. and Croft, D. B. (1981). Flehmen in kangaroos. Australian Mammalogy 4, 139–140Google Scholar
Cowan, I. M., O'Riordan, A. M. and Cowan, J. S. M. (1974). Energy requirements of the dasyurid marsupial mouse Antechinus swainsonii (Waterhouse). Canadian Journal of Zoology 52, 269–275CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crandall, K. A., Bininda-Edmonds, O. R. P., Mace, G. M. and Wayne, R. K. (2000). Considering evolutionary processes in conservation biology. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 15, 290–295CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Crespo, J. A. (1982). Ecología de la comunidad de mamíferos del Parque Nacional Iguazú, Misiones. Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales ‘Bernardino Rivadavia’ III, 45–162Google Scholar
Croft, D. B. (1981a). Behaviour of red kangaroos, Macropus rufus (Desmarest, 1822) in northwestern New South Wales, Australia. Australian Mammalogy 4, 5–58Google Scholar
Croft, D. B. (1981b). Social behaviour of the euro, Macropus robustus (Gould), in the Australian arid zone. Australian Wildlife Research 8, 13–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Croft, D. B. (1982). Communication in the Dasyuridae (Marsupialia): a review. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 291–299Google Scholar
Croft, D. B. (1989). Social organisation of the Macropodoidea. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 505–525Google Scholar
Croft, D. B. (1996), Locomotion, foraging competition and group size. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 134–157Google Scholar
Croft, D. B. and Snaith, F. (1991). Boxing in red kangaroos, Macropus rufus: aggression or play?International Journal of Comparative Psychology 4, 221–236Google Scholar
Crompton, A. W. and Hiiemae, K. M. (1970). Molar occlusion and mandibular movements during occlusion in the American opossum, Didelphis marsupialis. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 49, 21–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crook, J. H., Ellis, J. E. and Goss-Custard, J. D. (1976). Mammalian social systems: structure and function. Animal Behaviour 24, 261–274CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crowe, O. and Hume, I. D. (1997). Morphology and function of the gastrointestinal tract of Australian folivorous possums. Australian Journal of Zoology 45, 357–368CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cuthill, I. C. and Houston, A. I. (1997). Managing time and energy. In Behavioural Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach (ed. Krebs, J. R. and Davies, N. B.). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 97–120Google Scholar
Darwin, C. (1839). The Voyage of the ‘Beagle’. Republished Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1962Google Scholar
Davies, N. B. (1991). Mating systems. In Behavioural Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach (ed. Krebs, J. R. and Davies, N. B.). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 263–294Google Scholar
Dawson, T. J. (1989). Diets of macropodoid marsupials: general patterns and environmental influences. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 129–142Google Scholar
Dawson, T. J. (1995). Kangaroos: Biology of the Largest Marsupials. Sydney: University of New South Wales PressGoogle Scholar
Dawson, T. J. and Ellis, B. A. (1994). Diets of mammalian herbivores in Australian arid shrublands: seasonal effects on overlap between red kangaroos, sheep and rabbits and on dietary niche breadths and electivities. Journal of Arid Environments 26, 257–271CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawson, T. J. and Hulbert, A. J. (1970). Standard metabolism, body temperature, and surface areas of Australian marsupials. American Journal of Physiology 218, 1233–1238Google ScholarPubMed
Dawson, T. J. and Taylor, C. R. (1973). Energetic cost of locomotion in kangaroos. Nature 246, 313–314CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blainville, H. M. D. (1833). Cours de physiologie générale et comparée: professé a la Faculté des Sciences de Paris. Paris: G. BaillièreGoogle Scholar
Deane, E. M. and Cooper, D. W. (1988). Immunological development. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 190–199CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickman, C. R. (1996). Overview of the Impacts of Feral Cats on Australian Native Fauna. Canberra: Australian Nature Conservation AgencyGoogle Scholar
Dickman, C. R. (2003). Distributional ecology of dasyurid marsupials. In Predators with Pouches: the Biology of Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Jones, M. E., Dickman, C. R. and Archer, M.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 318–331Google Scholar
Dickman, C. R., Predavec, M. and Downey, F. J. (1995). Long-range movements of small mammals in arid Australia: implications for land management. Journal of Arid Environments 31, 441–452CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donaldson, R. and Stoddart, M. (1994). Detection of hypogeous fungi by Tasmanian bettong (Bettongia gaimardi: Marsupialia; Macropodoidea). Journal of Chemical Ecology 20, 1201–1207CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doolittle, J. H. and Weimer, J. (1968). Spatial probability learning in the Virginian opossum. Psychonomic Science 13, 191CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunlop, S. A., Tee, L. B., Lund, R. D. and Beazley, L. D. (1997). Development of primary visual projections occurs entirely postnatally in the fat-tailed dunnart, a marsupial mouse, Sminthopsis crassicaudata. Journal of Comparative Neurology 384, 26–403.0.CO;2-N>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Eisenberg, J. F. (1981). The Mammalian Radiations: an Analysis of Trends in Evolution, Adaptation and Behavior. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. (1985). Form and function: the phylogenesis of predatory behaviour. Australian Mammalogy 8, 195–200Google Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. (1989). Mammals of the Neotropics. The Northern Neotropics: Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. and Golani, I. (1977). Communication in the Metatheria. In How Animals Communicate (ed. Sebeok, T. A.). Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 575–599Google Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. and Leyhausen, P. (1972). The phylogenesis of predatory behaviour in mammals. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 30, 59–93CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Eisenberg, J. F. and Redford, K. H. (1999). Mammals of the Neotropics. The Central Neotropics: Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. and Wilson, D. E. (1981). Relative brain size and demographic strategies in didelphid marsupials. American Naturalist 118, 1–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F., Collins, L. R. and Wemmer, C. (1975). Communication in the Tasmanian Devil (Sarcophilus harrisii) and a survey of auditory communication in the Marsupialia. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 37, 379–399CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eldridge, M. D. B., King, J. M., Loupis, A. K.et al. (1999). Unprecedented low levels of genetic variation and inbreeding depression in an island population of the black-footed rock-wallaby. Conservation Biology 13, 531–541CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Emmons, L. H. and Feer, F. (1997). Neotropical Rainforest Mammals: a Field Guide, 2nd edn. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press
Erxleben, J. C. P. (1777). Systema regni animalis per classes, ordines, genera, species, varietates cum synonymia et historia animalium. Classis 1: Mammalia. Leipzig: WygandGoogle Scholar
Ewer, R. F. (1968). A preliminary survey of the behaviour in captivity of the dasyurid marsupial, Sminthopsis crassicaudata (Gould). Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 25, 319–365CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ewer, R. F. (1969). Some observations on the killing and eating of prey by two dasyurid marsupials: the mulgara Dasycercus cristicauda, and the Tasmanian devilSarcophilus harrisii. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 26, 23–38CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fagen, R. (1981). Animal Play. Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Fanning, F. D. (1982). Reproduction, growth and development in Ningaui sp. (Dasyuridae, Marsupialia) from the Northern Territory. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, vol. 1, pp. 23–37Google Scholar
Finlayson, H. H. (1932). Caloprymnus campestris: its recurrence and characters. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 56, 146–167Google Scholar
Firestone, K. B., Elphinstone, M. S., Sherwin, W. B. and Houlden, B. A. (1999). Phylogeographical population structure of tiger quolls Dasyurus maculatus (Dasyuridae: Marsupialia), an endangered carnivorous marsupial. Molecular Ecology 8, 1613–1625CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisher, D. O., Owens, I. P. F. and Johnson, C. N. (2001). The ecological basis of life history variation in marsupials. Ecology 82, 3531–3540CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisher, R. A. (1930). The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection. Oxford: Clarendon PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flannery, T. (1994a). Possums of the World: a Monograph of the Phalangeroidea. Chatswood: GEO PublicationsGoogle Scholar
Flannery, T. (1994b). The Future Eaters. Chatswood: ReedGoogle Scholar
Flannery, T. (1995a) Mammals of New Guinea. Chatswood: ReedGoogle Scholar
Flannery, T. (1995b) Mammals of the South-West Pacific and Moluccan Islands. Chatswood: ReedGoogle Scholar
Fleay, D. (1935). Breeding of Dasyurus viverrinus and general observations on the species. Journal of Mammalogy 16, 10–16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleay, D. (1947). Gliders of the Gum Trees. Melbourne: Bread and Cheese ClubGoogle Scholar
Fleay, D. (1950). Experiences with Australia's brushtailed tuan. Animal Kingdom 53, 152–157Google Scholar
Fleay, D. (1965). Australia's ‘needle-in-a-haystack’ marsupial. Victorian Naturalist 82, 195–204Google Scholar
Fleming, M. R. (1980). Thermoregulation and torpor in the sugar glider, Petaurus breviceps (Marsupialia: Petauridae). Australian Journal of Zoology 28, 521–534CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleming, M. R. and Frey, H. (1984). Aspects of the natural history of feathertail gliders (Acrobates pygmaeus) in Victoria. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 403–408Google Scholar
Fleming, T. H. (1972). Aspects of the population dynamics of three species of opossums in the Panama Canal Zone. Journal of Mammalogy 53, 619–623CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleming, T. H. (1973). The reproductive cycles of three species of opossums and other mammals in the Panama Canal Zone. Journal of Mammalogy 54, 439–455CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fletcher, T. and Selwood, L. (2000). Possum reproduction and development. In The Brushtail Possum: Biology, Impact and Management of an Introduced Marsupial (ed. Montague, T. L.). Lincoln: Manaaki Whenua Press, pp. 62–81Google Scholar
Foley, W. J. and Hume, I. D. (1987). Nitrogen requirements and urea metabolism in two arboreal marsupials, the greater glider (Petauroides volans) and the brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula), fed Eucalyptus foliage. Physiological Zoology 60, 241–250CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foley, W. J., Hume, I. D. and Cork, S. J. (1989). Fermentation in the hindgut of the greater glider (Petauroides volans) and brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). Physiological Zoology 62, 1126–1143CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fonseca, G. A. B. and Kierulff, M. C. (1988). Biology and natural history of Brazilian Atlantic Forest small mammals. Bulletin of the Florida State Museum (Biological Sciences) 34, 99–133Google Scholar
Fonseca, G. A. B., Rylands, A., Costa, C. M., Machado, R. B. and Leite, Y. L. (1994). Livro vermelho dos mamiferos brasileiros ameacados de extinção. Belo Horizonte: Fundaĉão BiodiversitasGoogle Scholar
Fonseca, G. A. B., Herrmann, G., Leite, Y. L. R., Mittermeier, R. A., Rylands, A. B. and Patton, J. L. (1996). Lista anotada dos mamíferos do Brasil. Occasional Paper 4. Washington, DC: Conservation International; Belo Horizonte: Fundação Biodiversitas, pp. 1–38Google Scholar
Foster, J. W., Brennan, F. E., Hampikian, G. K.et al. (1992). Evolution of sex determination and the Y chromosome: SRY-related sequences in marsupials. Nature 359, 531–533CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Francis, C. M., Anthony, E. L. P., Brunton, J. A. and Kunz, T. H. (1994). Lactation in male fruit bats. Nature 367, 691–692CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frankham, R. F. (1995). Effective population size/adult population size ratios in wildlife: a review. Genetical Research 66, 95–107CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franq, E. N. (1969). Behavioral aspects of feigned death in the opossum, Didelphis marsupialis. American Midland Naturalist 81, 556–568CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frederick, H. and Johnson, C. N. (1996). Social organisation in the rufous bettong, Aepyprymnus rufescens. Australian Journal of Zoology 44, 9–17CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friend, J. A. (1990). The numbat Myrmecobius fasciatus (Myrmecobiidae): history of decline and potential for recovery. Proceedings of the Ecological Society of Australia 16, 369–377Google Scholar
Friend, J. A. and Whitford, R. W. (1986). Captive breeding of the numbat (Myrmecobius fasciatus). Australian Mammal Society Bulletin 9, 54Google Scholar
Frost, S. B., Milliken, G. W., Plautz, E. J., Masterton, R. B. and Nudo, R. J. (2000). Somatosensory and motor representations in cerebral cortex of a primitive mammal (Monodelphis domestica): a window into the early evolution of sensorimotor cortex. Journal of Comparative Neurology 421, 29–513.0.CO;2-9>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fry, E. J. and Saunders, N. R. (2002). Spinal repair in immature animals: a novel approach using the South American opossum Monodelphis domestica. Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology 27, 542–547CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fry, E. J., Stolp, H. B., Lane, M. A., Dziegielewska, K. M. and Saunders, N. R. (2003). Regeneration of supraspinal axons after complete transection of the thoracic spinal cord in neonatal opossums (Monodelphis domestica). Journal of Comparative Neurology 466, 422–444CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fujino, T., Navaratnam, N. and Scott, J. (1998). Human apolipoprotein B RNA editing deaminase gene (APOBEC1). Genomics 47, 266–275CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ganslosser, U. (1979). Soziale interaktionen des Doria-Baumkanguruhs (Dendrolagus dorianus Ramsay 1883) (Marsupialia: Macropodidae). Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde 44, 1–18Google Scholar
Ganslosser, U. (1989). Agonistic behaviour in macropodids: a review. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 475–503Google Scholar
Gardner, A. (1982). Virginia opossum Didelphis virginiana. In Wild Mammals of North America (ed. Chapman, J. A. and Feldhamer, G. A.). Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, pp. 3–36Google Scholar
Gardner, A. (1993). Order Didelphimorphia. In Mammal Species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (ed. Wilson, D. E. and Reeder, D. M.). Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 15–23Google Scholar
Gaughwin, M. D. (1979). The occurrence of flehmen in a marsupial: the hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus latifrons). Animal Behaviour 27, 1063–1065CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaughwin, M. D. and Wells, R. T. (1978). General features of the reproduction of the hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus latifrons) in the Blanchetown region of South Australia. Australian Mammal Society Bulletin 5, 46–47Google Scholar
Geiser, F. (1987). Hibernation and daily torpor in two pygmy-possums (Cercartetus spp., Marsupialia). Physiological Zoology 60, 267–278CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geiser, F. (1994). Hibernation and daily torpor in marsupials: a review. Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 1–16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gemmell, N. J., Veitch, C. and Nelson, J. (1999). Birth in the marsupial northern brown bandicoot Isoodon macrourus. Australian Journal of Zoology 47, 517–528CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gemmell, R. T. (1989). The persistence of the corpus luteum of pregnancy into lactation in the marsupial bandicoot, Isoodon macrourus. General and Comparative Endocrinology 75, 355–362CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gemmell, R. T. (1990). The initiation of the breeding season of the northern brown bandicoot, Isoodon macrourus in captivity. In Bandicoots and Bilbies (ed. Seebeck, J. H., Brown, P. R., Wallis, R. L. and Kemper, C. M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 205–212Google Scholar
Gemmell, R. T. and Nelson, J. (1988). Ultrastructure of the olfactory system of three newborn marsupial species. Anatomical Record 221, 655–662CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gemmell, R. T. and Rose, R. W. (1989). The senses involved in movement of some newborn Macropodidae and other marsupials from cloaca to pouch. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 339–347Google Scholar
Gibson, L. A. (2001). Seasonal changes in the diet, food availability and food preference of the greater bilby (Macrotis lagotis) in south-western Queensland. Wildlife Research 28, 121–134CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson, L. A. and Hume, I. D. (2000). Seasonal field energetics and water flux rates of the greater bilby (Macrotis lagotis). Australian Journal of Zoology 48, 225–239CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giles, J. R. and Lim, L. (1987). Conservation of the Endangered Species of New South Wales: an Assessment of Current Status, Threats and Requirements for Maintenance of Wildlife Populations. Proceedings of the National Conference on Conservation of Threatened Species and their Habitats 2. Sydney: Australian Committee for IUCNGoogle Scholar
Gill, T. N. (1872). Arrangement of the families of mammals with analytical tables. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 11, 1–98Google Scholar
Girjes, A. A., Ellis, W. A., Lavin, M. F. and Carrick, F. N. (1993). Immuno-dot blot as a rapid diagnostic method for detection of chlamydial infection in koalas (Phasolarctos cinereus). Veterinary Record 133, 136–141CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glas, R., Graves, J. A. M., Toder, R., Ferguson-Smith, M. and O'Brien, P. C. (1999). Cross-species chromosome painting between human and marsupial directly demonstrates the ancient region of the mammalian X. Mammalian Genome 10, 1115–1116CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Godthelp, H., Wroe, S. and Archer, M. (1999). A new marsupial from the early Eocene Tingamarra local fauna of Murgon in southeastern Queensland: the prototypical Australian marsupial?Journal of Mammalian Evolution 6, 289–313CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldingay, R. (1984). Photoperiodic control of diel activity in the sugar glider (Petaurus breviceps). In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 385–390Google Scholar
Goldingay, R. (1992). Socioecology of the yellow-bellied glider (Petaurus australis) in a coastal forest. Australian Journal of Zoology 40, 267–278CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldingay, R. (1994). Loud calls of the yellow-bellied glider, Petaurus australis: territorial behaviour by an arboreal marsupial?Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 279–293CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldingay, R. and Kavanagh, R. P. (1990). Socioecology of the yellow-bellied glider (Petaurus australis) at Waratah Creek, New South Wales. Australian Journal of Zoology 38, 327–341CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grakoui, O. A., Bromley, S. K., Sumen, C.et al. (1999). The immunological synapse: a molecular machine controlling T cell activation. Science 285, 221–227CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grant, T. R. and Temple-Smith, P. D. (1987). Observations on torpor in the small marsupial Dromiciops australis (Marsupialia: Microbiotheriidae) from southern Chile. In Possums and Opossums: Studies in Evolution (ed. Archer, M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, and Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 273–277Google Scholar
Graves, J. A. M. (1995). The origin and function of the mammalian Y chromosome and Y-borne genes: an evolving understanding. Bioessays 17, 311–320CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Graves, J. A. M. and Westerman, M. (2002). Marsupial genetics and genomics. Trends in Genetics 18, 517–521CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Green, B. and Merchant, J. C. (1988). The composition of marsupial milk. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 41–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gregory, W. K. (1947). The monotremes and the palimpsest theory. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 88, 1–52Google Scholar
Grigera, D. E. and Rapoport, E. H. (1983). Status and distribution of the European hare in South America. Journal of Mammalogy 64, 163–166CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haffenden, A. T. (1984). Breeding, growth and development in the Herbert River ringtail possum, Pseudocheirus herbertensis herbertensis (Marsupialia: Petaudidae). In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 277–281Google Scholar
Handasyde, K. A. (1986). Factors affecting reproduction in the female koala (Phascolarctos cinereus). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, Monash UniversityGoogle Scholar
Happold, M. (1972). Maternal and juvenile behaviour in the marsupial jerboa, Antechinomys spenceri (Dasyuridae). Australian Mammalogy 1, 27–37Google Scholar
Harder, J. D. (1992). Reproductive biology of South American marsupials. In Reproductive Biology of South American Vertebrates (ed. Hamlett, W. C.). New York, NY: Springer, pp. 211–228CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harder, J. D. and Fleck, D. W. (1997). Reproductive ecology of New World marsupials. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 175–203Google Scholar
Harding, H. R., Carrick, F. N. and Shorey, C. D. (1981). Marsupial phylogeny: new indications from sperm ultrastructure and development in Tarsipes spencerae. Search 12, 45–47Google Scholar
Harrison, G. A. and Wedlock, D. N. (2000). Marsupial cytokines: structure, function and evolution. Developmental and Comparative Immunology 24, 473–484CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hayman, D. L. (1990). Marsupial cytogenetics. Australian Journal of Zoology 37, 331–349CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayssen, V., Lacy, R. C. and Parker, P. J. (1985). Metatherian reproduction: transitional or transcending?American Naturalist 126, 617–632CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hearn, J. P. (1975). The role of the pituitary in the reproduction of the male tammar wallaby, Macropus eugenii. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 42, 399–402CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Heathcote, C. F. (1987). Grouping of eastern grey kangaroos in open habitat. Australian Wildlife Research 14, 343–348CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heinsohn, G. E. (1966). Ecology and reproduction of the Tasmanian bandicoots (Perameles gunnii and Isoodon obesulus). University of California Publications in Zoology 80, 1–96Google Scholar
Hendrichs, H. (1996). Specific problems of Metatherian and Eutherian sociality. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 125–133Google Scholar
Henry, S. R. (1984). Social organisation of the greater glider (Petauroides volans) in Victoria. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 221–228Google Scholar
Henry, S. R. and Suckling, G. C. (1984). A review of the ecology of the sugar glider. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 355–358Google Scholar
Hess, W. R. (1954). Das Zwischenhirn. Basel: SchwabeGoogle Scholar
Hill, J. P. and O'Donoghue, C. H. (1913). The reproductive cycle of the marsupial Dasyurus viverrinus. Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science 59, 133–174Google Scholar
Hilton-Taylor, C. (2000). 2000 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Gland: IUCNGoogle Scholar
Hinde, R. A. and Stevenson-Hinde, J. (1976). Towards understanding relationships: dynamic stability. In Growing Points in Ethology (ed. Bateson, P. P. G. and Hinde, R. A.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 451–479Google Scholar
Hinds, L. A. (1988). The hormonal control of lactation. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 55–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hinds, L. A. and Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1985). Seasonal and circadian patterns of circulating prolactin during lactation and seasonal quiescence in the tammar, Macropus eugenii. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 74, 173–183CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Holmes, D. J. (1992). Sternal odor cues for social discrimination by female Virginia opossums, Didelphis virginiana. Journal of Mammalogy 72, 402–410CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hope, R. M. and Godfrey, G. K. (1988). Genetically determined variation of pelage colour and reflectance in natural and laboratory populations of the marsupial Sminthopsis crassicaudata (Gould). Australian Journal of Zoology 36, 441–454CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hope, R. M., Cooper, S. and Wainwright, B. (1990). Globin macromolecular sequences in marsupials and monotremes. Australian Journal of Zoology 37, 289–313CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horovitz, I. and Sánchez-Villagra, M. R. (2003). A morphological analysis of marsupial mammal higher-level phylogenetic relationships. Cladistics 19, 181–212CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horsup, A. (1996). The behavioural ecology of the allied rock-wallaby Petrogale assimilis. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, James Cook UniversityGoogle Scholar
Houlden, B. A., Greville, W. D. and Sherwin, W. B. (1996a). Evolution of MHC class I loci in marsupials: characterization of sequences from koala (Phascolarctos cinereus). Molecular and Biological Evolution 13, 1119–1127CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houlden, B. A., England, P. R., Taylor, A. C., Greville, W. D. and Sherwin, W. B. (1996b). Low genetic variability of the koala Phascolarctos cinereus in south-eastern Australia following a severe population bottleneck. Molecular Ecology 5, 269–281CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houlden, B. A., Costello, B. H., Sharkey, D.et al. (1999). Phylogeogenetic differentiation in the mitochondrial control region in the koala, Phascolarctos cinereus (Goldfuss 1817). Molecular Ecology 8, 999–1011CrossRefGoogle Scholar
How, R. A. (1978). Population strategies of four species of Australian ‘possums’. In The Ecology of Arboreal Folivores (ed. Montgomery, G. G.). Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 305–313Google Scholar
How, R. A. (1981). Population parameters of two congeneric possums, Trichosurus spp., in north-eastern New South Wales. Australian Journal of Zoology 29, 205–215CrossRefGoogle Scholar
How, R. A., Barnett, J. L., Bradley, A. J., Humphreys, W. F. and Martin, R. (1984). The population biology of Pseudocheirus peregrinus in a Leptospermum laevigatum thicket. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 261–288Google Scholar
Howard, W. E. and Amaya, J. N. (1975). European rabbit invades western Argentina. Journal of Wildlife Management 39, 757–761CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hrdina, F. C. (1997). Marsupial destruction in Queensland 1877–1930. Australian Zoologist 30, 272–286CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huffman, K. J., Nelson, J., Clarey, J. and Krubitzer, L. (1999). Organization of somatosensory cortex in three species of marsupials, Dasyurus hallucatus, Dactylopsila trivirgata, and Monodelphis domestica: neural correlates of morphological specializations. Journal of Comparative Neurology 403, 5–323.0.CO;2-F>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hughes, R. L. (1962). Reproduction in the macropod marsupial, Potorous tridactylus (Kerr). Australian Journal of Zoology 10, 193–224CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hughes, R. L. and Hall, L. S. (1984). Embryonic development in the common brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 197–212Google Scholar
Hulbert, A. J. (1988). Metabolism and the development of endothermy. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 148–161CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D. (1977). Production of volatile fatty acids in two species of wallaby and in sheep. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 56A, 299–304CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D. (1986). Nitrogen metabolism in the parma wallaby, Macropus parma. Australian Journal of Zoology 34, 147–155CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D. (1999). Marsupial Nutrition. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D. and Carlisle, C. H. (1985). Radiographic studies on the structure and function of the gastrointestinal tract of two species of potoroine marsupials. Australian Journal of Zoology 33, 641–654CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D. and Warner, A. C. I. (1980). Evolution of microbial digestion in mammals. In Digestive Physiology and Metabolism in Ruminants (ed. Ruckebusch, Y. and Thivend, P.). Lancaster: MTP Press, pp. 665–684CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D., Jazwinski, E. and Flannery, T. F. (1993). Morphology and function of the digestive tract in New Guinean possums. Australian Journal of Zoology 41, 85–100CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D., Runcie, M. J. and Caton, J. M. (1997). Digestive physiology of the ground cuscus (Phalanger gymnotis), a New Guinean phalangerid marsupial. Australian Journal of Zoology 45, 561–571CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunsaker, D. II, ed. (1977). The Biology of Marsupials. New York, NY: Academic Press
Hunsaker, D., II and Shupe, D. (1977). Behavior of New World marsupials. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Hunsaker, D. II). New York, NY: Academic Press, pp. 279–347Google Scholar
Hunt, M., Slotnick, B. and Croft, D. (1999). Olfactory function in red kangaroos (Macropus rufus) assessed using odor-cued taste avoidance. Physiology and Behavior 67, 365–368CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hutson, G. D. (1975). Sequences of prey-catching behaviour in the brush-tailed marsupial rat (Dasyuroides byrnei). Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 39, 39–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huxley, T. H. (1880). On the application of the laws of evolution to the arrangement of the Vertebrata, and more particularly of the Mammalia. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 43, 649–662Google Scholar
IUCN (1994). 1994 IUCN Red List Categories. IUCN Species Survival Commission. Gland: IUCN
IUCN (2001). 2000 IUCN Red List Categories: Version 3.1. IUCN Species Survival Commission. IUCN: Gland
Janetos, A. C. (1980). Strategies of female choice: a theoretical analysis. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 7, 107–112CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janke, A., Feldmaier-Fuchs, G., Thomas, W. K., von Haeseler, A. and Paabo, S. (1994). The marsupial mitochondrial genome and the evolution of placental mammals. Genetics 137, 243–256Google ScholarPubMed
Janke, A., Gemmell, N. J., Feldmaier-Fuchs, G., von Haeseler, A. and Paabo, S. (1996). The mitochondrial genome of a monotreme: the platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus). Journal of Molecular Evolution 42, 153–159CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janke, A., Magnell, O., Wieczorek, G., Westerman, M. and Arnason, U. (2002). Phylogenetic analysis of 18S rRNA and the mitochondrial genomes of the wombat, Vombatus ursinus, and the spiny anteater, Tachyglossus aculeatus: increased support for the Marsupionta hypothesis. Journal of Molecular Evolution 54, 71–80CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Janssens, P. A. and Messer, M. (1988). Changes in nutritional metabolism during weaning. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 162–175CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janssens, P. A. and Rogers, A. M. T. (1989). Metabolic changes during pouch vacation and weaning in Macropodoids. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 367–376Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. (1983). Mating systems and sexual dimorphism in large, terrestrial, mammalian herbivores. Biological Reviews 58, 485–520CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarman, P. J. (1984). The dietary ecology of macropod marsupials. Proceedings of the Nutrition Society of Australia 9, 82–87Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. (1987). Group size and activity in eastern grey kangaroos. Animal Behaviour 35, 1044–1050CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarman, P. J. (1991). Social behaviour and social organisation of the Macropodoidea. Advances in the Study of Behaviour 20, 1–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarman, P. J. and Bayne, P. (1997). Behavioural ecology of Petrogale penicillata in relation to conservation. Australian Mammalogy 19, 219–228Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. and Coulson, G. (1989). Dynamics and adaptiveness of grouping in macropods. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 527–547Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. and Kruuk, H. (1996). Phylogeny and social organisation in mammals. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 80–101Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. and Southwell, C. J. (1986). Grouping, associations and reproductive strategies in eastern grey kangaroos. In Ecological Aspects of Social Evolution (ed. Rubenstein, D. I. and Wrangham, R. W.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, pp. 399–428Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. and Wright, S. M. (1993). Macropod studies at Wallaby Creek. IX. Exposure and responses of eastern grey kangaroos to dingoes. Wildlife Research 20, 833–843CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jerison, H. J. (1973). Evolution of the Brain and Intelligence. New York, NY: Academic PressGoogle Scholar
Jimenez, J. A., Hughes, K. A., Alaks, G., Graham, L. and Lacy, R. C. (1994). An experimental study of inbreeding depression in a natural habitat. Science 266, 271–273CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. N. (1986). Philopatry, reproductive success of females, and maternal investment in the red-necked wallaby. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 19, 143–150CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. N. (1987). Relationships between mother and infant red-necked wallabies (Macropus rufogriseus banksianus). Ethology 74, 1–20CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. N. (1989). Social interactions and reproductive tactics in red-necked wallabies (Macropus rufogriseus banksianus). Journal of Zoology (London) 217, 267–280CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. N. and Crossman, D. G. (1991). Dispersal and social organization of the northern hairy-nosed wombat Lasiorhinus krefftii. Journal of Zoology (London) 225, 605–615CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. N. and Johnson, K. A. (1983). Behaviour of the bilby, Macrotis lagotis (Reid) (Marsupialia: Thylacomyidae) in captivity. Australian Wildlife Research 10, 77–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, J. I. (1977). Central nervous system of marsupials. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Hunsaker, D. II). New York, NY: Academic Press, pp. 157–278Google Scholar
Johnson, K. A., Burbidge, A. A. and McKenzie, N. L. (1989). Australian Macropodoidea: causes of decline and future research and management. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 641–657Google Scholar
Jones, F. W. (1923). The Mammals of South Australia. Part I. The Monotremes and the Carnivorous Marsupials. Adelaide: Government PrinterGoogle Scholar
Jones, F. W. (1924). The Mammals of South Australia. Part II. The Bandicoots and the Herbivorous Marsupials. Adelaide: Government PrinterGoogle Scholar
Jones, M. (1997). Character displacement in Australian dasyurid carnivores: size relationships and prey size patterns. Ecology 78, 2569–2587CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, M. E. and Barmuta, L. A. (1998). Diet overlap and relative abundance of sympatric dasyurid carnivores: a hypothesis of competition. Journal of Animal Ecology 67, 410–421CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, R. C. (1989). Reproduction in male Macropodidae. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 287–305Google Scholar
Jones, T. E. and Munger, B. L. (1985). Early differentiation of the afferent nervous system in glabrous snout skin of the opossum (Monodelphis domestica). Somatosensory Research 3, 169–184CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Julien-Laferrière, D. (1991). Organisation du peuplement de marsupiaux en Guyane française. Revue d'Ecologie (La Terre et la Vie) 46, 125–144Google Scholar
Julien-Laferrière, D. and Atramentowicz, M. (1990). Feeding and reproduction of three didelphid marsupials in two Neotropical forests (French Guiana). Biotropica 22, 404–415CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kakulas, B. A. (1963). Influence of the size of enclosure on the development of myopathy in the captive Rottnest quokka. Nature 198, 673–674CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kakulas, B. A. (1966). Regeneration of skeletal muscle in the Rottnest quokka. Australian Journal of Experimental Biology and Medical Science 44, 673–688CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kardong, K. V. (1998). Vertebrates: Comparative Anatomy, Function and Evolution. New York, NY: McGraw-HillGoogle Scholar
Kaufmann, J. H. (1974a). Social ethology of the whiptail wallaby, Macropus parryi, in north-eastern New South Wales, Australia. Animal Behaviour 22, 281–369CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaufmann, J. H. (1974b). The ecology and evolution of social organization in the kangaroo family (Macropodidae). American Zoologist 14, 51–62CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kavanagh, R. P. and Rohan-Jones, W. G. (1982). Calling behaviour of the yellow-bellied glider, Petaurus australis Shaw. Australian Mammalogy 5, 95–112Google Scholar
Kean, R. I. (1967). Behaviour and territorialism in Trichosurus vulpecula (Marsupialia). Proceedings of the New Zealand Ecological Society 14, 71–78Google Scholar
Kelt, D. A. and Martinez, D. R. (1989). Notes on distribution and ecology of two marsupials endemic to the Valdavian Forests of southern South America. Journal of Mammalogy 70, 220–224CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, M. (1992). Australasian Marsupials and Monotremes: an Action Plan for their Conservation. Gland: IUCNGoogle Scholar
Kerle, A. (2001). Possums: the Brushtails, Ringtails and Greater Glider. Sydney: University of New South Wales PressGoogle Scholar
Kerry, K. R. (1969). Intestinal disaccharidase activity in a monotreme and eight species of marsupials (with an added note on the disaccharidases of five species of sea birds). Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 52A, 235–246Google Scholar
King, D. R., Oliver, A. J. and Mead, R. J. (1981). Bettongia and fluoracetate: a role for 1080 in fauna management. Australian Wildlife Research 8, 529–536CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kinnear, J. E., Onus, M. L. and Bromilow, R. N. (1988). Fox control and rock wallaby population dynamics. Australian Wildlife Research 15: 435–450CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kinnear, J. E., Onus, M. L. and Sumner, N. R. (1998). Fox control and rock-wallaby population dynamics. II. An update. Wildlife Research 25, 81–88CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirkby, R. J. (1977). Learning and problem-solving in marsupials. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Stonehouse, B. and Gilmore, D.). London: Macmillan, pp. 193–208CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirkby, R. J. and Preston, A. C. (1972). The behaviour of marsupials. II. Reactivity and habituation to novelty in Sminthopsis crassicaudata. Journal of Biological Psychology 14, 21–24Google Scholar
Kirsch, J. A. W. and Palma, R. E. (1995). DNA–DNA hybridization studies of carnivorous marsupials. V. A further estimate of relationships among opossums (Marsupialia: Didelphidae). Mammalia 59, 403–425CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kleiber, M. (1961). The Fire of Life. New York, NY: WileyGoogle Scholar
Klettenheimer, B. (1995). Social dominance and scent marking in the sugar glider (Petaurus breviceps). Advances in the Biosciences 93, 345–352Google Scholar
Klettenheimer, B., Temple-Smith, P. D. and Sofronidis, G. (1997). Father and son sugar gliders: more than a genetic coalition?Journal of Zoology (London) 242, 741–750CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kool, K. M. (1989). Behavioural ecology of the silver leaf monkey, Trachypithecus auratus sondaicus, in the Pangandaran Nature Reserve, West Java, Indonesia. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South Wales
Koop, B. F. and Goodman, M. (1988). Evolutionary and developmental aspects of two hemoglobin beta-chain genes (epsilon M and beta M) of opossum. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 85, 3893–3897CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koppenheffer, T. L., Spong, K. D. and Falvo, H. M. (1998). The complement system of the marsupial Monodelphis domestica. Developmental and Comparative Immunology 22, 231–237CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kovacic, D. A. and Guttman, S. I. (1979). An electrophoretic comparison of genetic variability between eastern and western populations of the opossum. American Midland Naturalist 101, 269–277CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krajewski, C., Wroe, S. and Westerman, M. (2000a). Molecular evidence for the pattern and timing of cladogenesis in dasyurid marsupials. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 130, 375–404CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krajewski, C., Woolley, P. A. and Westerman, M. (2000b). The evolution of reproductive strategies in dasyurid marsupials: implications of molecular phylogeny. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 71, 417–435CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krause, W. J. (1998). A review of histogenesis/organogenesis in the developing North American opossum (Didelphis virginiana). Advances in Anatomy, Embryology, and Cell Biology 143, 1–115Google Scholar
Krause, W. J., Yamada, J. and Cutts, J. H. (1985). Quantitative distribution of enterocrine cells in the gastrointestinal tract of the adult opossum, Didelphis virginiana. Journal of Anatomy 140, 591–605Google ScholarPubMed
Krockenberger, A. K. (1993). Energetics and nutrition during lactation in the koala. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of Sydney
Krockenberger, A. K. (1996). Composition of the milk of the koala, Phascolarctos cinereus, an arboreal folivore. Physiological Zoology 69, 701–718CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krockenberger, A. K., Hume, I. D. and Cork, S. J. (1998). Production of milk and nutrition of the dependent young of free-ranging koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus). Physiological Zoology 71, 45–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kulski, J. K., Shiina, T., Anzai, T., Kohara, S. and Inoko, H. (2002). Comparative genomic analysis of the MHC: the evolution of class I duplication blocks, diversity and complexity from shark to man. Immunological Reviews 190, 95–122CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lande, R. and Barrowclough, G. F. (1987). Effective population size, genetic variation, and their use in population management. In Viable Populations for Conservation (ed. Soulé, M. E.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 87–123CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lanyon, J. M. and Sanson, G. D. (1986). Koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) dentition and nutrition. II. Implications of toothwear in nutrition. Journal of Zoology (London) 209, 169–181CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lanzavecchia, A. and Sallusto, F. (2000). From synapses to immunological memory: the role of sustained T cell stimulation. Current Opinion in Immunology 12, 92–98CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Latz, P. (1995). Bushfires and Bushtucker: Aboriginal Plant Use in Central Australia. Alice Springs: IAD PressGoogle Scholar
Leblond, H. and Cabana, T. (1997). Myelination of the ventral and dorsal roots of the C8 and L4 segments of the spinal cord at different stages of development in the gray opossum, Monodelphis domestica. Journal of Comparative Neurology 386, 203–2163.0.CO;2-5>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lee, A. K. and Cockburn, A. (1985). Evolutionary Ecology of Marsupials. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, A. K., Woolley, P. and Braithwaite, R. W. (1982). Life history strategies of dasyurid marsupials. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, vol. 1, pp. 1–11Google Scholar
Lemos, B. and Cerqueira, R. (2002). Morphological differentiation in the white-eared opossum group (Didelphidae: Didelphis). Journal of Mammalogy 83, 354–3692.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Linnaeus, C. (1758). Systema naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis. Vol. 1: Regnum animale. Editio decima, reformata. Stockholm: Laurentii Salvii
Lissowsky, M. (1996). The occurrence of play behaviour in marsupials. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 87–107Google Scholar
Lockhart, J. and Schwartz, S. B. (1983). Early Latin America. New York, NY: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Long, J., Archer, M., Flannery, T. and Hand, S. J. (2002). Prehistoric Mammals of Australia and New Guinea: One Hundred Million Years of Evolution. Kensington: University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Lorini, M. L., Oliviera, A. J. and Persson, V. G. (1994). Annual age structure and reproductive patterns in Marmosa incana (Lund, 1841) (Didelphidae, Marsupialia). Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde 59, 65–73Google Scholar
Low, B. S. (1978). Environmental uncertainty and the parental strategies of marsupials and placentals. American Naturalist 112, 197–213CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luikart, G. and England, P. R. (1999). Statistical analysis of microsatellite DNA data. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 14, 253–255CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Luikart, G., Sherwin, W. B., Steele, B. M. and Allendorf, F. W. (1998). Usefulness of molecular markers for detecting population bottlenecks via monitoring genetic change. Molecular Ecology 7, 963–974CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lundie-Jenkins, G. (1993). Observations on the behaviour of the rufous hare-wallaby, Lagorchestes hirsutus Gould (Marsupialia: Macropodidae) in captivity. Australian Mammalogy 16, 29–34Google Scholar
Lundie-Jenkins, G., Corbett, L. K. and Phillips, C. M. (1993). Ecology of the rufous hare-wallaby, Lagorchestes hirsutus Gould (Marsupialia: Macropodidae) in the Tanami Desert, NT. II. Interactions with introduced mammal species. Wildlife Research 20, 477–494CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luo, Z.-X, Ji, Q., Wible, J. R. and Yuan, C.-X. (2003). An Early Cretaceous tribosphenic mammal and metatherian evolution. Science 302, 1934–1940CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mackenzie, W. C. and Owen, W. J. (1919). The Glandular System in Monotremes and Marsupials. Melbourne: Jenkin, BuxtonGoogle Scholar
Macquarie, J. (1992). The effect of resource distribution, resource density and competition on the foraging patterns of red kangaroos, Macropus rufus. Unpublished B. Sc Hons thesis, University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Main, A. R., Shield, J. W. and Waring, H. (1959). Recent studies on marsupial ecology. In Biogeography and Ecology in Australia (ed. Keast, A., Crocker, R. L. and Christian, C. S.). Den Haag: Junk, pp. 315–331CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malcolm, J. R. (1991). Comparative abundances of Neotropical small mammals by trap height. Journal of Mammalogy 72, 188–192CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mansergh, I. and Broome, L. (1994). The Mountain Pygmy-possum of the Australian Alps. Kensington: New South Wales University PressGoogle Scholar
Marenssi, S. A., Reguero, M. A., Santillana, S. N. and Vizcaino, S. F. (1994). Eocene land mammals from Seymour Island, Antarctica: palaeobiogeographical implications. Antarctic Science 6, 3–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mark, R. F. and Marotte, L. R. (1992). Australian marsupials as models for the developing mammalian visual system. Trends in Neuroscience 15, 51–57CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mark, R. F. and Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1997). The developmental neurobiology of vision. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 311–326Google Scholar
Marotta, C. A., Wilson, J. T., Forget, B. G. and Weissman, S. M. (1977). Human beta-globin messenger RNA. III. Nucleotide sequences derived from complementary DNA. Journal of Biological Chemistry 252, 5040–5053Google ScholarPubMed
Marsh, K. J., Foley, W. J., Cowling, A. and Wallis, I. R. (2003). Differential susceptibility to Eucalyptus secondary compounds explains feeding by the common ringtail (Pseudocheirus peregrinus) and common brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). Journal of Comparative Physiology B173, 69–78Google Scholar
Marshall, L. G. and Muizon, C. (1988). The dawn of the age of mammals in South America. National Geographic Research 4, 23–55Google Scholar
Martin, P. S. and Klein, R. G., eds. (1984). Quaternary Extinctions. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona PressGoogle Scholar
Maxwell, S., Burbidge, A. A. and Morris, K. (1996). The 1996 Action Plan for Australian Marsupials and Monotremes. Prepared by the Australasian Marsupial and Monotreme Specialist Group, IUCN Species Survival Commission. Canberra: Wildlife AustraliaGoogle Scholar
McCarrey, J. R. (1994). Evolution of tissue specific gene expression in mammals. Bioscience 44, 20–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McClelland, K. L., Hume, I. D. and Soran, N. (1999). Responses of the digestive tract of the omnivorous northern brown bandicoot, Isoodon macrourus (Marsupialia: Peramelidae), to plant and insect-containing diets. Journal of Comparative Physiology B169, 411–418CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKenzie, L. M. and Cooper, D. W. (1997). Hybridization between tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii) populations from Western and South Australia. Journal of Heredity 88, 398–400CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McLean, I. G. and Lundie-Jenkins, G. (1993). Copulation and associated behaviour in the rufous hare-wallaby, Lagorchestes hirsutus. Australian Mammalogy 16, 77–80Google Scholar
McNab, B. K. (1986). Food habits, energetics and the reproduction of marsupials. Journal of Zoology (London) 208, 595–614CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McNab, B. K. and Eisenberg, J. F. (1989). Brain size and its relation to the rate of metabolism in mammals. American Naturalist 133, 157–167CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McNab, E. G. (1994). Predator calls and prey response. Victorian Naturalist 111, 190–195Google Scholar
Mead, R. J., Twigg, L. E., King, D. R. and Olvier, A. J. (1985). The tolerance to fluoroacetate of geographically separated populations of the quokkaSetonix brachyurus. Australian Zoologist 21, 503–512Google Scholar
Meissner, K. and Ganslosser, U. (1985). Development of young in the kowari Dasyuroides byrnei Spencer, 1896. Zoo Biology 4, 351–359CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mepham, T. B. (1976). The Secretion of Milk. Institute of Biology, Studies in Biology, 60. London: ArnoldGoogle Scholar
Merchant, J. C. (1990). Aspects of lactation in the northern brown bandicoot, Isoodon macrourus. In Bandicoots and Bilbies (ed. Seebeck, J. H., Brown, P. R., Wallis, R. M. and Kemper, C. M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 219–228Google Scholar
Messer, M. and Green, B. (1979). Milk carbohydrates of marsupials. II. Quantitative and qualitative changes in milk carbohydrates during lactation in the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Australian Journal of Biological Science 32, 519–531CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Metcalfe, C. J., Eldridge, M. D., Toder, R. and Johnston, P. G. (1998). Mapping the distribution of the telomeric sequence (T2AG3)n in the Macropodoidea (Marsupialia), by fluorescence in situ hybridization. I. The swamp wallaby, Wallabia bicolor. Chromosome Research 6, 603–610CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miles, M. A., Souza, A. A. and Póvoa, M. M. (1981). Mammal tracking and nest location in Brazilian forest with an improved spool-and-line device. Journal of Zoology (London) 195, 331–347CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milinski, M. and Parker, G. A. (1991). Competition for resources. In Behavioural Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach (ed. Krebs, J. R. and Davies, N. B.). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 137–168Google Scholar
Millar, J. S. (1977). Adaptive features of mammalian reproduction. Evolution 31, 370–386CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Millar, J. S. (1981). Pre-partum reproductive characteristics of eutherian mammals. Evolution 35, 1149–1163CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mitchell, P. (1990a). Social behaviour and communication of koalas. In Biology of the Koala (ed. Lee, A. K., Handasyde, K. A. and Sanson, G. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 151–170Google Scholar
Mitchell, P. (1990b). The home range and social activity of koalas – a quantitative analysis. In Biology of the Koala (ed. Lee, A. K., Handasyde, K. A. and Sanson, G. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 171–187Google Scholar
Moeller, H. (1973). Zur Evolutionshöhe des Marsupialia Gehirns. Zoologische Jahrbuch (Anatomie) 91, 434–448Google Scholar
Monteiro-Filho, E. L. A. and Dias, V. S. (1990). Observaçoes sobre a biologia de Lutreolina crassicaudata (Mammalia: Marsupialia). Revista Brasileira de Biologia 50, 393–399Google Scholar
Moore, B. D., Wallis, I. R., Marsh, K. J. and Foley, W. J. (2004). The role of nutrition in the conservation of the marsupial folivores of eucalypt forests. In Conservation of Australia's Forest Fauna (ed. Lunney, D.), 2nd edn. Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 549–575CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, H. D. and Taggart, D. A. (1995). Sperm pairing in the opossum increases the efficiency of sperm movement in a viscous environment. Biology of Reproduction 52, 947–953CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, S. J. and Sanson, G. D. (1995). A comparison of the molar efficiency of two insect-eating mammals. Journal of Zoology (London) 235, 175–192CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moritz, C. (1994). Defining ‘evolutionarily significant units’ for conservation. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 9, 373–375CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moritz, C. (1999). Conservation units and translocations: strategies for conserving evolutionary processes. Hereditas 130, 217–228CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moritz, C., Heideman, A., Geffen, E. and McRae, P. (1997). Genetic population structure of the greater bilby Macrotis lagotis, a marsupial in decline. Molecular Ecology 6, 925–936CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Morton, S. R. (1978). An ecological study of Sminthopsis crassicaudata (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae). 2. Behaviour and social organization. Australian Wildlife Research 5, 163–182CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morton, S. R. (1990). The impact of European settlement on the vertebrate animals of arid Australia: a conceptual model. Proceedings of the Ecological Society of Australia 16, 201–213Google Scholar
Morton, S. R. and Baynes, A. (1985). Small mammal assemblages in arid Australia: a reappraisal. Australian Mammalogy 8, 159–169Google Scholar
Morton, S. R., Dickman, C. R. and Fletcher, T. P. (1989). Dasyuridae. In Fauna of Australia. Vol. 1B. Mammalia (ed. Walton, D. W. and Richardson, B. J.). Canberra: Australian Government Printing Service, pp. 560–582Google Scholar
Moss, G. L. (1995). Home range, grouping patterns and the mating system of the red kangaroo (Macropus rufus) in the arid zone. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Moyle, D. I., Hume, I. D. and Hill, D. M. (1995). Digestive performance and selective digesta retention in the long-nosed bandicoot, Perameles nasuta, a small omnivorous marsupial. Journal of Comparative Physiology B164, 552–560Google Scholar
Muizon, C. de (1992). La fauna de mamíferos de Tiupampa (Paleoceno inferior Formación Santa Lucía), Bolivia. In Fossils y facies de Bolivia, Vol. L. Vertebraedos (ed. Suarez-Soruco, R.). Santa Cruz: Revista de YPFB, pp. 575–624Google Scholar
Muizon, C. (1994). A new carnivorous marsupial from the Palaeocene of Bolivia and the problem of marsupial monophyly. Nature 370, 208–211CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Müller, W. A. (1996). Developmental Biology. Berlin: SpringerGoogle ScholarPubMed
Munks, S. A. (1990). Ecological energetics and reproduction in the common ringtail possum, Pseudocheirus peregrinus (Marsupialia: Phalangeroides). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of TasmaniaGoogle Scholar
Munks, S. A. and Green, B. (1995). Energy allocation for reproduction in a marsupial arboreal folivore, the common ringtail possum (Pseudocheirus peregrinus). Oecologia 101, 94–104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Myers, K., Parer, I., Wood, D. and Cooke, B. D. (1994). The rabbit in Australia. In The European Rabbit: the History and Biology of a Successful Coloniser (ed. Thompson, H. V. and King, C. M.). Oxford: Oxford Scientific Publications, pp. 108–157Google Scholar
Mykytowycz, R. and Nay, T. (1964). Studies of the cutaneous glands and hair follicles of some species of Macropodidae. CSIRO Wildlife Research 9, 200–217CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagy, K. A. (1987). Field metabolic rate and food requirement scaling in mammals and birds. Ecological Monographs 57, 111–128CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagy, K. A. (1994). Field bioenergetics of mammals: what determines metabolic rates?Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 43–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, J. (1992). Developmental staging in a marsupial, Dasyurus hallucatus. Anatomy and Embryology (Berlin) 185, 335–354CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, J. E. and Gemmell, R. T. (2003). Birth in the northern quoll, Dasyurus hallucatus (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae). Australian Journal of Zoology 51, 187–198CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, J. E. and Stephan, H. (1982). Encephalisation in Australian marsupials. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 699–706Google Scholar
Neumann, V. C. H. (1961). Die visuelle Lernfahigkeit primitiver Säugetiere. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 18, 71–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newsome, A. E. (1966). The influence of food on breeding in the red kangaroo in central Australia. CSIRO Wildlife Research 11, 187–196CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newsome, A. E. (1975). An ecological comparison of the two arid-zone kangaroos of Australia, and their anomalous prosperity since the introduction of ruminant stock to their environment. Quarterly Review of Biology 50, 389–424Google ScholarPubMed
Newsome, A. E. (1977). Imbalance in the sex ratio and age structure of the red kangaroo, Macropus rufus, in central Australia. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Stonehouse, B. and Gilmore, D.). London: Macmillan, pp. 221–233CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nicholas, K., Simpson, K., Wilson, M., Trott, J. and Shaw, D. (1997). The tammar wallaby: a model to study putative autocrine-induced changes in milk composition. Journal of Mammary Gland Biology and Neoplasia 2, 299–310CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nicoll, M. E. and Thompson, S. D. (1987). Basal metabolic rates and energetics of reproduction in therian mammals: marsupials and placentals compared. In Reproductive Energetics in Mammals (ed. Loudon, A. S. and Racey, P. A.). Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 7–28Google Scholar
Nitikman, L. Z. and Mares, M. A. (1987). Ecology of small mammals in a gallery forest of central Brazil. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 56, 75–95Google Scholar
Norton, A. C., Beran, A. V. and Misrahy, G. A. (1964). Electroencephalograph during feigned sleep in the opossum. Nature 204, 162–163CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nunney, L. and Elam, D. R. (1994). Estimating the effective population size of conserved populations. Conservation Biology 8, 175–184CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nuttall, G. H. F. (1904). Blood Immunity and Blood Relationship. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Oakwood, M., Bradley, A. J. and Cockburn, A. (2001). Semelparity in a large marsupial. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B 268, 407–411CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Brien, S. J., Eisenberg, J. F., Miyamoto, M.et al. (1999a). Genome maps 10. Comparative genomics. Mammalian radiations: wall chart. Science 286, 463–478Google Scholar
O'Brien, S. J., Menotti-Raymond, M., Murphy, W. J.et al. (1999b). The promise of comparative genomics in mammals. Science 286, 458–481CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Connell, M. A. (1979). Ecology of didelphid marsupials from northern Venezuela. In Vertebrate Ecology in the Northern Neotropics (ed. Eisenberg, J. F.). Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 73–87Google Scholar
Oftedal, O. T. (1984). Milk composition, milk yield and energy output at peak lactation: A comparative review. Symposia of the Zoological Society of London 51, 33–85Google Scholar
Ojeda, R. and Giannoni, S. M. (1997). New World Marsupials: an Action Plan for Their Conservation. Gland: IUCNGoogle Scholar
Old, J. M. and Deane, E. M. (2000). Development of the immune system and immunological protection in marsupial pouch young. Developmental and Comparative Immunology 24, 445–454CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Olson, S. L. (1989). Extinction on islands: man as a catastrophe. In Conservation for the Twenty-first Century (ed. Western, D. and Pearl, M. C.). Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 50–53Google Scholar
O'Neill, R. J. W., Brennan, F. E., Delbridge, M. L. and Graves, J. A. M. (1998a). De novo insertion of an intron into the mammalian sex determining gene SRY. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 95, 1653–1657CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Neill, R. J. W., O'Neill, M. J. and Graves, J. A. M. (1998b). Undermethylation associated with retroelement activation and chromosome remodelling in an interspecific mammalian hybrid. Nature 393, 68–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oppel, A. (1896). Lehrbuch der vergleichenden mikroskopischen Anatomie der Wirbeltiere. Vol. I. Der Magen. Jena: Gustav Fischer, pp. 286–298Google Scholar
Osgood, W. H. (1921). A monographic study of the American marsupial Caenolestes. Field Museum of Natural History, Zoological Series 14, 1–162Google Scholar
Owen, R. (1868). On the Anatomy of Vertebrates. Vol. III. Mammals.London: Longmans, Green & Co
Padykula, H. A. and Taylor, J. M. (1982). Marsupial placentation and its evolutionary significance. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 31 (suppl.), 95–104Google ScholarPubMed
Paetkau, D. (2000). Using genetics to identify intraspecific conservation units: a critique of current methods. Conservation Biology 13, 1507–1509CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pahl, L. (1984). Population parameters and diet of the Victorian ringtail possum (Pseudocheirus peregrinus). In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 253–260Google Scholar
Panda, S., Nayak, S. K., Campo, B., Walker, J. R., Hogenesch, J. B. and Jegla, T. (2005). Illumination of the melanopsin signalling pathway. Science 307, 600–604CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Park, C. S. and Jacobson, N. L. (1993). The mammary gland and lactation. In Duke's Physiology of Domestic Animals (ed. Swenson, M. J. and Reece, W. O.). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, pp. 711–727Google Scholar
Parry, L. J., Clark, J. M. and Renfree, M. B. (1997). Ultrastructural localization of relaxin in the corpus luteum of the pregnant and early lactating tammar wallaby, Macropus eugenii. Cell and Tissue Research 290, 615–622CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pask, A. and Graves, J. A. M. (1998). Sex chromosomes and sex determining genes: insights from marsupials and monotremes. Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 55, 864–875CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pask, A., Renfree, M. B. and Graves, J. A. M. (2000). The human sex-reversing ATRX gene has a homologue on the marsupial Y chromosome, ATRY: implications for the evolution of mammalian sex determination. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 97, 13198–13202CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pass, D. M., Foley, W. J. and Bowden, B. (1998). Vertebrate folivory on Eucalyptus: identification of specific feeding deterrents for common ringtail possums (Pseudocheirus peregrinus) by bioassay-guided fractionation of Eucalyptus ovata foliage. Journal of Chemical Ecology 24, 1513–1527CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Passamani, M. (1993). Vertical stratification of small mammals in southeastern Brazil. Mammalia 65, 505–508Google Scholar
Pellis, S. M. and Officer, R. C. E. (1987). An analysis of some predatory behaviour patterns in four species of carnivorous marsupials (Dasyuridae), with comparative notes on the eutherian cat Felis catus. Ethology 75, 177–196CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pemberton, D. and Renouf, D. (1993). A field study of communication and social behaviour of the Tasmanian devil at feeding sites. Australian Journal of Zoology 41, 507–526CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perez-Hernandez, R., Soriano, P. and Lew, D. (1994). Marsupials de Venezuela. Caracas: LagovenGoogle Scholar
Perret, M. and Atramentowicz, M. (1989). Plasma concentrations of progesterone and testosterone in captive woolly opossums (Caluromys philander). Journal ofReproduction and Fertility 85, 31–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petrosz, R. (1983). Recommended Reserves for Irian Jaya Province. WWF/IUCN Project 1528 special report
Petrosz, R. (1984). Conservation and Development in Irian Jaya: a Strategy for Rational Resource Utilization. WWF/IUCN Project 1528/PT. Jakarta: Sinar Agape PressGoogle Scholar
Petrosz, R. and Fretes, Y. (1983). Mammals of the Reserves in Irian Jaya. WWF/IUCN Project 1528 special report
Pine, R. H., Dalby, P. L. and Matson, J. O. (1985). Ecology, postnatal development, morphometrics, and taxonomic status of the short-tailed opossum, Monodelphis dimidiata, an apparently semelparous annual marsupial. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 54, 195–231Google Scholar
Place, A. R. (1990). Chitin digestion in nestling Leach's storm petrels Oceanodroma leucorhoa. Bulletin of the Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory 20, 139–142Google Scholar
Pond, C. M. (1984). Physiological and ecological importance of energy storage in the evolution of lactation: evidence for a common pattern of anatomical organisation of adipose tissue in mammals. Symposia of the Zoological Society of London 51, 1–32Google Scholar
Poole, W. E. (1976). Breeding biology and current status of the grey kangaroo, Macropus fuliginosus fuliginosus, of Kangaroo Island, South Australia. Australian Journal of Zoology 24, 169–187CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poole, W. E. and Catling, P. C. (1974). Reproduction in two species of grey kangaroos, Macropus giganteus Shaw and M. fuliginosus (Desmarest). 1. Sexual maturity and oestrus. Australian Journal of Zoology 22, 277–302CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poole, W. E. and Pilton, P. E. (1964). Reproduction in the grey kangaroo, Macropus canguru, in captivity. CSIRO Wildlife Research 9, 218–234CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powell, M. R. and Doolittle, J. H. (1971). Repeated acquisition and extinction of an operant by opossums and rats. Psychonomic Science 24, 22–23CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Proctor-Gray, E. and Ganslosser, U. (1986). The individual behaviors of Lumholtz's tree-kangaroo: repertoire and taxonomic implications. Journal of Mammalogy 67, 343–352CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pulliam, H. R. and Caraco, T. (1984). Living in groups: is there an optimal group size? In Behavioural Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach (ed. Krebs, J. R. and Davies, N. B.). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 122–147Google Scholar
Qiu, O. X., Kumbalasiri, T., Carlson, S. M.et al. (2005). Induction of photosensitivity by heterologous expression of melanopsin. Nature 433, 745–749CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ralls, K., Ballou, J. D. and Templeton, A. (1988). Estimates of lethal equivalents and the cost of inbreeding in mammals. Conservation Biology 2, 185–193CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Redford, K. H. and Eisenberg, J. F. (1992). Mammals of the Neotropics. The Southern cone: Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Reid, F. A. (1997). A Field Guide to the Mammals of Central America and Southeast Mexico. New York, NY: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Renfree, M. B. (1993). Diapause, pregnancy, and parturition in Australian marsupials. Journal of Experimental Zoology 266, 450–462CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Renfree, M. B. (2000). Maternal recognition of pregnancy in marsupials. Reviews in Reproduction 5, 6–11CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Renfree, M. B. and Shaw, G. (2000). Diapause. Annual Reviews of Physiology 62, 353–375CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Renfree, M. B., Russell, E. M. and Wooller, R. D. (1984). Reproduction and life history of the honey possum, Tarsipes rostratus. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 427–437Google Scholar
Renfree, M. B., Fletcher, T. P., Blanden, D. R. et al. (1989). Physiological and behavioural events around the time of birth in macropodid marsupials. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 323–337Google Scholar
Renfree, M. B., Pask, A. and Shaw, G. (2001). Sex down under: the differentiation of sexual dimorphisms during marsupial development. Reproduction, Fertility and Development 13, 679–690CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rens, W., O'Brien, P. C., Yang, F., Graves, J. A. and Ferguson-Smith, M. A. (1999). Karyotype relationships between four distantly related marsupials revealed by reciprocal chromosome painting. Chromosome Research 7, 461–474CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Richardson, K. C., Wooller, R. D. and Collins, B. G. (1986). Adaptations to a diet of nectar and pollen in the marsupial Tarsipes rostratus (Marsupialia: Tarsipedidae). Journal of Zoology (London) 208, 285–297CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richardson, K. C., Bowden, T. A. J. and Myers, P. (1987). The cardiogastric gland and alimentary tract of caenolestid marsupials. Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 68, 65–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richardson, S. J., Wettenhall, R. E. and Schreiber, G. (1996). Evolution of transthyretin gene expression in the liver of Didelphis virginiana and other American marsupials. Endocrinology 137, 3507–3512CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roberts, W. W., Steinberg, M. L. and Means, L. W. (1967). Hypothalamic mechanisms for sexual, aggressive, and other motivational behaviors in the opossum, Didelphis virginiana. Journal of Comparative Physiology and Psychology 64, 1–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robertshaw, J. D. and Harden, R. H. (1985). The ecology of the dingo in north-eastern New South Wales. 2. Diet. Australian Wildlife Research 12, 39–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, A. C. and Young, M. C. (1983). The Toolache Wallaby (Macropus greyi Waterhouse). Adelaide: Department of Environment and Planning
Robinson, N. A., Sherwin, W. B. and Murray, N. D. (1993). Use of VNTR loci to reveal population structure in the eastern barred bandicoot, Perameles gunnii. Molecular Ecology 2, 195–207CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rodger, J. C. (1978). Male reproduction: its usefulness in discussions of Macropodidae evolution. Australian Mammalogy 2, 73–80Google Scholar
Rofe, R. and Hayman, D. (1985). G-banding evidence for a conserved complement in the Marsupialia. Cytogenetics and Cell Genetics 39, 40–50CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roig, V. G. (1989). Desertificatión y distribución geográfica de mamíferos en la república Argentina. In Detección y control de la desertification (ed. Roig, F. A.). Mendoza, Argentina: Centro Regional de Invesigaciones Científicas y Tecnológicas, pp. 263–278Google Scholar
Rowe, M. (1996). Sensorimotor cortical organisation: how do marsupials compare with other mammals? In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 3–45Google Scholar
Rubenstein, D. I. (1978). On predation, competition and the advantages of group living. In Perspectives in Ethology (ed. Bateson, P. P. G. and Klopfer, P. H.). New York, NY: Plenum Press, pp. 205–231Google Scholar
Rudd, C. D. (1994). Sexual behaviour of male and female tammar wallabies (Macropus eugenii) at post partum oestrus. Journal of Zoology (London) 232, 151–162CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rudd, C. D., Short, R. V., Shaw, G. and Renfree, M. B. (1996). Testosterone control of male-type sexual behavior in the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Hormones and Behavior 30, 446–454CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, E. M. (1973). Mother–young relationships and early behavioural development in the marsupials Macropus eugenii and Megaleia rufa. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 33, 163–203CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, E. M. (1982). Patterns of parental care and parental investment in marsupials. Biological Reviews 57, 423–486CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Russell, E. M. (1984). Social behaviour and social organization of marsupials. Mammalian Review 14, 101–154CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, E. M. (1985). The metatherians: Order Marsupialia. In Social Odours in Mammals (ed. Brown, R. E. and Macdonald, D. W.). Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 45–104Google Scholar
Russell, E. M. (1986). Observations on the behaviour of the honey possum, Tarsipes rostratus (Marsupialia: Tarsipedidae) in captivity. Australian Journal of Zoology Supplementary Series 121, 1–63Google Scholar
Russell, E. M. (1989). Maternal behaviour in the Macropodoidea. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 549–569Google Scholar
Russell, E. M. and Harrop, C. J. F. (1976). The behaviour of red kangaroos (Megaleia rufa) on hot summer days. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 40, 396–426Google ScholarPubMed
Russell, E. M. and Pearce, G. A. (1971). Exploration of novel objects by marsupials. Behaviour 40, 312–322CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, R. (1980). Spotlight on Possums. Brisbane: Queensland University PressGoogle Scholar
Russell, R. (1984). Social behaviour of the yellow-bellied glider, Petaurus australis reginae in north Queensland. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 343–353Google Scholar
Ryan, M. J. (1997). Sexual selection and mate choice. In Behavioural Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach (ed. Krebs, J. R. and Davies, N. B.). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 179–202Google Scholar
Ryser, J. (1992). The mating system and male mating success of the Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana) in Florida. Journal of Zoology (London) 118, 127–139CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sabat, P., Bozinovic, F. and Zambrano, F. (1995). Role of dietary substrates on intestinal disaccarhidases, digestibility, and energetics in the insectivorous mouse-oppossum (Thylamys elegans). Journal of Mammalogy 76, 603–611CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salamon, M. (1995). Seasonal, sexual and dietary induced variations in the sternal scent secretion in the brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). Advances in the Biosciences 93, 211–222Google Scholar
Salamon, M. (1996). Olfactory communication in Australian marsupials. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 46–79Google Scholar
Samollow, P. B. and Graves, J. A. M. (1998). Gene maps of marsupials. ILAR Journal 39, 203–224CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sanderson, K. J., Haight, J. R. and Pettigrew, J. D. (1984). The dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus of macropodid marsupials: cytoarchitecture and retinal projections. Journal of Comparative Neurology 224, 85–106CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Saulei, S. M. (1990). Forest research and development in Papua New Guinea. Ambio 19, 397Google Scholar
Saulei, S. M. and Kiapranis, R. (1996). Forest regeneration following selective logging operations in a lowland rain forest in Papua New Guinea. Science in New Guinea 22, 27–37Google Scholar
Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A., eds. (1997). Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives. Sydney: University of New South Wales PressGoogle Scholar
Schultz-Westrum, T. (1965). Innerartliche Verstandidung durch Düfte beim Gleitbeutler Petaurus breviceps papuanus Thomas (Marsupialia: Phalangeridae). Zietschrift für vergleichende Physiologie 50, 151–220CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, L. K., Hume, I. D. and Dickman, C. R. (1999). Ecology and population biology of long-nosed bandicoots (Perameles nasuta) at North Head, Sydney Harbour National Park. Wildlife Research 26, 805–821CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scotts, D. J. (1983). The social organization of Antechinus stuartii (Macleay) (Marsupialia, Dasyuridae) at Sherbrooke Forest, Victoria. Unpublished B. Sc Hons thesis, Monash University
Seebeck, J. H. (1992). Breeding, growth and development of captive Potorous longipes (Marsupialia: Potoroidae); and a comparison with P. tridactylus. Australian Mammalogy 15, 37–45Google Scholar
Selwood, L. (2000). Marsupial egg and embryo coats. Cells Tissues Organs 166, 208–219CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Serena, M., Bell, L. and Booth, R. J. (1996). Reproductive behaviour of the long-footed potoroo (Potorous longipes) in captivity, with an estimate of gestation length. Australian Mammalogy 19, 57–62Google Scholar
Setchell, B. P. (1977). Reproduction in male marsupials. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Stonehouse, B. and Gilmore, D.). London: Macmillan, pp. 411–457CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Settle, G. A. (1978). The quiddity of tiger quolls. Australian Natural History 19, 164–169Google Scholar
Settle, G. A. and Croft, D. B. (1982). The development of exploratory behaviour in Antechinus stuartii (Dasyuridae, Marsupialia) young in captivity. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 383–396Google Scholar
Sharman, G. B., Close, R. L. and Maynes, G. M. (1990). Chromosome evolution, phylogeny and speciation of rock-wallabies (Petrogale: Macropodidae). In Mammals from Pouches and Eggs: Genetics, Breeding and Evolution of Marsupials and Monotremes (ed. Graves, J. A. M., Hope, R. M. and Cooper, D. W.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 209–223Google Scholar
Shaw, G. (1996). The uterine environment in early pregnancy in the tammar wallaby. Reproduction, Fertility and Development 8, 811–818CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shaw, G. and Renfree, M. B. (2001). Fetal control of parturition in marsupials. Reproduction, Fertility and Development 13, 653–659CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shaw, G., Renfree, M. B. and Short, R. V. (1990). Primary genetic control of sexual differentiation in marsupials. In Mammals from Pouches and Eggs: Genetics, Breeding and Evolution of Marsupials and Monotremes (ed. Graves, J. A. M., Hope, R. M. and Cooper, D. W.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 301–308Google Scholar
Shaw, G., Harry, J. L., Whitworth, D. J. and Renfree, M. B. (1997). Sexual determination and differentiation in the marsupial Macropus eugenii. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 132–141Google Scholar
Sherwin, W. B. and Brown, P. R. (1990). Problems in the estimation of the effective size of a population of the eastern barred bandicoot Perameles gunnii at Hamilton, Victoria. In Bandicoots and Bilbies (ed. Seebeck, J. H., Brown, P. R., Wallis, R. L. and Kemper, C. M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 367–374Google Scholar
Sherwin, W. B. and Moritz, C. (2000). Managing and monitoring genetic erosion. In Genetics, Demography and Viability of Fragmented Populations (ed. Young, A. and Clarke, G.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 9–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sherwin, W. B. and Murray, N. D. (1990). Population and conservation genetics of marsupials. In Mammals from Pouches and Eggs: Genetics, Breeding and Evolution of Marsupials and Monotremes (ed. Graves, J. A. M., Hope, R. M. and Cooper, D. W.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 19–38Google Scholar
Sherwin, W. B., Murray, N. D., Graves, J. A. M. and Brown, P. R. (1991). Measurement of genetic variation in endangered populations: bandicoots (Marsupialia: Permaelidae) as an example. Conservation Biology 5, 103–108CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sherwin, W. B., Timms, P., Wilcken, J. and Houlden, B. A. (2000). Genetics of koalas: an analysis and conservation implications. Conservation Biology 14, 1–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shorey, H. H. (1976). Animal Communication by Pheromones. New York, NY: Academic PressGoogle Scholar
Simpson, G. G. (1980). Splendid Isolation. New Haven, CT: Yale University PressGoogle Scholar
Sinclair, A. H., Foster, J. W., Spencer, J. A.et al. (1988). Sequences homologous to ZFY, a candidate human sex-determining gene, are autosomal in marsupials. Nature 336, 780–783CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Slade, R. W., Hale, P. T., Francis, D. I., Graves, J. A. M. and Sturm, R. A. (1994). The marsupial MHC: the tammar wallaby, Macropus eugenii, contains an expressed DNA-like gene on chromosome 1. Journal of Molecular Evolution 38, 496–505CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Smith, A. P. (1980). Diet and ecology of Leadbeater's possum and the sugar glider. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, Monash University
Smith, A. P. (1982). Diet and feeding strategies of the marsupial sugar glider in temperate Australia. Journal of Animal Ecology 51, 149–166CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, A. P. and Lee, A. K. (1984). The evolution of strategies for survival and reproduction in possums and gliders. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 17–33Google Scholar
Smith, M. J. (1979). Observations on growth of Petaurus breviceps and P. norfolcensis (Petauridae: Marsupialia) in captivity. Australian Wildlife Research 6, 141–150CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, M. T. A. (1980a). Behaviour of the koala, Phascolarctos cinereus (Goldfuss), in captivity. IV. Scent-marking. Australian Wildlife Research 7, 35–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, M. T. A. (1980b). Behaviour of the koala, Phascolarctos cinereus (Goldfuss), in captivity. V. Sexual behaviour. Australian Wildlife Research 7, 177–190CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, S. J. (1981). The Tasmanian Tiger: 1980. Wildlife Division Technical Report. Hobart: National Parks and Wildlife Service
Soderquist, T. R. (1994). Anti-predator behaviour of the brush-tailed phascogale (Phascogale tapoatafa). Victorian Naturalist 111, 22–24Google Scholar
Soderquist, T. R. and Ealey, L. (1994). Social interactions and mating strategies of a solitary carnivorous marsupial, Phascogale tapoatafa, in the wild. Wildlife Research 21, 527–542CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soulé, M. E. and Frankel, O. H. (1980). Conservation and Evolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Southwood, T. R. E. (1977). Habitat, the templet for ecological strategies?Journal of Animal Ecology 46, 337–366CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Southwood, T. R. E. (1988). Tactics, strategies and templets. Oikos 52, 3–18CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spencer, P. B. S., Adams, M., March, H. D., Miller, D. J. and Eldridge, M. D. B. (1997). High levels of genetic variability in an isolated colony of rock wallabies (Petrogale assimilis): evidence from three classes of molecular markers. Australian Journal of Zoology 45, 199–210CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spencer, P. B. S., Horsup, A. B. and Marsh, H. D. (1998). Enhancement of reproductive success through mate choice in a social rock-wallaby. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 43, 1–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Springer, M. S., Kirsch, J. A. W. and Case, J. A. (1997a). The chronicle of marsupial evolution. In Molecular Evolution and Adaptive Radiation (ed. Givnish, T. J. and Sytsma, K. J.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 129–161Google Scholar
Springer, M. S., Burk, A., Kavanagh, J. R., Waddell, V. G. and Stanhope, M. J. (1997b). The interphotoreceptor retinoid binding protein gene in therian mammals: implications for higher level relationships and evidence for loss of function in the marsupial mole. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 94, 13754–13759CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stallings, J. R. (1988). Small mammal inventories in an eastern Brazilian park. Bulletin of the Florida State Museum (Biological Sciences) 34, 159–220Google Scholar
Start, A. N., Burbidge, A. A. and Armstrong, D. (1998). A review of the conservation status of the woylie, Bettongia penicillata ogilbyi (Marsupialia: Potoroidae) using IUCN criteria. CALMScience 2, 277–289Google Scholar
State of the Environment Advisory Council. (1996). Australia: State of the Enviroment. Canberra, Environment Australia
Stearns, S. C. (1992). The Evolution of Life Histories. Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Stevens, C. E. and Hume, I. D. (1995). Comparative Physiology of the Vertebrate Digestive System. 2nd edn. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Stewart, F. (1984). Mammogenesis and changing prolactin receptor concentrations in the mammary gland of the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 71, 141–148CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stirrat, S. C. and Fuller, M. (1997). The repertoire of social behaviours of agile wallabies, Macropus agilis. Australian Mammalogy 20, 71–78Google Scholar
Stodart, E. (1966). Management and behaviour of breeding groups of the marsupial Perameles nasuta Geoffroy in captivity. Australian Journal of Zoology 14, 611–623CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stoddart, D. M., Bradley, A. J. and Mallick, J. (1994). Plasma testosterone concentration, body weight, social dominance and scent-marking in male marsupial sugar gliders (Petaurus breviceps; Marsupialia: Petauridae). Journal of Zoology (London) 232, 595–601CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stonehouse, B. and Gilmore, D., eds. (1977). The Biology of Marsupials. London: MacmillanCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strahan, R., ed. (1995). The Mammals of Australia. Chatswood: ReedGoogle Scholar
Stuart-Dick, R. (1987). Parental investment and rearing schedules in the eastern grey kangaroo. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New England
Stuart-Dick, R., R. and Higginbottom, K. B. (1989). Strategies of parental investment in Macropodoids. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 571–592Google Scholar
Suckling, G. C. (1980). The effects of fragmentation and disturbance of forest on mammals in a region of Gippsland, Victoria. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, Monash University
Suckling, G. C. (1984). Population ecology of the sugar glider Petaurus breviceps in a system of fragmented habitat. Australian Wildlife Research 11, 49–75Google Scholar
Sumner, P., Arrese, C. A. and Partridge, J. C. (2005). The ecology of visual pigment tuning in an Australian marsupial: the honey possum (Tarsipes rostratus). Journal of Experimental Biology 208, 1803–1815CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sunquist, M. E. and Eisenberg, J. F. (1993). Reproductive strategies of female Didelphis. Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History 36, 109–140Google Scholar
Svartman, M. and Vianna-Morgante, A. M. (1998). Karyotype evolution of marsupials: from higher to lower diploid numbers. Cytogenetics and Cell Genetics 82, 263–266CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Szalay, F. (1982). A new appraisal of marsupial phylogeny and classification. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 621–640Google Scholar
Szalay, F. (1994). Evolutionary History of the Marsupialia and an Analysis of Osteological Characters. New York, NY: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Tan, P. C. (1995). Analysis of matrilines in euros using mitochrondrial DNA. Unpublished B. Sc Hons thesis, University of New South Wales
Taylor, A. C. (1995). Molecular ecology of the endangered northern hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus krefftii) and application to conservation management. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South Wales
Taylor, A. C., Sherwin, W. B. and Wayne, R. K. (1994). The use of simple sequence loci to measure genetic variation in bottlenecked species: the decline of the northern hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus krefftii). Molecular Ecology 3, 277–290CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A. C., Horsup, A., Johnson, C. N., Sunnucks, P. and Sherwin, B. (1997). Relatedness structure detected by microsatellite analysis and attempted pedigree reconstruction in an endangered marsupial, the northern hairy-nosed wombat Lasiorhinus krefftii. Molecular Ecology 6, 9–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, R. J. (1993). Observations on the behaviour and ecology of the common wombat Vombatus ursinus in northeast Tasmania. Australian Mammalogy 16, 1–7Google Scholar
Tedman, R. A. (1990). Some observations on the visceral anatomy of the bandicoot Isoodon macrourus (Marsupialia: Peramelidae). In Bandicoots and Bilbies (ed. Seebeck, J. H., Brown, P. R., Wallis, R. L. and Kemper, C. M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 107–116Google Scholar
Temple-Smith, P. D. (1994). Comparative structure and function of marsupial spermatozoa. Reproduction, Fertility and Development 6, 421–435CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Templeton, A. R. and Read, B. (1994). Inbreeding: one word, several meanings, much confusion. In Conservation Genetics (ed. Loeschcke, V., Tomiuk, J. and Jain, S. K.). Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag, pp. 91–105CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, J. A. and Owen, W. H. (1964). A field study of the Australian ringtail possum Pseudocheirus peregrinus (Marsupialia: Phalangeridae). Ecological Monographs 34, 27–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tilley, M. W., Doolittle, J. H. and Mason, D. J. (1966). Olfactory discrimination learning in the Virginia opossum. Perceptual and Motor Skills 23, 845–846CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tramontin, A. D. and Brenowitz, E. A. (2000). Seasonal plasticity in the adult brain. Trends in Neurosciences 23, 251–258CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Triggs, B. (1988). The Wombat. Sydney: University of New South Wales PressGoogle Scholar
Trivers, R. L. and Willard, D. E. (1973). Natural selection of parental ability to vary the sex ratio of offspring. Science 179, 90–92CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tunbridge, D. (1991). The Story of the Flinders Ranges Mammals. Kenthurst: Kangaroo PressGoogle Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1973). Life of Marsupials. London: Edward ArnoldGoogle Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1984). Reproductive physiology of possums and gliders. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 79–87Google Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1989). The adaptiveness of reproductive processes. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 277–285Google Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (2005). Life of Marsupials. Collingwood: CSIROGoogle Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Hinds, L. A. (1990). Control of seasonal reproduction in the tammar and Bennett's wallabies. Progress in Clinical Biological Research 342, 659–667Google ScholarPubMed
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1992). Components of the melatonin message in the response to photoperiod of the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Journal of Pineal Research 12, 155–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A., eds. (1988). The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research. Berlin: SpringerCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Renfree, M. B. (1987). Reproductive Physiology of Marsupials. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ullrey, D. E., Robinson, R. T. and Whetter, P. A. (1981). Composition of preferred and rejected Eucalyptus browse offered to captive koalas, Phascolarctos cinereus (Marsupialia). Australian Journal of Zoology 29, 839–846CrossRefGoogle Scholar
VandeBerg, J. L. and Robinson, E. S. (1997). The laboratory opossum (Monodelphis domestica) in laboratory research. ILAR Journal 38, 4–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dyck, S. (1979a). Behaviour in captive individuals of the dasyurid marsupial Planigale maculata (Gould 1851). Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 19, 413–429Google Scholar
Dyck, S. (1979b). Mating and other aspects of behaviour in wild striped possums. Victorian Naturalist 96, 84–85Google Scholar
Dyck, S. (2002). Morphology-based revision of Murexia and Antechinus (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae). Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 48, 239–330Google Scholar
Vane-Wright, R. I., Humphries, C. J. and Williams, P. H. (1991). What to protect? Systematics and the agony of choice. Biological Conservation 55, 235–254CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Schaike, C. P. (1989). The ecology of social relationships amongst female primates. In Comparative Socioecology: the Behavioural Ecology of Humans and Other Mammals (ed. Standen, V. and Foley, R. A.). Oxford: Blackwell Scientific, pp. 195–218Google Scholar
Vieira, E. M. and Astúa de Moraes, D. (2003). Carnivory and insectivory in Neotropical marsupials. In Predators with Pouches: the Biology of Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Jones, M. E., Dickman, C. R. and Archer, M.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 271–284Google Scholar
Vieira, E. M. and Monteiro-Filho, E. L. A. (2003). Vertical stratification of small mammals in the Atlantic rain forest of south-eastern Brazil. Journal of Tropical Ecology 19, 501–507CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vieira, E. M. and Palma, A. R. T. (1996). Natural history of Thylamys velutinus (Marsupialia, Didelphidae) in central Brazil. Mammalia 60, 481–484CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holst, E. and St Paul, U. (1960). Vom Wirkungsgefüge der Triebe. Naturwissenschaften 37, 464–476Google Scholar
Voss, R. S., Lunde, D. P. and Simmons, N. B. (2001). The mammals of Paracou, French Guiana: a Neotropical lowland rainforest fauna. Part 2: nonvolant species. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 263, 1–2362.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wainwright, B. and Hope, R. M. (1985). Cloning and chromosomal location of the alpha- and beta- globin genes from a marsupial. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 82, 8105–8108CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Waite, P. M. and Weller, W. L. (1999). Development of somatosensory pathways from the whiskers. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 327–344Google Scholar
Waite, P. M., Marotte, L. R., Leamey, C. A. and Mark, R. F. (1998). Development of whisker-related patterns in marsupials: factors controlling timing. Trends in Neurosciences 21, 265–269CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wakefield, M. J. and Graves, J. A. M. (1998). Comparative genome maps of vertebrates. (Poster). ILAR Journal 39 (2/3)Google Scholar
Wakefield, M. J. and Graves, J. A. M. (2002). Towards a kangaroo genome project. EMBO Reports 4, 143–147CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wakefield, N. A. (1961). Notes on the tuan. Victorian Naturalist 78, 232–235Google Scholar
Walker, L. (1996). Female mate-choice. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 208–225Google Scholar
Walker, L. V. and Croft, D. B. (1990). Odour preferences and discrimination in captive ringtail possums (Pseudocheirus peregrinus). International Journal of Comparative Psychology 3, 215–234Google Scholar
Wallis, I. R. (1990). The nutrition, digestive physiology and metabolism of potoroine marsupials. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New England, Armidale, NSW
Ward, S. J. (1990). Reproduction in the western pygmy-possum, Cercartetus concinnus (Marsupialia: Burramyidae) with notes on reproduction of some other small possum species. Australian Journal of Zoology 38, 423–438CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waters, P., Duffy, B., Frost, C. J., Delbridge, M. L. and Graves, J. A. M. (2001). The human Y chromosome derives largely from a single autosomal region added 80–130 million years ago. Cytogenetics and Cell Genetics 92, 74–79CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Watson, D. M. (1990). Play behaviour in a captive group of red-necked wallabies (Macropus rufogriseus banksianus). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South Wales
Watson, D. M. (1998). Kangaroos at play: play behaviour in the Macropodoidea. In Animal Play: Evolutionary, Comparative and Ecological Perspectives (ed. Bekoff, M. and Byers, J. A.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 45–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, D. M. and Croft, D. B. (1993). Play fighting in captive red-necked wallabies, Macropus rufogriseus banksianus. Behaviour 126, 219–245CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, D. M. and Croft, D. B. (1996). Age-related differences in play fighting strategies of captive male red-necked wallabies (Macropus rufogriseus banksianus). Ethology 102, 336–346CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, D. M. and Dawson, T. J. (1993). The effects of age, sex, reproductive status, and temporal factors on the time-use of free-ranging red kangaroos (Macropus rufus) in western New South Wales. Wildlife Research 20, 785–801CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, D. M., Croft, D. B. and Crozier, R. H. (1992). Paternity exclusion and dominance in captive red-necked wallabies, Macropus rufogriseus (Marsupialia: Macropodidae). Australian Mammalogy 15, 31–36Google Scholar
Welk, R. (1995). The foraging behaviour of swamp wallabies (Wallabia bicolor). Unpublished B. Sc Hons thesis, University of New South Wales
Wellard, G. A. and Hume, I. D. (1981). Nitrogen metabolism and nitrogen requirements of the brushtail possum Trichosurus vulpecula (Kerr). Australian Journal of Zoology 29, 147–156CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wells, R. T. (1973). Physiological and behavioural adaptations of the hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus latifrons Owen) to its arid environment. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of Adelaide
Westerman, M., Springer, M. S., Dixon, J. and Krajewski, C. (1999). Molecular relationships of the extinct pig-footed bandicoot Chaeropus ecaudatus (Marsupialia: Perameloidea) using 12S rRNA sequences. Journal of Mammalian Evolution 6, 271–288CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weymss, C. T. (1953). A preliminary study of marsupial relationships as indicated by the precipitin test. Zoologica (NY) 38, 173–181Google Scholar
White, M. J. D. (1937). The Chromosomes. London: MethuenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilkes, G. E. and Janssens, P. A. (1988). The development of renal function. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 176–189CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wing, E. S. (1986). Domestication of Andean mammals. In High Altitude Tropical Biogeography (ed. Vuilleumier, F. and Monasterio, M.). Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 246–264Google Scholar
Winkler, D. W. (1987). A general model for parental care. American Naturalist 130, 526–543CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winter, J. W. (1977). The behaviour and social organisation of the brush-tail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula Kerr). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of Queensland
Winter, J. W. (1996). Australian possums and Madagascan lemurs: behavioural comparison of ecological equivalents. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 262–292Google Scholar
Winter, J. W. and Goudberg, N. J. (1995). Green ringtail possum Pseudochirops archeri (Collett, 1884). In The Mammals of Australia (ed. Strahan, R.). Chatswood: Reed, pp. 244–246Google Scholar
Withers, P. C. (1992). Metabolism, water balance and temperature regulation in the golden bandicoot (Isoodon auratus). Australian Journal of Zoology 40, 523–531CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Witte, I. (1993). The temporal patterning of behaviour of the red kangaroo (Macropus rufus). Unpublished B. Sc Hons thesis, University of New South Wales
Wittenberger, J. F. (1979). The evolution of mating systems in birds and mammals. In Handbook of Behavioral Neurobiology: Social Behavior and Communication (ed. Master, P. and Vandenburgh, J.). New York, NY: Plenum Press, pp. 271– 349Google Scholar
Wolpert, L., Beddington, R., Brockes, J.et al. (1998). Principles of Development. Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Woodman, N., Slade, N. A. and Timm, R. M. (1995). Mammalian community structure in lowland, tropical Peru, as determined by removal trapping. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 113, 1–20CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wooller, R. D., Renfree, M. B., Russell, E. M.et al. (1981). A population study of the nectar-feeding marsupial Tarsipes spencerae (Marsupialia: Tarsipedidae). Journal of Zoology (London) 195, 267–279CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woolley, P. A. (2003). Reproductive biology of some dasyurid marsupials of New Guinea. In Predators with Pouches: the Biology of Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Jones, M. E., Dickman, C. R. and Archer, M.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 169–182Google Scholar
Worthington-Wilmer, J. M., Melzer, A., Carrick, F. and Moritz, C. (1993). Low genetic diversity and inbreeding depression in Queensland koalas. Wildlife Research 20, 177–188CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wrangham, R. W. and Rubenstein, D. I. (1986). Social evolution of birds and mammals. In Ecological Aspects of Social Evolution (ed. Rubenstein, D. I. and Wrangham, R. W.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, pp. 452–470Google Scholar
Wroe, S., Myers, T. J., Wells, R. T. and Gillespie, A. (1999). Estimating the weight of the Pleistocene marsupial lion (Thylacoleo carnifex: Thylacoleonidae): implications for the ecomorphology of a marsupial super-predator and hypotheses of impoverishment of Australian marsupial carnivore faunas. Australian Journal of Zoology 47, 489–498CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wysocki, G. J., Wellington, J. L. and Beauchamp, G. K. (1980). Access of urinary novolatiles to the mammalian vomeronasal organ. Science 207, 781–783CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zenger, K. R., McKenzie, L. M. and Cooper, D. W. (2002). The first comprehensive genetic linkage map of a marsupial: the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Genetics 162, 321–330Google Scholar
Abbott, I. (2002). Origin and spread of the cat, Felis catus, on mainland Australia, with a discussion of the magnitude of its early impact on native fauna. Wildlife Research 29, 51–74CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abbott, I. and Burbidge, A. A. (1995). The occurrence of mammal species on the islands of Australia: a summary of existing knowledge. CALMScience 1, 259–324Google Scholar
Ahnelt, P. K., Hokoc, J. N. and Rohlich, P. (1995). Photoreceptors in a primitive mammal, the South American opossum, Didelphis marsupialis aurita: characterization with anti-opsin immunolabeling. Visual Neuroscience 12, 793–804CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aitkin, L. (1998). Hearing: the Brain and Auditory Communication in Marsupials. Berlin: SpringerCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Algar, D. and Kinnear, J. E. (1996). Secondary poisoning of foxes following a routine 1080 rabbit-baiting campaign in the Western Australian wheatbelt. CALMScience 2, 149–152Google Scholar
ANCA (1996). Draft Threat Abatement Plan for Predation by the European Red Fox. Canberra: Australian Nature Conservation Agency
Archer, M. (1982). Genesis: and in the beginning there was an incredible carnivorous mother. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, p. ⅶ–ⅹGoogle Scholar
Archer, M., Godthelp, H. and Hand, S. J. (1993). Early Eocene marsupials from Australia. In Kaupia: Dramstädter Beiträge zur Naturgeschichte. Monument Grube Messel: Perspectives and Relationships. Part 2 (ed. Schrenk, F. and Ernest, K.). Darmstadt: Hessisches Landesmuseum Darmstadt, pp. 193–200Google Scholar
Archer, M., Hand, S. J., Godthelp, H. and Creaser, P. (1997). Correlation of the Cainozoic sediments of the Riversleigh World Heritage fossil property. In Actes du Congrès Biochrom (ed. Aguiler, J.-P., Legendre, S. and Michaux, J.). Montpellier: École Pratique des Hautes Études, Institut de Montpellier, pp. 131–152Google Scholar
Archer, M., Arena, R., Bassarova, M.et al. (1999). The evolutionary history and diversity of Australian mammals. Australian Mammalogy 21, 1–45Google Scholar
Arrese, C., Archer, M., Runham, P., Dunlop, S. A. and Beazley, L. D. (2000). Visual system in a diurnal marsupial, the numbat (Myrmecobius fasciatus): retinal organization, visual acuity and visual fields. Brain Behaviour and Evolution 55, 163–175CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arrese, C. A., Hart, N. S., Thomas, N., Beazley, L. D. and Shand, J. (2002). Trichromacy in Australian marsupials. Current Biology 12, 657–660CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arrese, C. A., Oddy, A. Y., Runham, P. B.et al. (2005). Cone topography and spectral sensitivity in two potentially trichromatic marsupials, the quokka (Setonix brachyurus) and quenda (Isoodon obesulus). Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B 272, 791–796CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashworth, D. L. (1995). Female reproductive success and maternal investment in the euro (Macropus robustus erubescens) in the arid zone. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Ashworth, D. L. (1996). Strategies of maternal investment in marsupials: a comparison with eutherian mammals. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander Press, pp. 226–251Google Scholar
Aslin, H. (1974). The behaviour of Dasyuroides byrnei (Marsupialia) in captivity. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 35, 187–208CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atherton, R. G. and Haffenden, A. T. (1982). Observations on the reproduction and growth of the long-tailed pygmy possum, Cercartetus caudatus (Marsupialia: Burramyidae), in captivity. Australian Mammalogy 5, 253–259Google Scholar
Atramentowicz, M. (1982). Influence du milieu sur l'activité locomotrice et la reproduction de Caluromys philander (L). Revue Ecologie (Terre et Vie) 36, 373–395Google Scholar
Atramentowicz, M. (1986). Dynamique de population chez trois marsupiaux didelphides de Guyane. Biotropica 18, 136–149CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atramentowicz, M. (1988). La frugivore opportuniste de trois marsupiaux didelphides de Guyana. Revue Ecologie (Terre et Vie) 43, 47–57Google Scholar
Augee, M. L., Smith, B. and Rose, S. (1996). Survival of wild and hand-reared ringtail possums Pseudocheirus peregrinus in bushland near Sydney. Wildlife Research 23, 99–108CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Azara, F. (1802). Apuntamientos para la historia natural de los cuadrúpedos del Paraguay y Río La Plata. Republished New York, NY: Arno Press, 1978Google Scholar
Baillie, J. and Groombridge, B. (1996). 1996 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland: IUCNGoogle Scholar
Baker, M. W. C. and Croft, D. B. (1993). Vocal communication between the mother and young of the eastern grey kangaroo, Macropus giganteus, and the red kangaroo, M. rufus (Marsupialia: Macropodidae). Australian Journal of Zoology 41, 257–272CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bakker, H. R., Bradshaw, S. D. and McDonald, I. R. (1976). Gravity as the sole navigational aid to the newborn quokka. Nature 259, 42Google ScholarPubMed
Barboza, P. S. (1993). Digestive strategies of the wombats: feed intake, fiber digestion and digesta passage in two grazing marsupials with hindgut fermentation. Physiological Zoology 66, 983–999CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barboza, P. S. and Hume, I. D. (1992). Hindgut fermentation in the wombats: two marsupial grazers. Journal of Comparative Physiology B162, 561–566Google Scholar
Barboza, P. S. and Vanselow, B. A. (1990). Copper toxicity in captive wombats (Marsupialia: Vombatidae). 1990 Proceedings of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians, pp. 204–206
Barboza, P. S., Hume, I. D. and Nolan, J. V. (1993). Nitrogen metabolism and requirements of nitrogen and energy in wombats (Marsupialia: Vombatidae). Physiological Zoology 66, 807–828CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barker, S. (1960). The role of trace elements in the biology of the quokka (Setonix brachyurus, Quoy & Gaimard). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of Western AustraliaGoogle Scholar
Barnes, R. D. (1987). The special anatomy of Marmosa robinsoni. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Hunsaker, D. II). New York, NY: Academic Press, pp. 387–412Google Scholar
Baynes, A. (1987). The original mammal fauna of the Nullarbor and southern peripheral regions. In A Biological Survey of the Nullarbor region, South and Western Australia (ed. McKenzie, N. L. and Robinson, A. C.). Adelaide: Government Printer, pp. 139–152Google Scholar
Baynes, A. (1990). The Mammals of Shark Bay, Western Australia. In Research in Shark Bay (ed. Berry, P. F., Bradshaw, S. D. and Wilson, B. R.). Perth: Western Australian Museum, pp. 313–325Google Scholar
Beal, A. M. (1992). Relationships between plasma composition and secretory rates in the potoroine marsupials, Aepyprymnus rufescens and Potorous tridactylus. Journal of Comparative Physiology B162, 637–645CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bee, C. A. and Close, R. L. (1993). Mitochondrial DNA analysis of introgression between adjacent taxa of rock wallabies Petrogale species (Marsupialia, Macropodidae). Genetics Research 61, 21–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bekoff, M. and Byers, J. A., eds. (1998). Animal Play: Evolutionary, Comparative and Ecological Perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, W. J. (1991). Searching Behaviour: the Behavioural Ecology of Finding Resources. London: Chapman and HallGoogle Scholar
Belovsky, G. E., Schmitz, O. J., Slade, J. B. and Dawson, T. J. (1991). Effects of spines and thorns on Australian arid zone herbivores of different body masses. Oecologia 88, 521–528CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bennett, A. F. and Baxter, B. J. (1989). Diet of the long-nosed potoroo, Potorous tridactylus (Marsupialia: Potoroidae), in south-western Victoria. Australian Wildlife Research 16, 263–271CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bennett, A. F. and Dawson, W. R. (1976). Metabolism. In Biology of the Reptilia (ed. Gans, C. and Dawson, W. R.), Vol. 5. New York, NY: Academic Press, pp. 127–223Google Scholar
Bennett, J. H., Hayman, D. L. and Hope, R. M. (1986). Novel sex differences in linkage values and meiotic chromosome behaviour in a marsupial. Nature 323, 59–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biggins, J. G. (1979). Olfactory communication in the brushtailed possum, Trichosurus vulpecula, Kerr, 1792 (Marsupialia: Phalangeridae). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, Monash University
Biggins, J. G. (1984). Communication in possums: a review. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 35–57Google Scholar
Birkhead, T. R. and Hunter, F. M. (1990). Mechanisms of sperm competition. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 5, 48–52CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Birkhead, T. R. and M⊘ller, A. P. (1993). Female control of paternity. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 8, 100–104CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Birney, E. C., Jenness, R. and Hume, I. D. (1980). Evolution of an enzyme system: ascorbic acid biosynthesis in monotremes and marsupials. Evolution 34, 230–239CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bodel, N. (1996). Olfactory discrimination in the male red-necked pademelon, Thylogale thetis. Unpublished B. Sc Hons. thesis, University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Bolliger, A. (1944). The response of the sternal integument of Trichosurus vulpecula to castration and to sex hormones. Journal and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 78, 234–238Google Scholar
Boyce, M. S. (1988). Evolution of life histories: theory and patterns from mammals. In Evolution of Life Histories of Mammals (ed. Boyce, M. S.). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, pp. 3–30Google Scholar
Bradshaw, S. D., Morris, K. D., Dickman, C. R., Withers, P. C. and Murphy, D. (1994). Field metabolism and turnover in the golden bandicoot (Isoodon auratus) and other small mammals from Barrow Island, Western Australia. Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 29–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breed, W. G. (1996). Egg maturation and fertilization in marsupials. Reproduction, Fertility and Development 8, 617–643CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brooks, D. E., Gaughwin, M. and Mann, T. (1978). Structural and biochemical characteristics of the male accessory organs of reproduction in the hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus latifrons). Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B 201, 191–207CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broom, R. (1896). On the comparative anatomy of the organ of Jacobson in marsupials. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 21, 591–623CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, A. H. D., Young, A., Burdon, J.et al. (1997). Genetic Indicators for State of the Environment Reporting. Canberra: Environment AustraliaGoogle Scholar
Brown, B. E. (2004). Atlas of New World marsupials. Fieldiana: Zoology, new series 102, 1–308Google Scholar
Brown, G. D. and Main, A. R. (1967). Studies on marsupial nutrition. V. The nitrogen requirements of the euro, Macropus robustus. Australian Journal of Zoology 15, 7–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunner, H. and Coman, B. J. (1974). The Identification of Mammalian Hair. Melbourne: Inkata PressGoogle Scholar
Bryant, B. J. (1977). Lymphatic and immunohematopoietic systems. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Hunsaker, D. II). New York, NY: Academic Press, pp. 349–385Google Scholar
Buchmann, O. L. K. and Grecian, E. A. (1974). Discrimination-reversal learning in the marsupial Isoodon obesulus (Marsupialia: Peramelidae). Animal Behaviour 22, 975–981CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buddle, B. M. and Young, L. J. (2000). Immunobiology of mycobacterial infections in marsupials. Developmental and Comparative Immunology 24, 517–529CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Burbidge, A. A. (1971). The Flora and Fauna of the Monte Bello Islands. Perth: Department of Fisheries and FaunaGoogle Scholar
Burbidge, A. A. (1989). Australian and New Zealand Islands: Nature Conservation Values and Management. Perth: Department of Conservation and Land ManagementGoogle Scholar
Burbidge, A. A. (1995). Conservation of Australian mammals. In The Mammals of Australia (ed. Strahan, R.). Chatswood: Reed Books, pp. 26–29Google Scholar
Burbidge, A. A. and George, A. S. (1978). The flora and fauna of Dirk Hartog Island, Western Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 60, 71–90Google Scholar
Burbidge, A. A. and McKenzie, N. L. (1989). Patterns in the modern decline of Western Australia's vertebrate fauna: causes and conservation implications. Biological Conservation 50, 143–198CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burbidge, A. A., Johnson, K. A., Fuller, P. J. and Southgate, R. I. (1988). Aboriginal knowledge of the mammals of the central deserts of Australia. Australian Wildlife Research 15, 9–39CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burk, A., Westerman, M. and Springer, M. S. (1998). The phylogenetic position of the musky rat-kangaroo and the evolution of bipedal hopping in kangaroos (Macropodidae: Diprotodontia). Systematic Biology 47, 457–474CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Byers, J. A. (1999). The distribution of play behaviour among Australian marsupials. Journal of Zoology (London) 247, 349–356CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calaby, J. H. (1960). Observations on the banded anteater Myrmecobius f. fasciatus Waterhouse (Marsupialia), with particular reference to its food habits. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 135, 183–207CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calaby, J. H. (1971a). Man, fauna and climate in Aboriginal Australia. In Aboriginal Man and Environment in Australia (ed. Mulvaney, D. J. and Golson, J.). Canberra: Australian National University Press, pp. 80–93Google Scholar
Calaby, J. H. (1971b). The status of Australian Macropodidae. Australian Zoologist 16, 17–29Google Scholar
Calaby, J. H. (1984). Foreword. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney. Australian Mammal Society, pp. ⅲ–ⅳGoogle Scholar
Caraman, P. (1976). The Lost Paradise: the Jesuit Republic in South America. New York, NY: Seabury PressGoogle Scholar
Cassidy, G. and Cabana, T. (1993). The development of the long descending propriospinal projections in the opossum, Monodelphis domestica. Developmental Brain Research 72, 291–299CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cassidy, G., Boudrias, D., Pflieger, J. F. and Cabana, T. (1994). The development of sensorimotor reflexes in the Brazilian opossum Monodelphis domestica. Brain Behaviour and Evolution 43, 244–253CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ceballos, G. and Simonetti, J. A., eds. (2002). Diversidad y Conservación de los Mamíferos Neotropicales. Distrito Federal, Mexico: Comisión Nacional para el Conocimiento y Uso de la BiodiversidadGoogle Scholar
Charles-Dominique, P., Atramentowicz, M., Charles-Dominique, M.et al. (1981). Les mammifères frugivores arboricoles nocturnes d'une forêt guyanaise: interrelations plantes-animaux. Revue Ecologie (Terre et Vie) 35, 342–435Google Scholar
Chilcott, M. J. and Hume, I. D. (1985). Coprophagy and selective retention of fluid digesta: their role in the nutrition of the common ringtail possum, Pseudocheirus peregrinus. Australian Journal of Zoology 33, 1–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chivers, D. J. and Langer, P. (1994). The Digestive System of Mammals: Food, Form and Function. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christensen, P. and Burrows, N. (1995). Project Desert Dreaming: experimental reintroduction of mammals to the Gibson Desert, Western Australia. In Reintroduction Biology of Australian and New Zealand Fauna (ed. Serena, M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 199–207Google Scholar
Christensen, P. E. R. (1980). A sad day for native fauna. Forest Focus 23, 3–12Google Scholar
Cisternas, P. A. and Armati, P. J. (1999). Development of the thymus, spleen, lymph nodes and liver in the marsupial, Isoodon macrourus (northern brown bandicoot, Peramelidae). Anatomy and Embryology, Berlin 200, 433–443CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cisternas, P. A. and Armati, P. J. (2002). Immune system cell markers in the northern brown bandicoot, Isoodon macrourus. Developmental and Comparative Immunology 24, 771–784CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clancy, T. F. (1989). Factors influencing movement patterns of the euro (Macropus robustus erubescens) in the arid zone. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Clancy, T. F. and Croft, D. B. (1991). Differences in habitat use and grouping behavior between macropods and eutherian herbivores. Journal of Mammalogy 72, 441–449CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claridge, A. W. and Cork, S. J. (1994). Nutritional value of two species of hypogeal fungi for the long-nosed potoroo (Potorous tridactylus), a forest-dwelling mycophagous marsupial. Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 701–710CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claridge, A. W., Cunningham, R. B. and Tanton, M. T. (1993). Foraging patterns of the long-nosed potoroo (Potorous tridactylus) for hypogeal fungi in mixed-species and regrowth eucalypt forest stands in southeastern Australia. Forest Ecology and Management 61, 75–90CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, J. L., Jones, M. E. and Jarman, P. J. (1989). A day in the life of a kangaroo: activities and movements of eastern grey kangaroos Macropus giganteus at Wallaby Creek. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 611–618Google Scholar
Close, R. L. and Bell, J. N. (1997). Fertile hybrids in two genera of wallabies: Petrogale and Thylogale. Journal of Heredity 88, 393–397CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clutton-Brock, T. H. (1991). The Evolution of Parental Care. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University PressGoogle Scholar
Cockburn, A. (1990). Life history of the bandicoots: developmental rigidity and phenotypic plasticity. In Bandicoots and Bilbies (ed. Seebeck, J. H., Brown, P. R., Wallis, R. M. and Kemper, C. M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 285–292Google Scholar
Cockburn, A. (1997). Living slow and dying young: senescence in marsupials. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 163–171Google Scholar
Cockburn, A., Scott, M. P. and Scotts, D. J. (1985). Inbreeding avoidance and male-biased natal dispersal in Antechninus spp. (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae). Animal Behaviour 33, 908–915CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colagross, A. M. L. and Cockburn, A. (1993). Vigilance and grouping in the eastern grey kangaroo, Macropus giganteus. Australian Journal of Zoology 41, 325–334CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coleman, L. A., Harman, A. M. and Beazley, L. D. (1987). Displaced retinal ganglion cells in the wallaby Setonix brachyurus. Vision Research 27, 1269–1277CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Collet, C., Joseph, R. and Nicholas, K. (1989). Molecular cloning and characterization of a novel marsupial milk protein gene. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 164, 1380–1383CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Collins, L. R. (1973). Monotremes and Marsupials: a Reference for Zoological Institutions. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution PressGoogle Scholar
Coman, B. J. (1996). Fox Vulpes vulpes. In The Mammals of Australia (ed. Strahan, R.). Chatswood: Reed, pp. 698–699Google Scholar
Cone, A. L. and Cone, D. M. (1970). Operant conditioning of Virginia opossum. Psychological Reports 26, 83–86CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, D. W. and McKenzie, L. M. (1997). Genetics of tammar wallabies. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 120–131Google Scholar
Cooper, D. W., Johnston, P. G., VandeBerg, J. L., Maynes, G. M. and Chew, G. K. (1979). A comparison of genetic variability at X-linked and autosomal loci in kangaroos, man and Drosophila. Genetics Research 33, 243–252CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cooper, D. W., Johnston, P. G., Graves, J. A. M. and Watson, J. M. (1993). X-inactivation in marsupials and monotremes. Seminars in Developmental Biology 4, 117–128CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, S. J. and Hope, R. M. (1993). Evolution and expression of a beta-like globin gene of the Australian marsupial Sminthopsis crassicaudata. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 90, 11777–11781CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cooper, S. J., Murphy, R., Dolman, G., Hussey, D. and Hope, R. M. (1996). A molecular and evolutionary study of the beta-globin gene family of the Australian marsupial Sminthopsis crassicaudata. Molecular Biology and Evolution 13, 1012–1022CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cork, S. J. (1991). Meeting the energy requirements for lactation in a macropodid marsupial: Current nutrition versus stored body reserves. Journal of Zoology (London) 225, 567–576CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cork, S. J. and Dove, H. (1986). Milk consumption in late lactation in a marsupial, the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Proceedings of the Nutrition Society of Australia 11, 93Google Scholar
Cork, S. J. and Dove, H. (1989). Lactation in the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). II. Intake of milk components and maternal allocation of energy. Journal of Zoology (London) 219, 399–409CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cork, S. J., Hume, I. D. and Dawson, T. J. (1983). Digestion and metabolism of a natural foliar diet (Eucalyptus punctata) by an arboreal marsupial, the koala (Phascolarctos cinereus). Journal of Comparative Physiology B153, 181–190CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coulson, G. (1989). Repertoires of social behaviour in the Macropodoidea. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 457–473Google Scholar
Coulson, G. (1996). Anti-predator behaviour in marsupials. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 158–186Google Scholar
Coulson, G. (1997). Repertoires of social behaviour in captive and free-ranging grey kangaroos, Macropus giganteus and Macropus fuliginosus (Marsupialia: Macropodidae). Journal of Zoology (London) 242, 119–130CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coulson, G. and Croft, D. B. (1981). Flehmen in kangaroos. Australian Mammalogy 4, 139–140Google Scholar
Cowan, I. M., O'Riordan, A. M. and Cowan, J. S. M. (1974). Energy requirements of the dasyurid marsupial mouse Antechinus swainsonii (Waterhouse). Canadian Journal of Zoology 52, 269–275CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crandall, K. A., Bininda-Edmonds, O. R. P., Mace, G. M. and Wayne, R. K. (2000). Considering evolutionary processes in conservation biology. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 15, 290–295CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Crespo, J. A. (1982). Ecología de la comunidad de mamíferos del Parque Nacional Iguazú, Misiones. Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales ‘Bernardino Rivadavia’ III, 45–162Google Scholar
Croft, D. B. (1981a). Behaviour of red kangaroos, Macropus rufus (Desmarest, 1822) in northwestern New South Wales, Australia. Australian Mammalogy 4, 5–58Google Scholar
Croft, D. B. (1981b). Social behaviour of the euro, Macropus robustus (Gould), in the Australian arid zone. Australian Wildlife Research 8, 13–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Croft, D. B. (1982). Communication in the Dasyuridae (Marsupialia): a review. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 291–299Google Scholar
Croft, D. B. (1989). Social organisation of the Macropodoidea. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 505–525Google Scholar
Croft, D. B. (1996), Locomotion, foraging competition and group size. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 134–157Google Scholar
Croft, D. B. and Snaith, F. (1991). Boxing in red kangaroos, Macropus rufus: aggression or play?International Journal of Comparative Psychology 4, 221–236Google Scholar
Crompton, A. W. and Hiiemae, K. M. (1970). Molar occlusion and mandibular movements during occlusion in the American opossum, Didelphis marsupialis. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 49, 21–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crook, J. H., Ellis, J. E. and Goss-Custard, J. D. (1976). Mammalian social systems: structure and function. Animal Behaviour 24, 261–274CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crowe, O. and Hume, I. D. (1997). Morphology and function of the gastrointestinal tract of Australian folivorous possums. Australian Journal of Zoology 45, 357–368CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cuthill, I. C. and Houston, A. I. (1997). Managing time and energy. In Behavioural Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach (ed. Krebs, J. R. and Davies, N. B.). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 97–120Google Scholar
Darwin, C. (1839). The Voyage of the ‘Beagle’. Republished Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1962Google Scholar
Davies, N. B. (1991). Mating systems. In Behavioural Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach (ed. Krebs, J. R. and Davies, N. B.). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 263–294Google Scholar
Dawson, T. J. (1989). Diets of macropodoid marsupials: general patterns and environmental influences. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 129–142Google Scholar
Dawson, T. J. (1995). Kangaroos: Biology of the Largest Marsupials. Sydney: University of New South Wales PressGoogle Scholar
Dawson, T. J. and Ellis, B. A. (1994). Diets of mammalian herbivores in Australian arid shrublands: seasonal effects on overlap between red kangaroos, sheep and rabbits and on dietary niche breadths and electivities. Journal of Arid Environments 26, 257–271CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawson, T. J. and Hulbert, A. J. (1970). Standard metabolism, body temperature, and surface areas of Australian marsupials. American Journal of Physiology 218, 1233–1238Google ScholarPubMed
Dawson, T. J. and Taylor, C. R. (1973). Energetic cost of locomotion in kangaroos. Nature 246, 313–314CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blainville, H. M. D. (1833). Cours de physiologie générale et comparée: professé a la Faculté des Sciences de Paris. Paris: G. BaillièreGoogle Scholar
Deane, E. M. and Cooper, D. W. (1988). Immunological development. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 190–199CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickman, C. R. (1996). Overview of the Impacts of Feral Cats on Australian Native Fauna. Canberra: Australian Nature Conservation AgencyGoogle Scholar
Dickman, C. R. (2003). Distributional ecology of dasyurid marsupials. In Predators with Pouches: the Biology of Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Jones, M. E., Dickman, C. R. and Archer, M.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 318–331Google Scholar
Dickman, C. R., Predavec, M. and Downey, F. J. (1995). Long-range movements of small mammals in arid Australia: implications for land management. Journal of Arid Environments 31, 441–452CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donaldson, R. and Stoddart, M. (1994). Detection of hypogeous fungi by Tasmanian bettong (Bettongia gaimardi: Marsupialia; Macropodoidea). Journal of Chemical Ecology 20, 1201–1207CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doolittle, J. H. and Weimer, J. (1968). Spatial probability learning in the Virginian opossum. Psychonomic Science 13, 191CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunlop, S. A., Tee, L. B., Lund, R. D. and Beazley, L. D. (1997). Development of primary visual projections occurs entirely postnatally in the fat-tailed dunnart, a marsupial mouse, Sminthopsis crassicaudata. Journal of Comparative Neurology 384, 26–403.0.CO;2-N>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Eisenberg, J. F. (1981). The Mammalian Radiations: an Analysis of Trends in Evolution, Adaptation and Behavior. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. (1985). Form and function: the phylogenesis of predatory behaviour. Australian Mammalogy 8, 195–200Google Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. (1989). Mammals of the Neotropics. The Northern Neotropics: Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. and Golani, I. (1977). Communication in the Metatheria. In How Animals Communicate (ed. Sebeok, T. A.). Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 575–599Google Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. and Leyhausen, P. (1972). The phylogenesis of predatory behaviour in mammals. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 30, 59–93CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Eisenberg, J. F. and Redford, K. H. (1999). Mammals of the Neotropics. The Central Neotropics: Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. and Wilson, D. E. (1981). Relative brain size and demographic strategies in didelphid marsupials. American Naturalist 118, 1–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F., Collins, L. R. and Wemmer, C. (1975). Communication in the Tasmanian Devil (Sarcophilus harrisii) and a survey of auditory communication in the Marsupialia. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 37, 379–399CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eldridge, M. D. B., King, J. M., Loupis, A. K.et al. (1999). Unprecedented low levels of genetic variation and inbreeding depression in an island population of the black-footed rock-wallaby. Conservation Biology 13, 531–541CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Emmons, L. H. and Feer, F. (1997). Neotropical Rainforest Mammals: a Field Guide, 2nd edn. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press
Erxleben, J. C. P. (1777). Systema regni animalis per classes, ordines, genera, species, varietates cum synonymia et historia animalium. Classis 1: Mammalia. Leipzig: WygandGoogle Scholar
Ewer, R. F. (1968). A preliminary survey of the behaviour in captivity of the dasyurid marsupial, Sminthopsis crassicaudata (Gould). Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 25, 319–365CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ewer, R. F. (1969). Some observations on the killing and eating of prey by two dasyurid marsupials: the mulgara Dasycercus cristicauda, and the Tasmanian devilSarcophilus harrisii. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 26, 23–38CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fagen, R. (1981). Animal Play. Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Fanning, F. D. (1982). Reproduction, growth and development in Ningaui sp. (Dasyuridae, Marsupialia) from the Northern Territory. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, vol. 1, pp. 23–37Google Scholar
Finlayson, H. H. (1932). Caloprymnus campestris: its recurrence and characters. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 56, 146–167Google Scholar
Firestone, K. B., Elphinstone, M. S., Sherwin, W. B. and Houlden, B. A. (1999). Phylogeographical population structure of tiger quolls Dasyurus maculatus (Dasyuridae: Marsupialia), an endangered carnivorous marsupial. Molecular Ecology 8, 1613–1625CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisher, D. O., Owens, I. P. F. and Johnson, C. N. (2001). The ecological basis of life history variation in marsupials. Ecology 82, 3531–3540CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisher, R. A. (1930). The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection. Oxford: Clarendon PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flannery, T. (1994a). Possums of the World: a Monograph of the Phalangeroidea. Chatswood: GEO PublicationsGoogle Scholar
Flannery, T. (1994b). The Future Eaters. Chatswood: ReedGoogle Scholar
Flannery, T. (1995a) Mammals of New Guinea. Chatswood: ReedGoogle Scholar
Flannery, T. (1995b) Mammals of the South-West Pacific and Moluccan Islands. Chatswood: ReedGoogle Scholar
Fleay, D. (1935). Breeding of Dasyurus viverrinus and general observations on the species. Journal of Mammalogy 16, 10–16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleay, D. (1947). Gliders of the Gum Trees. Melbourne: Bread and Cheese ClubGoogle Scholar
Fleay, D. (1950). Experiences with Australia's brushtailed tuan. Animal Kingdom 53, 152–157Google Scholar
Fleay, D. (1965). Australia's ‘needle-in-a-haystack’ marsupial. Victorian Naturalist 82, 195–204Google Scholar
Fleming, M. R. (1980). Thermoregulation and torpor in the sugar glider, Petaurus breviceps (Marsupialia: Petauridae). Australian Journal of Zoology 28, 521–534CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleming, M. R. and Frey, H. (1984). Aspects of the natural history of feathertail gliders (Acrobates pygmaeus) in Victoria. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 403–408Google Scholar
Fleming, T. H. (1972). Aspects of the population dynamics of three species of opossums in the Panama Canal Zone. Journal of Mammalogy 53, 619–623CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleming, T. H. (1973). The reproductive cycles of three species of opossums and other mammals in the Panama Canal Zone. Journal of Mammalogy 54, 439–455CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fletcher, T. and Selwood, L. (2000). Possum reproduction and development. In The Brushtail Possum: Biology, Impact and Management of an Introduced Marsupial (ed. Montague, T. L.). Lincoln: Manaaki Whenua Press, pp. 62–81Google Scholar
Foley, W. J. and Hume, I. D. (1987). Nitrogen requirements and urea metabolism in two arboreal marsupials, the greater glider (Petauroides volans) and the brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula), fed Eucalyptus foliage. Physiological Zoology 60, 241–250CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foley, W. J., Hume, I. D. and Cork, S. J. (1989). Fermentation in the hindgut of the greater glider (Petauroides volans) and brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). Physiological Zoology 62, 1126–1143CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fonseca, G. A. B. and Kierulff, M. C. (1988). Biology and natural history of Brazilian Atlantic Forest small mammals. Bulletin of the Florida State Museum (Biological Sciences) 34, 99–133Google Scholar
Fonseca, G. A. B., Rylands, A., Costa, C. M., Machado, R. B. and Leite, Y. L. (1994). Livro vermelho dos mamiferos brasileiros ameacados de extinção. Belo Horizonte: Fundaĉão BiodiversitasGoogle Scholar
Fonseca, G. A. B., Herrmann, G., Leite, Y. L. R., Mittermeier, R. A., Rylands, A. B. and Patton, J. L. (1996). Lista anotada dos mamíferos do Brasil. Occasional Paper 4. Washington, DC: Conservation International; Belo Horizonte: Fundação Biodiversitas, pp. 1–38Google Scholar
Foster, J. W., Brennan, F. E., Hampikian, G. K.et al. (1992). Evolution of sex determination and the Y chromosome: SRY-related sequences in marsupials. Nature 359, 531–533CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Francis, C. M., Anthony, E. L. P., Brunton, J. A. and Kunz, T. H. (1994). Lactation in male fruit bats. Nature 367, 691–692CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frankham, R. F. (1995). Effective population size/adult population size ratios in wildlife: a review. Genetical Research 66, 95–107CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franq, E. N. (1969). Behavioral aspects of feigned death in the opossum, Didelphis marsupialis. American Midland Naturalist 81, 556–568CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frederick, H. and Johnson, C. N. (1996). Social organisation in the rufous bettong, Aepyprymnus rufescens. Australian Journal of Zoology 44, 9–17CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friend, J. A. (1990). The numbat Myrmecobius fasciatus (Myrmecobiidae): history of decline and potential for recovery. Proceedings of the Ecological Society of Australia 16, 369–377Google Scholar
Friend, J. A. and Whitford, R. W. (1986). Captive breeding of the numbat (Myrmecobius fasciatus). Australian Mammal Society Bulletin 9, 54Google Scholar
Frost, S. B., Milliken, G. W., Plautz, E. J., Masterton, R. B. and Nudo, R. J. (2000). Somatosensory and motor representations in cerebral cortex of a primitive mammal (Monodelphis domestica): a window into the early evolution of sensorimotor cortex. Journal of Comparative Neurology 421, 29–513.0.CO;2-9>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fry, E. J. and Saunders, N. R. (2002). Spinal repair in immature animals: a novel approach using the South American opossum Monodelphis domestica. Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology 27, 542–547CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fry, E. J., Stolp, H. B., Lane, M. A., Dziegielewska, K. M. and Saunders, N. R. (2003). Regeneration of supraspinal axons after complete transection of the thoracic spinal cord in neonatal opossums (Monodelphis domestica). Journal of Comparative Neurology 466, 422–444CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fujino, T., Navaratnam, N. and Scott, J. (1998). Human apolipoprotein B RNA editing deaminase gene (APOBEC1). Genomics 47, 266–275CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ganslosser, U. (1979). Soziale interaktionen des Doria-Baumkanguruhs (Dendrolagus dorianus Ramsay 1883) (Marsupialia: Macropodidae). Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde 44, 1–18Google Scholar
Ganslosser, U. (1989). Agonistic behaviour in macropodids: a review. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 475–503Google Scholar
Gardner, A. (1982). Virginia opossum Didelphis virginiana. In Wild Mammals of North America (ed. Chapman, J. A. and Feldhamer, G. A.). Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, pp. 3–36Google Scholar
Gardner, A. (1993). Order Didelphimorphia. In Mammal Species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (ed. Wilson, D. E. and Reeder, D. M.). Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 15–23Google Scholar
Gaughwin, M. D. (1979). The occurrence of flehmen in a marsupial: the hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus latifrons). Animal Behaviour 27, 1063–1065CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaughwin, M. D. and Wells, R. T. (1978). General features of the reproduction of the hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus latifrons) in the Blanchetown region of South Australia. Australian Mammal Society Bulletin 5, 46–47Google Scholar
Geiser, F. (1987). Hibernation and daily torpor in two pygmy-possums (Cercartetus spp., Marsupialia). Physiological Zoology 60, 267–278CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geiser, F. (1994). Hibernation and daily torpor in marsupials: a review. Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 1–16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gemmell, N. J., Veitch, C. and Nelson, J. (1999). Birth in the marsupial northern brown bandicoot Isoodon macrourus. Australian Journal of Zoology 47, 517–528CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gemmell, R. T. (1989). The persistence of the corpus luteum of pregnancy into lactation in the marsupial bandicoot, Isoodon macrourus. General and Comparative Endocrinology 75, 355–362CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gemmell, R. T. (1990). The initiation of the breeding season of the northern brown bandicoot, Isoodon macrourus in captivity. In Bandicoots and Bilbies (ed. Seebeck, J. H., Brown, P. R., Wallis, R. L. and Kemper, C. M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 205–212Google Scholar
Gemmell, R. T. and Nelson, J. (1988). Ultrastructure of the olfactory system of three newborn marsupial species. Anatomical Record 221, 655–662CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gemmell, R. T. and Rose, R. W. (1989). The senses involved in movement of some newborn Macropodidae and other marsupials from cloaca to pouch. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 339–347Google Scholar
Gibson, L. A. (2001). Seasonal changes in the diet, food availability and food preference of the greater bilby (Macrotis lagotis) in south-western Queensland. Wildlife Research 28, 121–134CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson, L. A. and Hume, I. D. (2000). Seasonal field energetics and water flux rates of the greater bilby (Macrotis lagotis). Australian Journal of Zoology 48, 225–239CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giles, J. R. and Lim, L. (1987). Conservation of the Endangered Species of New South Wales: an Assessment of Current Status, Threats and Requirements for Maintenance of Wildlife Populations. Proceedings of the National Conference on Conservation of Threatened Species and their Habitats 2. Sydney: Australian Committee for IUCNGoogle Scholar
Gill, T. N. (1872). Arrangement of the families of mammals with analytical tables. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 11, 1–98Google Scholar
Girjes, A. A., Ellis, W. A., Lavin, M. F. and Carrick, F. N. (1993). Immuno-dot blot as a rapid diagnostic method for detection of chlamydial infection in koalas (Phasolarctos cinereus). Veterinary Record 133, 136–141CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glas, R., Graves, J. A. M., Toder, R., Ferguson-Smith, M. and O'Brien, P. C. (1999). Cross-species chromosome painting between human and marsupial directly demonstrates the ancient region of the mammalian X. Mammalian Genome 10, 1115–1116CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Godthelp, H., Wroe, S. and Archer, M. (1999). A new marsupial from the early Eocene Tingamarra local fauna of Murgon in southeastern Queensland: the prototypical Australian marsupial?Journal of Mammalian Evolution 6, 289–313CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldingay, R. (1984). Photoperiodic control of diel activity in the sugar glider (Petaurus breviceps). In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 385–390Google Scholar
Goldingay, R. (1992). Socioecology of the yellow-bellied glider (Petaurus australis) in a coastal forest. Australian Journal of Zoology 40, 267–278CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldingay, R. (1994). Loud calls of the yellow-bellied glider, Petaurus australis: territorial behaviour by an arboreal marsupial?Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 279–293CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldingay, R. and Kavanagh, R. P. (1990). Socioecology of the yellow-bellied glider (Petaurus australis) at Waratah Creek, New South Wales. Australian Journal of Zoology 38, 327–341CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grakoui, O. A., Bromley, S. K., Sumen, C.et al. (1999). The immunological synapse: a molecular machine controlling T cell activation. Science 285, 221–227CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grant, T. R. and Temple-Smith, P. D. (1987). Observations on torpor in the small marsupial Dromiciops australis (Marsupialia: Microbiotheriidae) from southern Chile. In Possums and Opossums: Studies in Evolution (ed. Archer, M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, and Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 273–277Google Scholar
Graves, J. A. M. (1995). The origin and function of the mammalian Y chromosome and Y-borne genes: an evolving understanding. Bioessays 17, 311–320CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Graves, J. A. M. and Westerman, M. (2002). Marsupial genetics and genomics. Trends in Genetics 18, 517–521CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Green, B. and Merchant, J. C. (1988). The composition of marsupial milk. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 41–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gregory, W. K. (1947). The monotremes and the palimpsest theory. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 88, 1–52Google Scholar
Grigera, D. E. and Rapoport, E. H. (1983). Status and distribution of the European hare in South America. Journal of Mammalogy 64, 163–166CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haffenden, A. T. (1984). Breeding, growth and development in the Herbert River ringtail possum, Pseudocheirus herbertensis herbertensis (Marsupialia: Petaudidae). In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 277–281Google Scholar
Handasyde, K. A. (1986). Factors affecting reproduction in the female koala (Phascolarctos cinereus). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, Monash UniversityGoogle Scholar
Happold, M. (1972). Maternal and juvenile behaviour in the marsupial jerboa, Antechinomys spenceri (Dasyuridae). Australian Mammalogy 1, 27–37Google Scholar
Harder, J. D. (1992). Reproductive biology of South American marsupials. In Reproductive Biology of South American Vertebrates (ed. Hamlett, W. C.). New York, NY: Springer, pp. 211–228CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harder, J. D. and Fleck, D. W. (1997). Reproductive ecology of New World marsupials. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 175–203Google Scholar
Harding, H. R., Carrick, F. N. and Shorey, C. D. (1981). Marsupial phylogeny: new indications from sperm ultrastructure and development in Tarsipes spencerae. Search 12, 45–47Google Scholar
Harrison, G. A. and Wedlock, D. N. (2000). Marsupial cytokines: structure, function and evolution. Developmental and Comparative Immunology 24, 473–484CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hayman, D. L. (1990). Marsupial cytogenetics. Australian Journal of Zoology 37, 331–349CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayssen, V., Lacy, R. C. and Parker, P. J. (1985). Metatherian reproduction: transitional or transcending?American Naturalist 126, 617–632CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hearn, J. P. (1975). The role of the pituitary in the reproduction of the male tammar wallaby, Macropus eugenii. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 42, 399–402CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Heathcote, C. F. (1987). Grouping of eastern grey kangaroos in open habitat. Australian Wildlife Research 14, 343–348CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heinsohn, G. E. (1966). Ecology and reproduction of the Tasmanian bandicoots (Perameles gunnii and Isoodon obesulus). University of California Publications in Zoology 80, 1–96Google Scholar
Hendrichs, H. (1996). Specific problems of Metatherian and Eutherian sociality. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 125–133Google Scholar
Henry, S. R. (1984). Social organisation of the greater glider (Petauroides volans) in Victoria. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 221–228Google Scholar
Henry, S. R. and Suckling, G. C. (1984). A review of the ecology of the sugar glider. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 355–358Google Scholar
Hess, W. R. (1954). Das Zwischenhirn. Basel: SchwabeGoogle Scholar
Hill, J. P. and O'Donoghue, C. H. (1913). The reproductive cycle of the marsupial Dasyurus viverrinus. Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science 59, 133–174Google Scholar
Hilton-Taylor, C. (2000). 2000 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Gland: IUCNGoogle Scholar
Hinde, R. A. and Stevenson-Hinde, J. (1976). Towards understanding relationships: dynamic stability. In Growing Points in Ethology (ed. Bateson, P. P. G. and Hinde, R. A.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 451–479Google Scholar
Hinds, L. A. (1988). The hormonal control of lactation. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 55–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hinds, L. A. and Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1985). Seasonal and circadian patterns of circulating prolactin during lactation and seasonal quiescence in the tammar, Macropus eugenii. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 74, 173–183CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Holmes, D. J. (1992). Sternal odor cues for social discrimination by female Virginia opossums, Didelphis virginiana. Journal of Mammalogy 72, 402–410CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hope, R. M. and Godfrey, G. K. (1988). Genetically determined variation of pelage colour and reflectance in natural and laboratory populations of the marsupial Sminthopsis crassicaudata (Gould). Australian Journal of Zoology 36, 441–454CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hope, R. M., Cooper, S. and Wainwright, B. (1990). Globin macromolecular sequences in marsupials and monotremes. Australian Journal of Zoology 37, 289–313CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horovitz, I. and Sánchez-Villagra, M. R. (2003). A morphological analysis of marsupial mammal higher-level phylogenetic relationships. Cladistics 19, 181–212CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horsup, A. (1996). The behavioural ecology of the allied rock-wallaby Petrogale assimilis. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, James Cook UniversityGoogle Scholar
Houlden, B. A., Greville, W. D. and Sherwin, W. B. (1996a). Evolution of MHC class I loci in marsupials: characterization of sequences from koala (Phascolarctos cinereus). Molecular and Biological Evolution 13, 1119–1127CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houlden, B. A., England, P. R., Taylor, A. C., Greville, W. D. and Sherwin, W. B. (1996b). Low genetic variability of the koala Phascolarctos cinereus in south-eastern Australia following a severe population bottleneck. Molecular Ecology 5, 269–281CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houlden, B. A., Costello, B. H., Sharkey, D.et al. (1999). Phylogeogenetic differentiation in the mitochondrial control region in the koala, Phascolarctos cinereus (Goldfuss 1817). Molecular Ecology 8, 999–1011CrossRefGoogle Scholar
How, R. A. (1978). Population strategies of four species of Australian ‘possums’. In The Ecology of Arboreal Folivores (ed. Montgomery, G. G.). Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 305–313Google Scholar
How, R. A. (1981). Population parameters of two congeneric possums, Trichosurus spp., in north-eastern New South Wales. Australian Journal of Zoology 29, 205–215CrossRefGoogle Scholar
How, R. A., Barnett, J. L., Bradley, A. J., Humphreys, W. F. and Martin, R. (1984). The population biology of Pseudocheirus peregrinus in a Leptospermum laevigatum thicket. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 261–288Google Scholar
Howard, W. E. and Amaya, J. N. (1975). European rabbit invades western Argentina. Journal of Wildlife Management 39, 757–761CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hrdina, F. C. (1997). Marsupial destruction in Queensland 1877–1930. Australian Zoologist 30, 272–286CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huffman, K. J., Nelson, J., Clarey, J. and Krubitzer, L. (1999). Organization of somatosensory cortex in three species of marsupials, Dasyurus hallucatus, Dactylopsila trivirgata, and Monodelphis domestica: neural correlates of morphological specializations. Journal of Comparative Neurology 403, 5–323.0.CO;2-F>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hughes, R. L. (1962). Reproduction in the macropod marsupial, Potorous tridactylus (Kerr). Australian Journal of Zoology 10, 193–224CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hughes, R. L. and Hall, L. S. (1984). Embryonic development in the common brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 197–212Google Scholar
Hulbert, A. J. (1988). Metabolism and the development of endothermy. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 148–161CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D. (1977). Production of volatile fatty acids in two species of wallaby and in sheep. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 56A, 299–304CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D. (1986). Nitrogen metabolism in the parma wallaby, Macropus parma. Australian Journal of Zoology 34, 147–155CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D. (1999). Marsupial Nutrition. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D. and Carlisle, C. H. (1985). Radiographic studies on the structure and function of the gastrointestinal tract of two species of potoroine marsupials. Australian Journal of Zoology 33, 641–654CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D. and Warner, A. C. I. (1980). Evolution of microbial digestion in mammals. In Digestive Physiology and Metabolism in Ruminants (ed. Ruckebusch, Y. and Thivend, P.). Lancaster: MTP Press, pp. 665–684CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D., Jazwinski, E. and Flannery, T. F. (1993). Morphology and function of the digestive tract in New Guinean possums. Australian Journal of Zoology 41, 85–100CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, I. D., Runcie, M. J. and Caton, J. M. (1997). Digestive physiology of the ground cuscus (Phalanger gymnotis), a New Guinean phalangerid marsupial. Australian Journal of Zoology 45, 561–571CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunsaker, D. II, ed. (1977). The Biology of Marsupials. New York, NY: Academic Press
Hunsaker, D., II and Shupe, D. (1977). Behavior of New World marsupials. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Hunsaker, D. II). New York, NY: Academic Press, pp. 279–347Google Scholar
Hunt, M., Slotnick, B. and Croft, D. (1999). Olfactory function in red kangaroos (Macropus rufus) assessed using odor-cued taste avoidance. Physiology and Behavior 67, 365–368CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hutson, G. D. (1975). Sequences of prey-catching behaviour in the brush-tailed marsupial rat (Dasyuroides byrnei). Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 39, 39–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huxley, T. H. (1880). On the application of the laws of evolution to the arrangement of the Vertebrata, and more particularly of the Mammalia. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 43, 649–662Google Scholar
IUCN (1994). 1994 IUCN Red List Categories. IUCN Species Survival Commission. Gland: IUCN
IUCN (2001). 2000 IUCN Red List Categories: Version 3.1. IUCN Species Survival Commission. IUCN: Gland
Janetos, A. C. (1980). Strategies of female choice: a theoretical analysis. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 7, 107–112CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janke, A., Feldmaier-Fuchs, G., Thomas, W. K., von Haeseler, A. and Paabo, S. (1994). The marsupial mitochondrial genome and the evolution of placental mammals. Genetics 137, 243–256Google ScholarPubMed
Janke, A., Gemmell, N. J., Feldmaier-Fuchs, G., von Haeseler, A. and Paabo, S. (1996). The mitochondrial genome of a monotreme: the platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus). Journal of Molecular Evolution 42, 153–159CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janke, A., Magnell, O., Wieczorek, G., Westerman, M. and Arnason, U. (2002). Phylogenetic analysis of 18S rRNA and the mitochondrial genomes of the wombat, Vombatus ursinus, and the spiny anteater, Tachyglossus aculeatus: increased support for the Marsupionta hypothesis. Journal of Molecular Evolution 54, 71–80CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Janssens, P. A. and Messer, M. (1988). Changes in nutritional metabolism during weaning. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 162–175CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janssens, P. A. and Rogers, A. M. T. (1989). Metabolic changes during pouch vacation and weaning in Macropodoids. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 367–376Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. (1983). Mating systems and sexual dimorphism in large, terrestrial, mammalian herbivores. Biological Reviews 58, 485–520CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarman, P. J. (1984). The dietary ecology of macropod marsupials. Proceedings of the Nutrition Society of Australia 9, 82–87Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. (1987). Group size and activity in eastern grey kangaroos. Animal Behaviour 35, 1044–1050CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarman, P. J. (1991). Social behaviour and social organisation of the Macropodoidea. Advances in the Study of Behaviour 20, 1–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarman, P. J. and Bayne, P. (1997). Behavioural ecology of Petrogale penicillata in relation to conservation. Australian Mammalogy 19, 219–228Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. and Coulson, G. (1989). Dynamics and adaptiveness of grouping in macropods. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 527–547Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. and Kruuk, H. (1996). Phylogeny and social organisation in mammals. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 80–101Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. and Southwell, C. J. (1986). Grouping, associations and reproductive strategies in eastern grey kangaroos. In Ecological Aspects of Social Evolution (ed. Rubenstein, D. I. and Wrangham, R. W.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, pp. 399–428Google Scholar
Jarman, P. J. and Wright, S. M. (1993). Macropod studies at Wallaby Creek. IX. Exposure and responses of eastern grey kangaroos to dingoes. Wildlife Research 20, 833–843CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jerison, H. J. (1973). Evolution of the Brain and Intelligence. New York, NY: Academic PressGoogle Scholar
Jimenez, J. A., Hughes, K. A., Alaks, G., Graham, L. and Lacy, R. C. (1994). An experimental study of inbreeding depression in a natural habitat. Science 266, 271–273CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. N. (1986). Philopatry, reproductive success of females, and maternal investment in the red-necked wallaby. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 19, 143–150CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. N. (1987). Relationships between mother and infant red-necked wallabies (Macropus rufogriseus banksianus). Ethology 74, 1–20CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. N. (1989). Social interactions and reproductive tactics in red-necked wallabies (Macropus rufogriseus banksianus). Journal of Zoology (London) 217, 267–280CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. N. and Crossman, D. G. (1991). Dispersal and social organization of the northern hairy-nosed wombat Lasiorhinus krefftii. Journal of Zoology (London) 225, 605–615CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. N. and Johnson, K. A. (1983). Behaviour of the bilby, Macrotis lagotis (Reid) (Marsupialia: Thylacomyidae) in captivity. Australian Wildlife Research 10, 77–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, J. I. (1977). Central nervous system of marsupials. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Hunsaker, D. II). New York, NY: Academic Press, pp. 157–278Google Scholar
Johnson, K. A., Burbidge, A. A. and McKenzie, N. L. (1989). Australian Macropodoidea: causes of decline and future research and management. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 641–657Google Scholar
Jones, F. W. (1923). The Mammals of South Australia. Part I. The Monotremes and the Carnivorous Marsupials. Adelaide: Government PrinterGoogle Scholar
Jones, F. W. (1924). The Mammals of South Australia. Part II. The Bandicoots and the Herbivorous Marsupials. Adelaide: Government PrinterGoogle Scholar
Jones, M. (1997). Character displacement in Australian dasyurid carnivores: size relationships and prey size patterns. Ecology 78, 2569–2587CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, M. E. and Barmuta, L. A. (1998). Diet overlap and relative abundance of sympatric dasyurid carnivores: a hypothesis of competition. Journal of Animal Ecology 67, 410–421CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, R. C. (1989). Reproduction in male Macropodidae. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 287–305Google Scholar
Jones, T. E. and Munger, B. L. (1985). Early differentiation of the afferent nervous system in glabrous snout skin of the opossum (Monodelphis domestica). Somatosensory Research 3, 169–184CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Julien-Laferrière, D. (1991). Organisation du peuplement de marsupiaux en Guyane française. Revue d'Ecologie (La Terre et la Vie) 46, 125–144Google Scholar
Julien-Laferrière, D. and Atramentowicz, M. (1990). Feeding and reproduction of three didelphid marsupials in two Neotropical forests (French Guiana). Biotropica 22, 404–415CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kakulas, B. A. (1963). Influence of the size of enclosure on the development of myopathy in the captive Rottnest quokka. Nature 198, 673–674CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kakulas, B. A. (1966). Regeneration of skeletal muscle in the Rottnest quokka. Australian Journal of Experimental Biology and Medical Science 44, 673–688CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kardong, K. V. (1998). Vertebrates: Comparative Anatomy, Function and Evolution. New York, NY: McGraw-HillGoogle Scholar
Kaufmann, J. H. (1974a). Social ethology of the whiptail wallaby, Macropus parryi, in north-eastern New South Wales, Australia. Animal Behaviour 22, 281–369CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaufmann, J. H. (1974b). The ecology and evolution of social organization in the kangaroo family (Macropodidae). American Zoologist 14, 51–62CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kavanagh, R. P. and Rohan-Jones, W. G. (1982). Calling behaviour of the yellow-bellied glider, Petaurus australis Shaw. Australian Mammalogy 5, 95–112Google Scholar
Kean, R. I. (1967). Behaviour and territorialism in Trichosurus vulpecula (Marsupialia). Proceedings of the New Zealand Ecological Society 14, 71–78Google Scholar
Kelt, D. A. and Martinez, D. R. (1989). Notes on distribution and ecology of two marsupials endemic to the Valdavian Forests of southern South America. Journal of Mammalogy 70, 220–224CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, M. (1992). Australasian Marsupials and Monotremes: an Action Plan for their Conservation. Gland: IUCNGoogle Scholar
Kerle, A. (2001). Possums: the Brushtails, Ringtails and Greater Glider. Sydney: University of New South Wales PressGoogle Scholar
Kerry, K. R. (1969). Intestinal disaccharidase activity in a monotreme and eight species of marsupials (with an added note on the disaccharidases of five species of sea birds). Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 52A, 235–246Google Scholar
King, D. R., Oliver, A. J. and Mead, R. J. (1981). Bettongia and fluoracetate: a role for 1080 in fauna management. Australian Wildlife Research 8, 529–536CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kinnear, J. E., Onus, M. L. and Bromilow, R. N. (1988). Fox control and rock wallaby population dynamics. Australian Wildlife Research 15: 435–450CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kinnear, J. E., Onus, M. L. and Sumner, N. R. (1998). Fox control and rock-wallaby population dynamics. II. An update. Wildlife Research 25, 81–88CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirkby, R. J. (1977). Learning and problem-solving in marsupials. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Stonehouse, B. and Gilmore, D.). London: Macmillan, pp. 193–208CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirkby, R. J. and Preston, A. C. (1972). The behaviour of marsupials. II. Reactivity and habituation to novelty in Sminthopsis crassicaudata. Journal of Biological Psychology 14, 21–24Google Scholar
Kirsch, J. A. W. and Palma, R. E. (1995). DNA–DNA hybridization studies of carnivorous marsupials. V. A further estimate of relationships among opossums (Marsupialia: Didelphidae). Mammalia 59, 403–425CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kleiber, M. (1961). The Fire of Life. New York, NY: WileyGoogle Scholar
Klettenheimer, B. (1995). Social dominance and scent marking in the sugar glider (Petaurus breviceps). Advances in the Biosciences 93, 345–352Google Scholar
Klettenheimer, B., Temple-Smith, P. D. and Sofronidis, G. (1997). Father and son sugar gliders: more than a genetic coalition?Journal of Zoology (London) 242, 741–750CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kool, K. M. (1989). Behavioural ecology of the silver leaf monkey, Trachypithecus auratus sondaicus, in the Pangandaran Nature Reserve, West Java, Indonesia. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South Wales
Koop, B. F. and Goodman, M. (1988). Evolutionary and developmental aspects of two hemoglobin beta-chain genes (epsilon M and beta M) of opossum. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 85, 3893–3897CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koppenheffer, T. L., Spong, K. D. and Falvo, H. M. (1998). The complement system of the marsupial Monodelphis domestica. Developmental and Comparative Immunology 22, 231–237CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kovacic, D. A. and Guttman, S. I. (1979). An electrophoretic comparison of genetic variability between eastern and western populations of the opossum. American Midland Naturalist 101, 269–277CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krajewski, C., Wroe, S. and Westerman, M. (2000a). Molecular evidence for the pattern and timing of cladogenesis in dasyurid marsupials. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 130, 375–404CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krajewski, C., Woolley, P. A. and Westerman, M. (2000b). The evolution of reproductive strategies in dasyurid marsupials: implications of molecular phylogeny. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 71, 417–435CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krause, W. J. (1998). A review of histogenesis/organogenesis in the developing North American opossum (Didelphis virginiana). Advances in Anatomy, Embryology, and Cell Biology 143, 1–115Google Scholar
Krause, W. J., Yamada, J. and Cutts, J. H. (1985). Quantitative distribution of enterocrine cells in the gastrointestinal tract of the adult opossum, Didelphis virginiana. Journal of Anatomy 140, 591–605Google ScholarPubMed
Krockenberger, A. K. (1993). Energetics and nutrition during lactation in the koala. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of Sydney
Krockenberger, A. K. (1996). Composition of the milk of the koala, Phascolarctos cinereus, an arboreal folivore. Physiological Zoology 69, 701–718CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krockenberger, A. K., Hume, I. D. and Cork, S. J. (1998). Production of milk and nutrition of the dependent young of free-ranging koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus). Physiological Zoology 71, 45–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kulski, J. K., Shiina, T., Anzai, T., Kohara, S. and Inoko, H. (2002). Comparative genomic analysis of the MHC: the evolution of class I duplication blocks, diversity and complexity from shark to man. Immunological Reviews 190, 95–122CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lande, R. and Barrowclough, G. F. (1987). Effective population size, genetic variation, and their use in population management. In Viable Populations for Conservation (ed. Soulé, M. E.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 87–123CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lanyon, J. M. and Sanson, G. D. (1986). Koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) dentition and nutrition. II. Implications of toothwear in nutrition. Journal of Zoology (London) 209, 169–181CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lanzavecchia, A. and Sallusto, F. (2000). From synapses to immunological memory: the role of sustained T cell stimulation. Current Opinion in Immunology 12, 92–98CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Latz, P. (1995). Bushfires and Bushtucker: Aboriginal Plant Use in Central Australia. Alice Springs: IAD PressGoogle Scholar
Leblond, H. and Cabana, T. (1997). Myelination of the ventral and dorsal roots of the C8 and L4 segments of the spinal cord at different stages of development in the gray opossum, Monodelphis domestica. Journal of Comparative Neurology 386, 203–2163.0.CO;2-5>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lee, A. K. and Cockburn, A. (1985). Evolutionary Ecology of Marsupials. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, A. K., Woolley, P. and Braithwaite, R. W. (1982). Life history strategies of dasyurid marsupials. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, vol. 1, pp. 1–11Google Scholar
Lemos, B. and Cerqueira, R. (2002). Morphological differentiation in the white-eared opossum group (Didelphidae: Didelphis). Journal of Mammalogy 83, 354–3692.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Linnaeus, C. (1758). Systema naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis. Vol. 1: Regnum animale. Editio decima, reformata. Stockholm: Laurentii Salvii
Lissowsky, M. (1996). The occurrence of play behaviour in marsupials. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 87–107Google Scholar
Lockhart, J. and Schwartz, S. B. (1983). Early Latin America. New York, NY: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Long, J., Archer, M., Flannery, T. and Hand, S. J. (2002). Prehistoric Mammals of Australia and New Guinea: One Hundred Million Years of Evolution. Kensington: University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Lorini, M. L., Oliviera, A. J. and Persson, V. G. (1994). Annual age structure and reproductive patterns in Marmosa incana (Lund, 1841) (Didelphidae, Marsupialia). Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde 59, 65–73Google Scholar
Low, B. S. (1978). Environmental uncertainty and the parental strategies of marsupials and placentals. American Naturalist 112, 197–213CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luikart, G. and England, P. R. (1999). Statistical analysis of microsatellite DNA data. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 14, 253–255CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Luikart, G., Sherwin, W. B., Steele, B. M. and Allendorf, F. W. (1998). Usefulness of molecular markers for detecting population bottlenecks via monitoring genetic change. Molecular Ecology 7, 963–974CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lundie-Jenkins, G. (1993). Observations on the behaviour of the rufous hare-wallaby, Lagorchestes hirsutus Gould (Marsupialia: Macropodidae) in captivity. Australian Mammalogy 16, 29–34Google Scholar
Lundie-Jenkins, G., Corbett, L. K. and Phillips, C. M. (1993). Ecology of the rufous hare-wallaby, Lagorchestes hirsutus Gould (Marsupialia: Macropodidae) in the Tanami Desert, NT. II. Interactions with introduced mammal species. Wildlife Research 20, 477–494CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luo, Z.-X, Ji, Q., Wible, J. R. and Yuan, C.-X. (2003). An Early Cretaceous tribosphenic mammal and metatherian evolution. Science 302, 1934–1940CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mackenzie, W. C. and Owen, W. J. (1919). The Glandular System in Monotremes and Marsupials. Melbourne: Jenkin, BuxtonGoogle Scholar
Macquarie, J. (1992). The effect of resource distribution, resource density and competition on the foraging patterns of red kangaroos, Macropus rufus. Unpublished B. Sc Hons thesis, University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Main, A. R., Shield, J. W. and Waring, H. (1959). Recent studies on marsupial ecology. In Biogeography and Ecology in Australia (ed. Keast, A., Crocker, R. L. and Christian, C. S.). Den Haag: Junk, pp. 315–331CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malcolm, J. R. (1991). Comparative abundances of Neotropical small mammals by trap height. Journal of Mammalogy 72, 188–192CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mansergh, I. and Broome, L. (1994). The Mountain Pygmy-possum of the Australian Alps. Kensington: New South Wales University PressGoogle Scholar
Marenssi, S. A., Reguero, M. A., Santillana, S. N. and Vizcaino, S. F. (1994). Eocene land mammals from Seymour Island, Antarctica: palaeobiogeographical implications. Antarctic Science 6, 3–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mark, R. F. and Marotte, L. R. (1992). Australian marsupials as models for the developing mammalian visual system. Trends in Neuroscience 15, 51–57CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mark, R. F. and Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1997). The developmental neurobiology of vision. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 311–326Google Scholar
Marotta, C. A., Wilson, J. T., Forget, B. G. and Weissman, S. M. (1977). Human beta-globin messenger RNA. III. Nucleotide sequences derived from complementary DNA. Journal of Biological Chemistry 252, 5040–5053Google ScholarPubMed
Marsh, K. J., Foley, W. J., Cowling, A. and Wallis, I. R. (2003). Differential susceptibility to Eucalyptus secondary compounds explains feeding by the common ringtail (Pseudocheirus peregrinus) and common brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). Journal of Comparative Physiology B173, 69–78Google Scholar
Marshall, L. G. and Muizon, C. (1988). The dawn of the age of mammals in South America. National Geographic Research 4, 23–55Google Scholar
Martin, P. S. and Klein, R. G., eds. (1984). Quaternary Extinctions. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona PressGoogle Scholar
Maxwell, S., Burbidge, A. A. and Morris, K. (1996). The 1996 Action Plan for Australian Marsupials and Monotremes. Prepared by the Australasian Marsupial and Monotreme Specialist Group, IUCN Species Survival Commission. Canberra: Wildlife AustraliaGoogle Scholar
McCarrey, J. R. (1994). Evolution of tissue specific gene expression in mammals. Bioscience 44, 20–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McClelland, K. L., Hume, I. D. and Soran, N. (1999). Responses of the digestive tract of the omnivorous northern brown bandicoot, Isoodon macrourus (Marsupialia: Peramelidae), to plant and insect-containing diets. Journal of Comparative Physiology B169, 411–418CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKenzie, L. M. and Cooper, D. W. (1997). Hybridization between tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii) populations from Western and South Australia. Journal of Heredity 88, 398–400CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McLean, I. G. and Lundie-Jenkins, G. (1993). Copulation and associated behaviour in the rufous hare-wallaby, Lagorchestes hirsutus. Australian Mammalogy 16, 77–80Google Scholar
McNab, B. K. (1986). Food habits, energetics and the reproduction of marsupials. Journal of Zoology (London) 208, 595–614CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McNab, B. K. and Eisenberg, J. F. (1989). Brain size and its relation to the rate of metabolism in mammals. American Naturalist 133, 157–167CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McNab, E. G. (1994). Predator calls and prey response. Victorian Naturalist 111, 190–195Google Scholar
Mead, R. J., Twigg, L. E., King, D. R. and Olvier, A. J. (1985). The tolerance to fluoroacetate of geographically separated populations of the quokkaSetonix brachyurus. Australian Zoologist 21, 503–512Google Scholar
Meissner, K. and Ganslosser, U. (1985). Development of young in the kowari Dasyuroides byrnei Spencer, 1896. Zoo Biology 4, 351–359CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mepham, T. B. (1976). The Secretion of Milk. Institute of Biology, Studies in Biology, 60. London: ArnoldGoogle Scholar
Merchant, J. C. (1990). Aspects of lactation in the northern brown bandicoot, Isoodon macrourus. In Bandicoots and Bilbies (ed. Seebeck, J. H., Brown, P. R., Wallis, R. M. and Kemper, C. M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 219–228Google Scholar
Messer, M. and Green, B. (1979). Milk carbohydrates of marsupials. II. Quantitative and qualitative changes in milk carbohydrates during lactation in the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Australian Journal of Biological Science 32, 519–531CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Metcalfe, C. J., Eldridge, M. D., Toder, R. and Johnston, P. G. (1998). Mapping the distribution of the telomeric sequence (T2AG3)n in the Macropodoidea (Marsupialia), by fluorescence in situ hybridization. I. The swamp wallaby, Wallabia bicolor. Chromosome Research 6, 603–610CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miles, M. A., Souza, A. A. and Póvoa, M. M. (1981). Mammal tracking and nest location in Brazilian forest with an improved spool-and-line device. Journal of Zoology (London) 195, 331–347CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milinski, M. and Parker, G. A. (1991). Competition for resources. In Behavioural Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach (ed. Krebs, J. R. and Davies, N. B.). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 137–168Google Scholar
Millar, J. S. (1977). Adaptive features of mammalian reproduction. Evolution 31, 370–386CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Millar, J. S. (1981). Pre-partum reproductive characteristics of eutherian mammals. Evolution 35, 1149–1163CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mitchell, P. (1990a). Social behaviour and communication of koalas. In Biology of the Koala (ed. Lee, A. K., Handasyde, K. A. and Sanson, G. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 151–170Google Scholar
Mitchell, P. (1990b). The home range and social activity of koalas – a quantitative analysis. In Biology of the Koala (ed. Lee, A. K., Handasyde, K. A. and Sanson, G. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 171–187Google Scholar
Moeller, H. (1973). Zur Evolutionshöhe des Marsupialia Gehirns. Zoologische Jahrbuch (Anatomie) 91, 434–448Google Scholar
Monteiro-Filho, E. L. A. and Dias, V. S. (1990). Observaçoes sobre a biologia de Lutreolina crassicaudata (Mammalia: Marsupialia). Revista Brasileira de Biologia 50, 393–399Google Scholar
Moore, B. D., Wallis, I. R., Marsh, K. J. and Foley, W. J. (2004). The role of nutrition in the conservation of the marsupial folivores of eucalypt forests. In Conservation of Australia's Forest Fauna (ed. Lunney, D.), 2nd edn. Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 549–575CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, H. D. and Taggart, D. A. (1995). Sperm pairing in the opossum increases the efficiency of sperm movement in a viscous environment. Biology of Reproduction 52, 947–953CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, S. J. and Sanson, G. D. (1995). A comparison of the molar efficiency of two insect-eating mammals. Journal of Zoology (London) 235, 175–192CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moritz, C. (1994). Defining ‘evolutionarily significant units’ for conservation. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 9, 373–375CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moritz, C. (1999). Conservation units and translocations: strategies for conserving evolutionary processes. Hereditas 130, 217–228CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moritz, C., Heideman, A., Geffen, E. and McRae, P. (1997). Genetic population structure of the greater bilby Macrotis lagotis, a marsupial in decline. Molecular Ecology 6, 925–936CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Morton, S. R. (1978). An ecological study of Sminthopsis crassicaudata (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae). 2. Behaviour and social organization. Australian Wildlife Research 5, 163–182CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morton, S. R. (1990). The impact of European settlement on the vertebrate animals of arid Australia: a conceptual model. Proceedings of the Ecological Society of Australia 16, 201–213Google Scholar
Morton, S. R. and Baynes, A. (1985). Small mammal assemblages in arid Australia: a reappraisal. Australian Mammalogy 8, 159–169Google Scholar
Morton, S. R., Dickman, C. R. and Fletcher, T. P. (1989). Dasyuridae. In Fauna of Australia. Vol. 1B. Mammalia (ed. Walton, D. W. and Richardson, B. J.). Canberra: Australian Government Printing Service, pp. 560–582Google Scholar
Moss, G. L. (1995). Home range, grouping patterns and the mating system of the red kangaroo (Macropus rufus) in the arid zone. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South WalesGoogle Scholar
Moyle, D. I., Hume, I. D. and Hill, D. M. (1995). Digestive performance and selective digesta retention in the long-nosed bandicoot, Perameles nasuta, a small omnivorous marsupial. Journal of Comparative Physiology B164, 552–560Google Scholar
Muizon, C. de (1992). La fauna de mamíferos de Tiupampa (Paleoceno inferior Formación Santa Lucía), Bolivia. In Fossils y facies de Bolivia, Vol. L. Vertebraedos (ed. Suarez-Soruco, R.). Santa Cruz: Revista de YPFB, pp. 575–624Google Scholar
Muizon, C. (1994). A new carnivorous marsupial from the Palaeocene of Bolivia and the problem of marsupial monophyly. Nature 370, 208–211CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Müller, W. A. (1996). Developmental Biology. Berlin: SpringerGoogle ScholarPubMed
Munks, S. A. (1990). Ecological energetics and reproduction in the common ringtail possum, Pseudocheirus peregrinus (Marsupialia: Phalangeroides). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of TasmaniaGoogle Scholar
Munks, S. A. and Green, B. (1995). Energy allocation for reproduction in a marsupial arboreal folivore, the common ringtail possum (Pseudocheirus peregrinus). Oecologia 101, 94–104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Myers, K., Parer, I., Wood, D. and Cooke, B. D. (1994). The rabbit in Australia. In The European Rabbit: the History and Biology of a Successful Coloniser (ed. Thompson, H. V. and King, C. M.). Oxford: Oxford Scientific Publications, pp. 108–157Google Scholar
Mykytowycz, R. and Nay, T. (1964). Studies of the cutaneous glands and hair follicles of some species of Macropodidae. CSIRO Wildlife Research 9, 200–217CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagy, K. A. (1987). Field metabolic rate and food requirement scaling in mammals and birds. Ecological Monographs 57, 111–128CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagy, K. A. (1994). Field bioenergetics of mammals: what determines metabolic rates?Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 43–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, J. (1992). Developmental staging in a marsupial, Dasyurus hallucatus. Anatomy and Embryology (Berlin) 185, 335–354CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, J. E. and Gemmell, R. T. (2003). Birth in the northern quoll, Dasyurus hallucatus (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae). Australian Journal of Zoology 51, 187–198CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, J. E. and Stephan, H. (1982). Encephalisation in Australian marsupials. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 699–706Google Scholar
Neumann, V. C. H. (1961). Die visuelle Lernfahigkeit primitiver Säugetiere. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 18, 71–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newsome, A. E. (1966). The influence of food on breeding in the red kangaroo in central Australia. CSIRO Wildlife Research 11, 187–196CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newsome, A. E. (1975). An ecological comparison of the two arid-zone kangaroos of Australia, and their anomalous prosperity since the introduction of ruminant stock to their environment. Quarterly Review of Biology 50, 389–424Google ScholarPubMed
Newsome, A. E. (1977). Imbalance in the sex ratio and age structure of the red kangaroo, Macropus rufus, in central Australia. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Stonehouse, B. and Gilmore, D.). London: Macmillan, pp. 221–233CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nicholas, K., Simpson, K., Wilson, M., Trott, J. and Shaw, D. (1997). The tammar wallaby: a model to study putative autocrine-induced changes in milk composition. Journal of Mammary Gland Biology and Neoplasia 2, 299–310CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nicoll, M. E. and Thompson, S. D. (1987). Basal metabolic rates and energetics of reproduction in therian mammals: marsupials and placentals compared. In Reproductive Energetics in Mammals (ed. Loudon, A. S. and Racey, P. A.). Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 7–28Google Scholar
Nitikman, L. Z. and Mares, M. A. (1987). Ecology of small mammals in a gallery forest of central Brazil. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 56, 75–95Google Scholar
Norton, A. C., Beran, A. V. and Misrahy, G. A. (1964). Electroencephalograph during feigned sleep in the opossum. Nature 204, 162–163CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nunney, L. and Elam, D. R. (1994). Estimating the effective population size of conserved populations. Conservation Biology 8, 175–184CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nuttall, G. H. F. (1904). Blood Immunity and Blood Relationship. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Oakwood, M., Bradley, A. J. and Cockburn, A. (2001). Semelparity in a large marsupial. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B 268, 407–411CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Brien, S. J., Eisenberg, J. F., Miyamoto, M.et al. (1999a). Genome maps 10. Comparative genomics. Mammalian radiations: wall chart. Science 286, 463–478Google Scholar
O'Brien, S. J., Menotti-Raymond, M., Murphy, W. J.et al. (1999b). The promise of comparative genomics in mammals. Science 286, 458–481CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Connell, M. A. (1979). Ecology of didelphid marsupials from northern Venezuela. In Vertebrate Ecology in the Northern Neotropics (ed. Eisenberg, J. F.). Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 73–87Google Scholar
Oftedal, O. T. (1984). Milk composition, milk yield and energy output at peak lactation: A comparative review. Symposia of the Zoological Society of London 51, 33–85Google Scholar
Ojeda, R. and Giannoni, S. M. (1997). New World Marsupials: an Action Plan for Their Conservation. Gland: IUCNGoogle Scholar
Old, J. M. and Deane, E. M. (2000). Development of the immune system and immunological protection in marsupial pouch young. Developmental and Comparative Immunology 24, 445–454CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Olson, S. L. (1989). Extinction on islands: man as a catastrophe. In Conservation for the Twenty-first Century (ed. Western, D. and Pearl, M. C.). Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 50–53Google Scholar
O'Neill, R. J. W., Brennan, F. E., Delbridge, M. L. and Graves, J. A. M. (1998a). De novo insertion of an intron into the mammalian sex determining gene SRY. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 95, 1653–1657CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Neill, R. J. W., O'Neill, M. J. and Graves, J. A. M. (1998b). Undermethylation associated with retroelement activation and chromosome remodelling in an interspecific mammalian hybrid. Nature 393, 68–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oppel, A. (1896). Lehrbuch der vergleichenden mikroskopischen Anatomie der Wirbeltiere. Vol. I. Der Magen. Jena: Gustav Fischer, pp. 286–298Google Scholar
Osgood, W. H. (1921). A monographic study of the American marsupial Caenolestes. Field Museum of Natural History, Zoological Series 14, 1–162Google Scholar
Owen, R. (1868). On the Anatomy of Vertebrates. Vol. III. Mammals.London: Longmans, Green & Co
Padykula, H. A. and Taylor, J. M. (1982). Marsupial placentation and its evolutionary significance. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 31 (suppl.), 95–104Google ScholarPubMed
Paetkau, D. (2000). Using genetics to identify intraspecific conservation units: a critique of current methods. Conservation Biology 13, 1507–1509CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pahl, L. (1984). Population parameters and diet of the Victorian ringtail possum (Pseudocheirus peregrinus). In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 253–260Google Scholar
Panda, S., Nayak, S. K., Campo, B., Walker, J. R., Hogenesch, J. B. and Jegla, T. (2005). Illumination of the melanopsin signalling pathway. Science 307, 600–604CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Park, C. S. and Jacobson, N. L. (1993). The mammary gland and lactation. In Duke's Physiology of Domestic Animals (ed. Swenson, M. J. and Reece, W. O.). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, pp. 711–727Google Scholar
Parry, L. J., Clark, J. M. and Renfree, M. B. (1997). Ultrastructural localization of relaxin in the corpus luteum of the pregnant and early lactating tammar wallaby, Macropus eugenii. Cell and Tissue Research 290, 615–622CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pask, A. and Graves, J. A. M. (1998). Sex chromosomes and sex determining genes: insights from marsupials and monotremes. Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 55, 864–875CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pask, A., Renfree, M. B. and Graves, J. A. M. (2000). The human sex-reversing ATRX gene has a homologue on the marsupial Y chromosome, ATRY: implications for the evolution of mammalian sex determination. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 97, 13198–13202CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pass, D. M., Foley, W. J. and Bowden, B. (1998). Vertebrate folivory on Eucalyptus: identification of specific feeding deterrents for common ringtail possums (Pseudocheirus peregrinus) by bioassay-guided fractionation of Eucalyptus ovata foliage. Journal of Chemical Ecology 24, 1513–1527CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Passamani, M. (1993). Vertical stratification of small mammals in southeastern Brazil. Mammalia 65, 505–508Google Scholar
Pellis, S. M. and Officer, R. C. E. (1987). An analysis of some predatory behaviour patterns in four species of carnivorous marsupials (Dasyuridae), with comparative notes on the eutherian cat Felis catus. Ethology 75, 177–196CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pemberton, D. and Renouf, D. (1993). A field study of communication and social behaviour of the Tasmanian devil at feeding sites. Australian Journal of Zoology 41, 507–526CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perez-Hernandez, R., Soriano, P. and Lew, D. (1994). Marsupials de Venezuela. Caracas: LagovenGoogle Scholar
Perret, M. and Atramentowicz, M. (1989). Plasma concentrations of progesterone and testosterone in captive woolly opossums (Caluromys philander). Journal ofReproduction and Fertility 85, 31–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petrosz, R. (1983). Recommended Reserves for Irian Jaya Province. WWF/IUCN Project 1528 special report
Petrosz, R. (1984). Conservation and Development in Irian Jaya: a Strategy for Rational Resource Utilization. WWF/IUCN Project 1528/PT. Jakarta: Sinar Agape PressGoogle Scholar
Petrosz, R. and Fretes, Y. (1983). Mammals of the Reserves in Irian Jaya. WWF/IUCN Project 1528 special report
Pine, R. H., Dalby, P. L. and Matson, J. O. (1985). Ecology, postnatal development, morphometrics, and taxonomic status of the short-tailed opossum, Monodelphis dimidiata, an apparently semelparous annual marsupial. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 54, 195–231Google Scholar
Place, A. R. (1990). Chitin digestion in nestling Leach's storm petrels Oceanodroma leucorhoa. Bulletin of the Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory 20, 139–142Google Scholar
Pond, C. M. (1984). Physiological and ecological importance of energy storage in the evolution of lactation: evidence for a common pattern of anatomical organisation of adipose tissue in mammals. Symposia of the Zoological Society of London 51, 1–32Google Scholar
Poole, W. E. (1976). Breeding biology and current status of the grey kangaroo, Macropus fuliginosus fuliginosus, of Kangaroo Island, South Australia. Australian Journal of Zoology 24, 169–187CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poole, W. E. and Catling, P. C. (1974). Reproduction in two species of grey kangaroos, Macropus giganteus Shaw and M. fuliginosus (Desmarest). 1. Sexual maturity and oestrus. Australian Journal of Zoology 22, 277–302CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poole, W. E. and Pilton, P. E. (1964). Reproduction in the grey kangaroo, Macropus canguru, in captivity. CSIRO Wildlife Research 9, 218–234CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powell, M. R. and Doolittle, J. H. (1971). Repeated acquisition and extinction of an operant by opossums and rats. Psychonomic Science 24, 22–23CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Proctor-Gray, E. and Ganslosser, U. (1986). The individual behaviors of Lumholtz's tree-kangaroo: repertoire and taxonomic implications. Journal of Mammalogy 67, 343–352CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pulliam, H. R. and Caraco, T. (1984). Living in groups: is there an optimal group size? In Behavioural Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach (ed. Krebs, J. R. and Davies, N. B.). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 122–147Google Scholar
Qiu, O. X., Kumbalasiri, T., Carlson, S. M.et al. (2005). Induction of photosensitivity by heterologous expression of melanopsin. Nature 433, 745–749CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ralls, K., Ballou, J. D. and Templeton, A. (1988). Estimates of lethal equivalents and the cost of inbreeding in mammals. Conservation Biology 2, 185–193CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Redford, K. H. and Eisenberg, J. F. (1992). Mammals of the Neotropics. The Southern cone: Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Reid, F. A. (1997). A Field Guide to the Mammals of Central America and Southeast Mexico. New York, NY: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Renfree, M. B. (1993). Diapause, pregnancy, and parturition in Australian marsupials. Journal of Experimental Zoology 266, 450–462CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Renfree, M. B. (2000). Maternal recognition of pregnancy in marsupials. Reviews in Reproduction 5, 6–11CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Renfree, M. B. and Shaw, G. (2000). Diapause. Annual Reviews of Physiology 62, 353–375CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Renfree, M. B., Russell, E. M. and Wooller, R. D. (1984). Reproduction and life history of the honey possum, Tarsipes rostratus. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 427–437Google Scholar
Renfree, M. B., Fletcher, T. P., Blanden, D. R. et al. (1989). Physiological and behavioural events around the time of birth in macropodid marsupials. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 323–337Google Scholar
Renfree, M. B., Pask, A. and Shaw, G. (2001). Sex down under: the differentiation of sexual dimorphisms during marsupial development. Reproduction, Fertility and Development 13, 679–690CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rens, W., O'Brien, P. C., Yang, F., Graves, J. A. and Ferguson-Smith, M. A. (1999). Karyotype relationships between four distantly related marsupials revealed by reciprocal chromosome painting. Chromosome Research 7, 461–474CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Richardson, K. C., Wooller, R. D. and Collins, B. G. (1986). Adaptations to a diet of nectar and pollen in the marsupial Tarsipes rostratus (Marsupialia: Tarsipedidae). Journal of Zoology (London) 208, 285–297CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richardson, K. C., Bowden, T. A. J. and Myers, P. (1987). The cardiogastric gland and alimentary tract of caenolestid marsupials. Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 68, 65–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richardson, S. J., Wettenhall, R. E. and Schreiber, G. (1996). Evolution of transthyretin gene expression in the liver of Didelphis virginiana and other American marsupials. Endocrinology 137, 3507–3512CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roberts, W. W., Steinberg, M. L. and Means, L. W. (1967). Hypothalamic mechanisms for sexual, aggressive, and other motivational behaviors in the opossum, Didelphis virginiana. Journal of Comparative Physiology and Psychology 64, 1–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robertshaw, J. D. and Harden, R. H. (1985). The ecology of the dingo in north-eastern New South Wales. 2. Diet. Australian Wildlife Research 12, 39–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, A. C. and Young, M. C. (1983). The Toolache Wallaby (Macropus greyi Waterhouse). Adelaide: Department of Environment and Planning
Robinson, N. A., Sherwin, W. B. and Murray, N. D. (1993). Use of VNTR loci to reveal population structure in the eastern barred bandicoot, Perameles gunnii. Molecular Ecology 2, 195–207CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rodger, J. C. (1978). Male reproduction: its usefulness in discussions of Macropodidae evolution. Australian Mammalogy 2, 73–80Google Scholar
Rofe, R. and Hayman, D. (1985). G-banding evidence for a conserved complement in the Marsupialia. Cytogenetics and Cell Genetics 39, 40–50CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roig, V. G. (1989). Desertificatión y distribución geográfica de mamíferos en la república Argentina. In Detección y control de la desertification (ed. Roig, F. A.). Mendoza, Argentina: Centro Regional de Invesigaciones Científicas y Tecnológicas, pp. 263–278Google Scholar
Rowe, M. (1996). Sensorimotor cortical organisation: how do marsupials compare with other mammals? In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 3–45Google Scholar
Rubenstein, D. I. (1978). On predation, competition and the advantages of group living. In Perspectives in Ethology (ed. Bateson, P. P. G. and Klopfer, P. H.). New York, NY: Plenum Press, pp. 205–231Google Scholar
Rudd, C. D. (1994). Sexual behaviour of male and female tammar wallabies (Macropus eugenii) at post partum oestrus. Journal of Zoology (London) 232, 151–162CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rudd, C. D., Short, R. V., Shaw, G. and Renfree, M. B. (1996). Testosterone control of male-type sexual behavior in the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Hormones and Behavior 30, 446–454CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, E. M. (1973). Mother–young relationships and early behavioural development in the marsupials Macropus eugenii and Megaleia rufa. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 33, 163–203CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, E. M. (1982). Patterns of parental care and parental investment in marsupials. Biological Reviews 57, 423–486CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Russell, E. M. (1984). Social behaviour and social organization of marsupials. Mammalian Review 14, 101–154CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, E. M. (1985). The metatherians: Order Marsupialia. In Social Odours in Mammals (ed. Brown, R. E. and Macdonald, D. W.). Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 45–104Google Scholar
Russell, E. M. (1986). Observations on the behaviour of the honey possum, Tarsipes rostratus (Marsupialia: Tarsipedidae) in captivity. Australian Journal of Zoology Supplementary Series 121, 1–63Google Scholar
Russell, E. M. (1989). Maternal behaviour in the Macropodoidea. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 549–569Google Scholar
Russell, E. M. and Harrop, C. J. F. (1976). The behaviour of red kangaroos (Megaleia rufa) on hot summer days. Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie 40, 396–426Google ScholarPubMed
Russell, E. M. and Pearce, G. A. (1971). Exploration of novel objects by marsupials. Behaviour 40, 312–322CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, R. (1980). Spotlight on Possums. Brisbane: Queensland University PressGoogle Scholar
Russell, R. (1984). Social behaviour of the yellow-bellied glider, Petaurus australis reginae in north Queensland. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 343–353Google Scholar
Ryan, M. J. (1997). Sexual selection and mate choice. In Behavioural Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach (ed. Krebs, J. R. and Davies, N. B.). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 179–202Google Scholar
Ryser, J. (1992). The mating system and male mating success of the Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana) in Florida. Journal of Zoology (London) 118, 127–139CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sabat, P., Bozinovic, F. and Zambrano, F. (1995). Role of dietary substrates on intestinal disaccarhidases, digestibility, and energetics in the insectivorous mouse-oppossum (Thylamys elegans). Journal of Mammalogy 76, 603–611CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salamon, M. (1995). Seasonal, sexual and dietary induced variations in the sternal scent secretion in the brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). Advances in the Biosciences 93, 211–222Google Scholar
Salamon, M. (1996). Olfactory communication in Australian marsupials. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 46–79Google Scholar
Samollow, P. B. and Graves, J. A. M. (1998). Gene maps of marsupials. ILAR Journal 39, 203–224CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sanderson, K. J., Haight, J. R. and Pettigrew, J. D. (1984). The dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus of macropodid marsupials: cytoarchitecture and retinal projections. Journal of Comparative Neurology 224, 85–106CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Saulei, S. M. (1990). Forest research and development in Papua New Guinea. Ambio 19, 397Google Scholar
Saulei, S. M. and Kiapranis, R. (1996). Forest regeneration following selective logging operations in a lowland rain forest in Papua New Guinea. Science in New Guinea 22, 27–37Google Scholar
Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A., eds. (1997). Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives. Sydney: University of New South Wales PressGoogle Scholar
Schultz-Westrum, T. (1965). Innerartliche Verstandidung durch Düfte beim Gleitbeutler Petaurus breviceps papuanus Thomas (Marsupialia: Phalangeridae). Zietschrift für vergleichende Physiologie 50, 151–220CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, L. K., Hume, I. D. and Dickman, C. R. (1999). Ecology and population biology of long-nosed bandicoots (Perameles nasuta) at North Head, Sydney Harbour National Park. Wildlife Research 26, 805–821CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scotts, D. J. (1983). The social organization of Antechinus stuartii (Macleay) (Marsupialia, Dasyuridae) at Sherbrooke Forest, Victoria. Unpublished B. Sc Hons thesis, Monash University
Seebeck, J. H. (1992). Breeding, growth and development of captive Potorous longipes (Marsupialia: Potoroidae); and a comparison with P. tridactylus. Australian Mammalogy 15, 37–45Google Scholar
Selwood, L. (2000). Marsupial egg and embryo coats. Cells Tissues Organs 166, 208–219CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Serena, M., Bell, L. and Booth, R. J. (1996). Reproductive behaviour of the long-footed potoroo (Potorous longipes) in captivity, with an estimate of gestation length. Australian Mammalogy 19, 57–62Google Scholar
Setchell, B. P. (1977). Reproduction in male marsupials. In The Biology of Marsupials (ed. Stonehouse, B. and Gilmore, D.). London: Macmillan, pp. 411–457CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Settle, G. A. (1978). The quiddity of tiger quolls. Australian Natural History 19, 164–169Google Scholar
Settle, G. A. and Croft, D. B. (1982). The development of exploratory behaviour in Antechinus stuartii (Dasyuridae, Marsupialia) young in captivity. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 383–396Google Scholar
Sharman, G. B., Close, R. L. and Maynes, G. M. (1990). Chromosome evolution, phylogeny and speciation of rock-wallabies (Petrogale: Macropodidae). In Mammals from Pouches and Eggs: Genetics, Breeding and Evolution of Marsupials and Monotremes (ed. Graves, J. A. M., Hope, R. M. and Cooper, D. W.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 209–223Google Scholar
Shaw, G. (1996). The uterine environment in early pregnancy in the tammar wallaby. Reproduction, Fertility and Development 8, 811–818CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shaw, G. and Renfree, M. B. (2001). Fetal control of parturition in marsupials. Reproduction, Fertility and Development 13, 653–659CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shaw, G., Renfree, M. B. and Short, R. V. (1990). Primary genetic control of sexual differentiation in marsupials. In Mammals from Pouches and Eggs: Genetics, Breeding and Evolution of Marsupials and Monotremes (ed. Graves, J. A. M., Hope, R. M. and Cooper, D. W.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 301–308Google Scholar
Shaw, G., Harry, J. L., Whitworth, D. J. and Renfree, M. B. (1997). Sexual determination and differentiation in the marsupial Macropus eugenii. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 132–141Google Scholar
Sherwin, W. B. and Brown, P. R. (1990). Problems in the estimation of the effective size of a population of the eastern barred bandicoot Perameles gunnii at Hamilton, Victoria. In Bandicoots and Bilbies (ed. Seebeck, J. H., Brown, P. R., Wallis, R. L. and Kemper, C. M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 367–374Google Scholar
Sherwin, W. B. and Moritz, C. (2000). Managing and monitoring genetic erosion. In Genetics, Demography and Viability of Fragmented Populations (ed. Young, A. and Clarke, G.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 9–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sherwin, W. B. and Murray, N. D. (1990). Population and conservation genetics of marsupials. In Mammals from Pouches and Eggs: Genetics, Breeding and Evolution of Marsupials and Monotremes (ed. Graves, J. A. M., Hope, R. M. and Cooper, D. W.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 19–38Google Scholar
Sherwin, W. B., Murray, N. D., Graves, J. A. M. and Brown, P. R. (1991). Measurement of genetic variation in endangered populations: bandicoots (Marsupialia: Permaelidae) as an example. Conservation Biology 5, 103–108CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sherwin, W. B., Timms, P., Wilcken, J. and Houlden, B. A. (2000). Genetics of koalas: an analysis and conservation implications. Conservation Biology 14, 1–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shorey, H. H. (1976). Animal Communication by Pheromones. New York, NY: Academic PressGoogle Scholar
Simpson, G. G. (1980). Splendid Isolation. New Haven, CT: Yale University PressGoogle Scholar
Sinclair, A. H., Foster, J. W., Spencer, J. A.et al. (1988). Sequences homologous to ZFY, a candidate human sex-determining gene, are autosomal in marsupials. Nature 336, 780–783CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Slade, R. W., Hale, P. T., Francis, D. I., Graves, J. A. M. and Sturm, R. A. (1994). The marsupial MHC: the tammar wallaby, Macropus eugenii, contains an expressed DNA-like gene on chromosome 1. Journal of Molecular Evolution 38, 496–505CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Smith, A. P. (1980). Diet and ecology of Leadbeater's possum and the sugar glider. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, Monash University
Smith, A. P. (1982). Diet and feeding strategies of the marsupial sugar glider in temperate Australia. Journal of Animal Ecology 51, 149–166CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, A. P. and Lee, A. K. (1984). The evolution of strategies for survival and reproduction in possums and gliders. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 17–33Google Scholar
Smith, M. J. (1979). Observations on growth of Petaurus breviceps and P. norfolcensis (Petauridae: Marsupialia) in captivity. Australian Wildlife Research 6, 141–150CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, M. T. A. (1980a). Behaviour of the koala, Phascolarctos cinereus (Goldfuss), in captivity. IV. Scent-marking. Australian Wildlife Research 7, 35–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, M. T. A. (1980b). Behaviour of the koala, Phascolarctos cinereus (Goldfuss), in captivity. V. Sexual behaviour. Australian Wildlife Research 7, 177–190CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, S. J. (1981). The Tasmanian Tiger: 1980. Wildlife Division Technical Report. Hobart: National Parks and Wildlife Service
Soderquist, T. R. (1994). Anti-predator behaviour of the brush-tailed phascogale (Phascogale tapoatafa). Victorian Naturalist 111, 22–24Google Scholar
Soderquist, T. R. and Ealey, L. (1994). Social interactions and mating strategies of a solitary carnivorous marsupial, Phascogale tapoatafa, in the wild. Wildlife Research 21, 527–542CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soulé, M. E. and Frankel, O. H. (1980). Conservation and Evolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Southwood, T. R. E. (1977). Habitat, the templet for ecological strategies?Journal of Animal Ecology 46, 337–366CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Southwood, T. R. E. (1988). Tactics, strategies and templets. Oikos 52, 3–18CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spencer, P. B. S., Adams, M., March, H. D., Miller, D. J. and Eldridge, M. D. B. (1997). High levels of genetic variability in an isolated colony of rock wallabies (Petrogale assimilis): evidence from three classes of molecular markers. Australian Journal of Zoology 45, 199–210CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spencer, P. B. S., Horsup, A. B. and Marsh, H. D. (1998). Enhancement of reproductive success through mate choice in a social rock-wallaby. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 43, 1–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Springer, M. S., Kirsch, J. A. W. and Case, J. A. (1997a). The chronicle of marsupial evolution. In Molecular Evolution and Adaptive Radiation (ed. Givnish, T. J. and Sytsma, K. J.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 129–161Google Scholar
Springer, M. S., Burk, A., Kavanagh, J. R., Waddell, V. G. and Stanhope, M. J. (1997b). The interphotoreceptor retinoid binding protein gene in therian mammals: implications for higher level relationships and evidence for loss of function in the marsupial mole. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 94, 13754–13759CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stallings, J. R. (1988). Small mammal inventories in an eastern Brazilian park. Bulletin of the Florida State Museum (Biological Sciences) 34, 159–220Google Scholar
Start, A. N., Burbidge, A. A. and Armstrong, D. (1998). A review of the conservation status of the woylie, Bettongia penicillata ogilbyi (Marsupialia: Potoroidae) using IUCN criteria. CALMScience 2, 277–289Google Scholar
State of the Environment Advisory Council. (1996). Australia: State of the Enviroment. Canberra, Environment Australia
Stearns, S. C. (1992). The Evolution of Life Histories. Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Stevens, C. E. and Hume, I. D. (1995). Comparative Physiology of the Vertebrate Digestive System. 2nd edn. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Stewart, F. (1984). Mammogenesis and changing prolactin receptor concentrations in the mammary gland of the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 71, 141–148CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stirrat, S. C. and Fuller, M. (1997). The repertoire of social behaviours of agile wallabies, Macropus agilis. Australian Mammalogy 20, 71–78Google Scholar
Stodart, E. (1966). Management and behaviour of breeding groups of the marsupial Perameles nasuta Geoffroy in captivity. Australian Journal of Zoology 14, 611–623CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stoddart, D. M., Bradley, A. J. and Mallick, J. (1994). Plasma testosterone concentration, body weight, social dominance and scent-marking in male marsupial sugar gliders (Petaurus breviceps; Marsupialia: Petauridae). Journal of Zoology (London) 232, 595–601CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stonehouse, B. and Gilmore, D., eds. (1977). The Biology of Marsupials. London: MacmillanCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strahan, R., ed. (1995). The Mammals of Australia. Chatswood: ReedGoogle Scholar
Stuart-Dick, R. (1987). Parental investment and rearing schedules in the eastern grey kangaroo. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New England
Stuart-Dick, R., R. and Higginbottom, K. B. (1989). Strategies of parental investment in Macropodoids. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 571–592Google Scholar
Suckling, G. C. (1980). The effects of fragmentation and disturbance of forest on mammals in a region of Gippsland, Victoria. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, Monash University
Suckling, G. C. (1984). Population ecology of the sugar glider Petaurus breviceps in a system of fragmented habitat. Australian Wildlife Research 11, 49–75Google Scholar
Sumner, P., Arrese, C. A. and Partridge, J. C. (2005). The ecology of visual pigment tuning in an Australian marsupial: the honey possum (Tarsipes rostratus). Journal of Experimental Biology 208, 1803–1815CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sunquist, M. E. and Eisenberg, J. F. (1993). Reproductive strategies of female Didelphis. Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History 36, 109–140Google Scholar
Svartman, M. and Vianna-Morgante, A. M. (1998). Karyotype evolution of marsupials: from higher to lower diploid numbers. Cytogenetics and Cell Genetics 82, 263–266CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Szalay, F. (1982). A new appraisal of marsupial phylogeny and classification. In Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Archer, M.). Mosman: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, pp. 621–640Google Scholar
Szalay, F. (1994). Evolutionary History of the Marsupialia and an Analysis of Osteological Characters. New York, NY: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Tan, P. C. (1995). Analysis of matrilines in euros using mitochrondrial DNA. Unpublished B. Sc Hons thesis, University of New South Wales
Taylor, A. C. (1995). Molecular ecology of the endangered northern hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus krefftii) and application to conservation management. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South Wales
Taylor, A. C., Sherwin, W. B. and Wayne, R. K. (1994). The use of simple sequence loci to measure genetic variation in bottlenecked species: the decline of the northern hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus krefftii). Molecular Ecology 3, 277–290CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A. C., Horsup, A., Johnson, C. N., Sunnucks, P. and Sherwin, B. (1997). Relatedness structure detected by microsatellite analysis and attempted pedigree reconstruction in an endangered marsupial, the northern hairy-nosed wombat Lasiorhinus krefftii. Molecular Ecology 6, 9–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, R. J. (1993). Observations on the behaviour and ecology of the common wombat Vombatus ursinus in northeast Tasmania. Australian Mammalogy 16, 1–7Google Scholar
Tedman, R. A. (1990). Some observations on the visceral anatomy of the bandicoot Isoodon macrourus (Marsupialia: Peramelidae). In Bandicoots and Bilbies (ed. Seebeck, J. H., Brown, P. R., Wallis, R. L. and Kemper, C. M.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 107–116Google Scholar
Temple-Smith, P. D. (1994). Comparative structure and function of marsupial spermatozoa. Reproduction, Fertility and Development 6, 421–435CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Templeton, A. R. and Read, B. (1994). Inbreeding: one word, several meanings, much confusion. In Conservation Genetics (ed. Loeschcke, V., Tomiuk, J. and Jain, S. K.). Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag, pp. 91–105CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, J. A. and Owen, W. H. (1964). A field study of the Australian ringtail possum Pseudocheirus peregrinus (Marsupialia: Phalangeridae). Ecological Monographs 34, 27–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tilley, M. W., Doolittle, J. H. and Mason, D. J. (1966). Olfactory discrimination learning in the Virginia opossum. Perceptual and Motor Skills 23, 845–846CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tramontin, A. D. and Brenowitz, E. A. (2000). Seasonal plasticity in the adult brain. Trends in Neurosciences 23, 251–258CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Triggs, B. (1988). The Wombat. Sydney: University of New South Wales PressGoogle Scholar
Trivers, R. L. and Willard, D. E. (1973). Natural selection of parental ability to vary the sex ratio of offspring. Science 179, 90–92CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tunbridge, D. (1991). The Story of the Flinders Ranges Mammals. Kenthurst: Kangaroo PressGoogle Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1973). Life of Marsupials. London: Edward ArnoldGoogle Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1984). Reproductive physiology of possums and gliders. In Possums and Gliders (ed. Smith, A. P. and Hume, I. D.). Sydney: Australian Mammal Society, pp. 79–87Google Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1989). The adaptiveness of reproductive processes. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos (ed. Grigg, G. C., Jarman, P. J. and Hume, I. D.). Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty, pp. 277–285Google Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (2005). Life of Marsupials. Collingwood: CSIROGoogle Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Hinds, L. A. (1990). Control of seasonal reproduction in the tammar and Bennett's wallabies. Progress in Clinical Biological Research 342, 659–667Google ScholarPubMed
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. (1992). Components of the melatonin message in the response to photoperiod of the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Journal of Pineal Research 12, 155–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A., eds. (1988). The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research. Berlin: SpringerCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Renfree, M. B. (1987). Reproductive Physiology of Marsupials. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ullrey, D. E., Robinson, R. T. and Whetter, P. A. (1981). Composition of preferred and rejected Eucalyptus browse offered to captive koalas, Phascolarctos cinereus (Marsupialia). Australian Journal of Zoology 29, 839–846CrossRefGoogle Scholar
VandeBerg, J. L. and Robinson, E. S. (1997). The laboratory opossum (Monodelphis domestica) in laboratory research. ILAR Journal 38, 4–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dyck, S. (1979a). Behaviour in captive individuals of the dasyurid marsupial Planigale maculata (Gould 1851). Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 19, 413–429Google Scholar
Dyck, S. (1979b). Mating and other aspects of behaviour in wild striped possums. Victorian Naturalist 96, 84–85Google Scholar
Dyck, S. (2002). Morphology-based revision of Murexia and Antechinus (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae). Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 48, 239–330Google Scholar
Vane-Wright, R. I., Humphries, C. J. and Williams, P. H. (1991). What to protect? Systematics and the agony of choice. Biological Conservation 55, 235–254CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Schaike, C. P. (1989). The ecology of social relationships amongst female primates. In Comparative Socioecology: the Behavioural Ecology of Humans and Other Mammals (ed. Standen, V. and Foley, R. A.). Oxford: Blackwell Scientific, pp. 195–218Google Scholar
Vieira, E. M. and Astúa de Moraes, D. (2003). Carnivory and insectivory in Neotropical marsupials. In Predators with Pouches: the Biology of Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Jones, M. E., Dickman, C. R. and Archer, M.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 271–284Google Scholar
Vieira, E. M. and Monteiro-Filho, E. L. A. (2003). Vertical stratification of small mammals in the Atlantic rain forest of south-eastern Brazil. Journal of Tropical Ecology 19, 501–507CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vieira, E. M. and Palma, A. R. T. (1996). Natural history of Thylamys velutinus (Marsupialia, Didelphidae) in central Brazil. Mammalia 60, 481–484CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holst, E. and St Paul, U. (1960). Vom Wirkungsgefüge der Triebe. Naturwissenschaften 37, 464–476Google Scholar
Voss, R. S., Lunde, D. P. and Simmons, N. B. (2001). The mammals of Paracou, French Guiana: a Neotropical lowland rainforest fauna. Part 2: nonvolant species. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 263, 1–2362.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wainwright, B. and Hope, R. M. (1985). Cloning and chromosomal location of the alpha- and beta- globin genes from a marsupial. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 82, 8105–8108CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Waite, P. M. and Weller, W. L. (1999). Development of somatosensory pathways from the whiskers. In Marsupial Biology: Recent Research, New Perspectives (ed. Saunders, N. R. and Hinds, L. A.). Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, pp. 327–344Google Scholar
Waite, P. M., Marotte, L. R., Leamey, C. A. and Mark, R. F. (1998). Development of whisker-related patterns in marsupials: factors controlling timing. Trends in Neurosciences 21, 265–269CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wakefield, M. J. and Graves, J. A. M. (1998). Comparative genome maps of vertebrates. (Poster). ILAR Journal 39 (2/3)Google Scholar
Wakefield, M. J. and Graves, J. A. M. (2002). Towards a kangaroo genome project. EMBO Reports 4, 143–147CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wakefield, N. A. (1961). Notes on the tuan. Victorian Naturalist 78, 232–235Google Scholar
Walker, L. (1996). Female mate-choice. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 208–225Google Scholar
Walker, L. V. and Croft, D. B. (1990). Odour preferences and discrimination in captive ringtail possums (Pseudocheirus peregrinus). International Journal of Comparative Psychology 3, 215–234Google Scholar
Wallis, I. R. (1990). The nutrition, digestive physiology and metabolism of potoroine marsupials. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New England, Armidale, NSW
Ward, S. J. (1990). Reproduction in the western pygmy-possum, Cercartetus concinnus (Marsupialia: Burramyidae) with notes on reproduction of some other small possum species. Australian Journal of Zoology 38, 423–438CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waters, P., Duffy, B., Frost, C. J., Delbridge, M. L. and Graves, J. A. M. (2001). The human Y chromosome derives largely from a single autosomal region added 80–130 million years ago. Cytogenetics and Cell Genetics 92, 74–79CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Watson, D. M. (1990). Play behaviour in a captive group of red-necked wallabies (Macropus rufogriseus banksianus). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of New South Wales
Watson, D. M. (1998). Kangaroos at play: play behaviour in the Macropodoidea. In Animal Play: Evolutionary, Comparative and Ecological Perspectives (ed. Bekoff, M. and Byers, J. A.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 45–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, D. M. and Croft, D. B. (1993). Play fighting in captive red-necked wallabies, Macropus rufogriseus banksianus. Behaviour 126, 219–245CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, D. M. and Croft, D. B. (1996). Age-related differences in play fighting strategies of captive male red-necked wallabies (Macropus rufogriseus banksianus). Ethology 102, 336–346CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, D. M. and Dawson, T. J. (1993). The effects of age, sex, reproductive status, and temporal factors on the time-use of free-ranging red kangaroos (Macropus rufus) in western New South Wales. Wildlife Research 20, 785–801CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, D. M., Croft, D. B. and Crozier, R. H. (1992). Paternity exclusion and dominance in captive red-necked wallabies, Macropus rufogriseus (Marsupialia: Macropodidae). Australian Mammalogy 15, 31–36Google Scholar
Welk, R. (1995). The foraging behaviour of swamp wallabies (Wallabia bicolor). Unpublished B. Sc Hons thesis, University of New South Wales
Wellard, G. A. and Hume, I. D. (1981). Nitrogen metabolism and nitrogen requirements of the brushtail possum Trichosurus vulpecula (Kerr). Australian Journal of Zoology 29, 147–156CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wells, R. T. (1973). Physiological and behavioural adaptations of the hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus latifrons Owen) to its arid environment. Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of Adelaide
Westerman, M., Springer, M. S., Dixon, J. and Krajewski, C. (1999). Molecular relationships of the extinct pig-footed bandicoot Chaeropus ecaudatus (Marsupialia: Perameloidea) using 12S rRNA sequences. Journal of Mammalian Evolution 6, 271–288CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weymss, C. T. (1953). A preliminary study of marsupial relationships as indicated by the precipitin test. Zoologica (NY) 38, 173–181Google Scholar
White, M. J. D. (1937). The Chromosomes. London: MethuenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilkes, G. E. and Janssens, P. A. (1988). The development of renal function. In The Developing Marsupial: Models for Biomedical Research (ed. Tyndale-Biscoe, C. H. and Janssens, P. A.). Berlin: Springer, pp. 176–189CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wing, E. S. (1986). Domestication of Andean mammals. In High Altitude Tropical Biogeography (ed. Vuilleumier, F. and Monasterio, M.). Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 246–264Google Scholar
Winkler, D. W. (1987). A general model for parental care. American Naturalist 130, 526–543CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winter, J. W. (1977). The behaviour and social organisation of the brush-tail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula Kerr). Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of Queensland
Winter, J. W. (1996). Australian possums and Madagascan lemurs: behavioural comparison of ecological equivalents. In Comparison of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour (ed. Croft, D. B. and Ganslosser, U.). Fuerth: Filander, pp. 262–292Google Scholar
Winter, J. W. and Goudberg, N. J. (1995). Green ringtail possum Pseudochirops archeri (Collett, 1884). In The Mammals of Australia (ed. Strahan, R.). Chatswood: Reed, pp. 244–246Google Scholar
Withers, P. C. (1992). Metabolism, water balance and temperature regulation in the golden bandicoot (Isoodon auratus). Australian Journal of Zoology 40, 523–531CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Witte, I. (1993). The temporal patterning of behaviour of the red kangaroo (Macropus rufus). Unpublished B. Sc Hons thesis, University of New South Wales
Wittenberger, J. F. (1979). The evolution of mating systems in birds and mammals. In Handbook of Behavioral Neurobiology: Social Behavior and Communication (ed. Master, P. and Vandenburgh, J.). New York, NY: Plenum Press, pp. 271– 349Google Scholar
Wolpert, L., Beddington, R., Brockes, J.et al. (1998). Principles of Development. Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Woodman, N., Slade, N. A. and Timm, R. M. (1995). Mammalian community structure in lowland, tropical Peru, as determined by removal trapping. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 113, 1–20CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wooller, R. D., Renfree, M. B., Russell, E. M.et al. (1981). A population study of the nectar-feeding marsupial Tarsipes spencerae (Marsupialia: Tarsipedidae). Journal of Zoology (London) 195, 267–279CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woolley, P. A. (2003). Reproductive biology of some dasyurid marsupials of New Guinea. In Predators with Pouches: the Biology of Carnivorous Marsupials (ed. Jones, M. E., Dickman, C. R. and Archer, M.). Melbourne: CSIRO, pp. 169–182Google Scholar
Worthington-Wilmer, J. M., Melzer, A., Carrick, F. and Moritz, C. (1993). Low genetic diversity and inbreeding depression in Queensland koalas. Wildlife Research 20, 177–188CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wrangham, R. W. and Rubenstein, D. I. (1986). Social evolution of birds and mammals. In Ecological Aspects of Social Evolution (ed. Rubenstein, D. I. and Wrangham, R. W.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, pp. 452–470Google Scholar
Wroe, S., Myers, T. J., Wells, R. T. and Gillespie, A. (1999). Estimating the weight of the Pleistocene marsupial lion (Thylacoleo carnifex: Thylacoleonidae): implications for the ecomorphology of a marsupial super-predator and hypotheses of impoverishment of Australian marsupial carnivore faunas. Australian Journal of Zoology 47, 489–498CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wysocki, G. J., Wellington, J. L. and Beauchamp, G. K. (1980). Access of urinary novolatiles to the mammalian vomeronasal organ. Science 207, 781–783CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zenger, K. R., McKenzie, L. M. and Cooper, D. W. (2002). The first comprehensive genetic linkage map of a marsupial: the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). Genetics 162, 321–330Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×