929
Views
4
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric

References

  • Alhajeri, B.H., 2016. A phylogenetic test of the relationship between saltation and habitat openness in gerbils (Gerbillinae, Rodentia). Mammal Research 61, 231–241.
  • Alhajeri, B.H., 2021. Geometric differences between the crania of Australian hopping mice (Notomys, Murinae, Rodentia). Australian Mammalogy 44, 24–38.
  • Amori, G. & Gippoliti, S., 2001. Identifying priority ecoregions for rodent conservation at the genus level. Oryx 35, 158–165.
  • Amori, G., Gippoliti, S. & Luiselli, L., 2011. Do biodiversity hotspots match with rodent conservation hotspots? Biodiversity and Conservation 20, 3693–3700.
  • AMTC. 2021. The AMTC Australian Mammal Species List. Version 1.0. [online database] Australasian Mammal Taxonomy Consortium. https://australianmammals.org.au/publications/amtc-species-list (last accessed 13 Oct 2022).
  • Aplin, K.P., 2006. Ten million years of rodent evolution in Australasia: Phylogenetic evidence and a speculative historical biogeography. In Evolution and Biogeography of Australasian Vertebrates. Merrick, J.R., Archer, M., Hickey, G.M. & Lee, M.S.Y., eds, chapter 31, Auscipub Publishing, Sydney, Australia, 707–744.
  • Archer, M., 1976. Revision of the marsupial genus Planigale Troughton (Dasyuridae). Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 19, 61–109.
  • Archer, M., 1981. Results of the Archbold Expedition. No. 104. Systematic revision of the marsupial dasyurid genus Sminthopsis Thomas. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 168, 61–223.
  • Archer, M. & Baynes, A., 1972. Prehistoric mammal faunas from two small caves in the extreme south-west of Western Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 55, 80–89.
  • Archer, M. & Bartholomai, A., 1978. Tertiary mammals of Australia: a synoptic review. Alcheringa 2, 1–19.
  • Archer, M., Bates, H., Hand, S.J., Evans, T., Broome, L., McAllan, B., Geiser, F., Jackson, S., Myers, T., Gillespie, A., Palmer, C., Hawke, T. & Horn, A.M., 2019. The Burramys Project: a conservationist’s reach should exceed history’s grasp, or what is the fossil record for? Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 374, 20190221.
  • Barnosky, A.D., Koch, P.L., Feranec, R.S., Wing, S.L. & Shabel, A.B., 2004. Assessing the causes of Late Pleistocene extinctions on the continents. Science 306, 70–75.
  • Barnosky, A.D., Matzke, N., Tomiya, S., Wogan, G.O.U., Swartz, B., Quental, T.B., Marshall, C., McGuire, J.L., Lindsey, E.L., Maguire, K.C., Mersey, B. & Ferrer, E.A., 2011. Has the Earth’s sixth mass extinction already arrived? Nature 471, 51–57.
  • Baynes, A., 1984. Native mammal remains from Wilgie Mia Aboriginal ochre mine: evidence on the pre-European fauna of the western arid zone. Records of the Western Australian Museum 3, 297–310.
  • Bilney, R.J., Cooke, R. & White, J.G., 2010. Underestimated and severe: small mammal decline from the forests of south-eastern Australia since European settlement, as revealed by a top-order predator. Biological Conservation 143, 52–59.
  • Bowditch, T.E., 1821. An Analysis of the Natural Classifications of Mammalia for the Use of Students and Travellers. J. Smith, Paris, France.
  • Brandt, J.F., 1855. Untersuchungen über die craniologischen Entwicklungsstufen und Classification der Nager der Jetzwelt. Mémoires de l'Académie impériale des sciences de St Pétersbourg 6, 1–365.
  • Brazenor, C.W., 1936. Two new rats from Central Australia. Memoirs of the National Museum, Melbourne 9, 5–8.
  • Breed, W.G., 1979. The reproductive rate of the hopping-mouse Notomys alexis and its ecological significance. Australian Journal of Zoology 27, 177–194.
  • Breed, B. & Ford, F., 2007. Native Mice and Rats. CSIRO Publishing, Colling-Wood, Victoria, Australia.
  • Breed, W.G. & Leigh, C.M., 2011. Reproductive biology of an old endemic murid rodent of Australia, the spinifex hopping mouse, Notomys alexis: adaptations for life in the arid zone. Integrative Zoology 6, 321–333.
  • Breed, W.G., Leigh, C.M., Breed, E.J.P., Leigh, C.M. & Peirce, E.J., 2020. Reproductive biology of the mice and rats (family Muridae) in New Guinea—diversity and evolution. Records of the Australian Museum 72, 303–316.
  • Burbidge, A.A. & McKenzie, N.L., 1989. Patterns in the modern decline of Western Australia’s vertebrate fauna: causes and conservation implications. Biological Conservation 50, 143–198.
  • Cardillo, M., Mace, G.M., Jones, K.E., Bielby, J., Bininda-Emonds, O.R., Sechrest, W., David, C., Orme, L. & Purvis, A., 2005. Multiple causes of high extinction risk in large mammal species. Science 309, 1239–1241.
  • Chillagoe Caving Club., 1988. Broken River karst: a speleological field guide North Queensland Australia/compiled by Queensland National Parks and Wildlife Service and the Chillagoe Caving Club Inc.
  • Comay, O. & Dayan, T., 2018. What determines prey selection in owls? Roles of prey traits, prey class, environmental variables, and taxonomic specialization. Ecology and Evolution 8, 3382–3392.
  • Copley, P.B., Kemper, C.M. & Medlin, G.C., 1989. The mammals of north-western South Australia. Records of the South Australian Museum 23, 75–88.
  • Cramb, J., 2012. Taxonomy and palaeoecology of Quaternary faunas from caves in eastern tropical Queensland: a record of broad – Scale environmental change. Doctoral dissertation, Queensland University of Technology.
  • Cramb, J. & Hocknull, S., 2010. New Quaternary records of Conilurus (Rodentia: Muridae) from eastern and northern Australia with the description of a new species. Zootaxa 2634, 41–56.
  • Cramb, J., Price, G.J. & Hocknull, S.A., 2018. Short-tailed mice with a long fossil record: the genus Leggadina (Rodentia: Muridae) from the Quaternary of Queensland, Australia. Peerj. 6, e5639.
  • Driessen, M.M. & Rose, R.K., 1999. Pseudomys higginsi. Mammalian Species 623, 1–5.
  • Fisher, D.O., Johnson, C.N., Lawes, M.J., Fritz, S.A., McCallum, H., Blomberg, S.P., VanDerWal, J., Abbott, B., Frank, A., Legge, S., Letnic, M., Thomas, C.R., Fisher, A., Gordon, I.J. & Kutt, A., 2014. The current decline of tropical marsupials in Australia: Is history repeating? Global Ecology and Biogeography 23, 181–190.
  • Flannery, T.F., 1990. Pleistocene faunal loss: implications of the aftershock for Australia’s past and future. Archaeology in Oceania 25, 45–55.
  • Flannery, T.F., 1994. The Future Eaters: An Ecological History of the Australasian Lands and People. Grove Press, Port Melbourne, Victoria.
  • Ford, F., 2006. A splitting headache: relationships and generic boundaries among Australian murids. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 89, 117–138.
  • Freudenthal, M. & Martín-Suárez, E., 2013. Estimating body mass of fossil rodents. Scripta Geologica 145, 1–513.
  • Fulton, G.R., 2017. The Bramble Cay Melomys: the first mammalian extinction due to human-induced climate change. Pacific Conservation Biology 23, 1–3.
  • Fusco, D.A., McDowell, M.C. & Prideaux, G.J., 2016. Late-Holocene mammal fauna from southern Australia reveals rapid species declines post-European settlement: implications for conservation biology. The Holocene 26, 699–708.
  • Godthelp, H., 1997. Zyzomys rackhami sp. nov. (Rodentia, Muridae) a rock rat from Rackham’s Roost Site, Riversleigh, northwestern Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 41, 329–334.
  • Gould, J., 1844. Exhibition and character of a number of animals & c. transmitted from Australia by Mr. Gilbert. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1844, 103–107.
  • Gould, J., 1853. Remarks on the genus Hapalotis. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 19, 126–127.
  • Gray, J.E., 1832. On the specific distinction of Mus giganteus, Hardw., and Mus setifer, Horsf. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 2, 40–41.
  • Griffiths, D., 1980. Foraging costs and relative prey size. The American Naturalist 116, 743–752.
  • Henderson, R.A., Withnall, I.W. & Jell, P.A., 2013. Broken River Province. In Geology of Queensland. Jell, P.A., ed., Brisbane, Geological Survey of Queensland, 250–279.
  • Hocknull, S.A., 2005. Late Pleistocene-Holocene occurrence of Chaeropus (Peramelidae) and Macrotis (Thylacomyidae) from Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 51, 38.
  • Hocknull, S.A., Zhao, J-X., Feng, Y-X. & Webb, G.E., 2007. Responses of Quaternary rainforest vertebrates to climate change in Australia. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 264, 317–331.
  • Illiger, J.K.W., 1811. Prodomus Systematis Mammalium et Avium Additis Terminis Zoographicis Utriusque Classis, Eorumque Versione Germanica. Sumptibus C. Salfeld, Berolini [Berlin], Prussia.
  • Iucn., 2019. The IUCN Red List of threatened species. Version 2019-6.2. https://www.iucnredlist.org.
  • Johnson, C.N., 2006. Australia’s Mammal Extinctions: A 50,000-Year History. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge U.K.
  • Johnson, C.N., Delean, S. & Balmford, A., 2002. Phylogeny and the selectivity of extinction in Australian marsupials. Animal Conservation 5, 135–142.
  • Johnson, C.N. & Isaac, J.L., 2009. Body mass and extinction risk in Australian marsupials: the ‘Critical Weight Range’ revisited. Austral Ecology 34, 35–40.
  • Johnson, K.A., Burbidge, A.A. & McKenzie, N.L., 1989. Australian Macropodidae: status, causes of decline and future research and management. In Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos. Grigg, G., Jarman, P. & Hume, I., eds, Surrey Beatty & Sons, Sydney, 641–657.
  • Kershaw, A.P., van der Kaars, S. & Flenley, S.J.R., 2011. The Quaternary history of far eastern rainforests. In Tropical Rainforest Responses to Climatic Change. 2nd edn. Bush, M.B. ed, Springer Science and Business Media, 85–124.
  • Klinkhamer, A.J. & Godthelp, H., 2015. Two new species of fossil Leggadina (Rodentia: Muridae) from Northwestern Queensland. Peerj. 3, e1088.
  • Legendre, S., 1989. Les communautés de mammiféres du Paléogéne (Eocéne supérieur et Oligocéne) d’ Europe occidentale: structures, milieux et évolution. Münchner Geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen A16, 1–110.
  • Lesson, R.P., 1842. In: Noveau tableau du regne animal: mammiferes. Bertrand, A. ed., Paris mon Manuel de Mammalogie Publication.
  • Lidicker, W.Z., Wolff, J. & Sherman, P.W., 2007. Issues in rodent conservation. In Rodents Societies: An Ecological and Evolutionary Perspective. 1st edn. Wolff, J.O., Sherman, P.W., eds, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 453–462.
  • Linnaeus, C., 1758. Felis catus. Systema naturae per regna tria naturae: secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis. Holmiae: Laurentii Salvii 1, 42.
  • Lundelius, E.L., 1983. Climatic implications of late Pleistocene and Holocene faunal associations in Australia. Alcheringa 7, 125–149.
  • Mahoney, J.A., 1977. Skull characters and relationships of Notomys mordax Thomas (Rodentia: Muridae), a poorly known Queensland hopping-mouse. Australian Journal of Zoology 25, 749–754.
  • Mahoney, J.A., Smith, M.J. & Medlin, G.C., 2007. A new species of hopping-mouse, Notomys robustus sp. nov. (Rodentia: Muridae), from cave deposits in the Flinders and Davenport Ranges, South Australia. Australian Mammalogy 29, 117–135.
  • Mansergh, I.M., Cheal, D.C., Burch, J.W. & Allen, H.R., 2022. Something went missing: cessation of Traditional Owner land management and rapid mammalian population collapses in the semi-arid region of the Murray–Darling Basin, southeastern Australia. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 134, 45–84.
  • Marker, M.E., 1974. Dating Quaternary climatic oscillations using cave and tufa deposits. Goodwin Series 1974, 13–19.
  • Martinez, S., 2010. Palaeoecology of the Mount Etna bat fauna, coastal Eastern Queensland. Doctoral dissertation, Queensland University of Technology.
  • Mckenzie, N.L., Burbidge, A.A., Baynes, A., Brereton, R.N., Dickman, C.R., Gordon, G., Gibson, L.A., Menkhorst, P.W., Robinson, A.C., Williams, M.R. & Woinarski, J.C.Z., 2007. Analysis of factors implicated in the recent decline of Australia’s mammal fauna. Journal of Biogeography 34, 597–611.
  • Miller, G.H., Magee, J.W., Johnson, B.J., Fogel, M.L., Spooner, N.A., McCulloch, M.T. & Ayliffe, L.K., 1999. Pleistocene extinction of Genyornis newtoni: human impact on Australian megafauna. Science 283, 205–208.
  • Murphy, B.P. & Davies, H.F., 2014. There is a critical weight range for Australia’s declining tropical mammals. Global Ecology and Biogeography 23, 1058–1061.
  • Musser, G.G. & Carleton, M.D., 2005. Superfamily Muroidea. In Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference’, 3rd edn, Wilson, D.E., Reeder, D.M., eds, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 894–1531.
  • Musser, G.G., Smith, A.L., Robinson, M.F. & Lunde, D.P., 2005. Description of a new genus and species of rodent (Murinae, Muridae, Rodentia) from the Khammouan Limestone National Biodiversity Conservation area in Lao PDR. American Museum Novitates 3497, 1–31.
  • Myers, T.J., 2001. Prediction of marsupial body mass. Australian Journal of Zoology 49, 99–118.
  • Nowak, R.M. & Paradiso, J.L., 1983. Walker’s Mammals of the World. Volume II, 4th edition, The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
  • Ogilby, W., 1838. Notice of certain Australian quadrupeds, belonging to the Order Rodentia. Transactions of the Linnean Society of London 18, 121–132.
  • Pereira, H.M., Leadley, P.W., Proença, V., Alkemade, R., Scharlemann, J.P.W., Fernandez-Manjarrés, J.F., Araújo, M.B., Balvanera, P., Biggs, R., Cheung, W.W.L., Chini, L., Cooper, H.D., Gilman, E.L., Guénette, S., Hurtt, G.C., Huntington, H.P., Mace, G.M., Oberdorff, T., Revenga, C., Rodrigues, P., Scholes, R.J., Sumaila, U.R. & Walpole, M., 2010. Scenarios for global biodiversity in the 21st century. Science 330, 1496–1501.
  • Piper, K.J., Fitzgerald, E.M. & Rich, T.H., 2006. Mesozoic to early Quaternary mammal faunas of Victoria, south‐east Australia. Palaeontology 49, 1237–1262.
  • Price, G.J., 2002. Perameles sobbei sp. nov. (Marsupialia, Peramelidae), a Pleistocene bandicoot from the Darling Downs, south-eastern Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 48, 193–197.
  • Price, G.J., Ferguson, K.J., Webb, G.E., Feng, Y-X., Higgins, P., Nguyen, A.D., Zhao, J-X., Joannes-Boyau, R. & Louys, J., 2017. Seasonal migration of marsupial megafauna in Pleistocene Sahul (Australia–new Guinea). Proceedings of the Royal Society B 284, 20170785.
  • Price, G.J., Cramb, J., Louys, J., Travouillon, K.J., Pease, E.M.A., Feng, Y-x., Zhao, J-x. & Irvin, D., 2020. Late Quaternary fossil vertebrates of the Broken River karst area, northern Queensland, Australia. In Papers in Honour of Ken Aplin, Louys, J., O’Connor, S. & Helgen, K.M., eds, Records of the Australian Museum 72, 193–206.
  • Roberts, R.G., Flannery, T.F., Ayliffe, L.K., Yoshida, H., Olley, J.M., Prideaux, G.J., Laslett, G.M., Baynes, A., Smith, M.A., Jones, R. & Smith, B.L., 2001. New ages for the last Australian megafauna: continent-wide extinction about 46,000 years ago. Science 292, 1888–1892.
  • Robinson, A.C., Kemper, C.M., Medlin, G.C. & Watts, C.H.S., 2000. The rodents of South Australia. Wildlife Research 27, 379–404.
  • Roycroft, E., MacDonald, A.J., Moritz, C., Moussalli, A., Miguez, R.P. & Rowe, K.C., 2021. Museum genomics reveals the rapid decline and extinction of Australian rodents since European settlement. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118, 118.
  • Roycroft, E., Fabre, P.H., MacDonald, A.J., Moritz, C., Moussalli, A. & Rowe, K.C., 2022. New Guinea uplift opens ecological opportunity across a continent. Current Biology 32, 4215–4224.e3.
  • Seebacher, F. & Post, E., 2015. Climate change impacts on animal migration. Climate Change Responses 2, 1–2.
  • Smissen, P.J. & Rowe, K.C., 2018. Repeated biome transitions in the evolution of Australian rodents. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 128, 182–191.
  • Smith, M.J., 1977. Remains of mammals, including Notomys longicaudatus (Gould) (Rodentia: Muridae), in owl pellets from the Flinders Ranges, SA. Wildlife Research 4, 159–170.
  • Smith, R.J., 1993. Logarithmic transformation bias in allometry. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 90, 215–228.
  • Solomon, S., Qin, D., Manning, M., Avery, T.K. & Marquis, M., 2007. Climate Change 2007 – The Physical Science Basis: Working Group I Contribution to the Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
  • Start, A.N., Burbidge, A.A., McDowell, M.C. & McKenzie, N.L., 2012. The status of non-volant mammals along a rainfall gradient in the South-West Kimberley, Western Australia. Australian Mammalogy 34, 36–48.
  • Tate, G.H.H., 1951. Results of the Archbold Expeditions. No. 65. The rodents of Australia and New Guinea. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 97, 183–430.
  • Thomas, O., 1921. On three new Australian rats. Annals and Magazine of Natural History 8, 618–622.
  • Thomas, O., 1922. A subdivision of the genus Uromys. Annals and Magazine of Natural History 9, 260–261.
  • Travouillon, K.J., Simões, B.F., Miguez, R.P., Brace, S., Brewer, P., Stemmer, D., Price, G.J., Cramb, J. & Louys, J., 2019. Hidden in plain sight: reassessment of the pig-footed bandicoot, Chaeropus ecaudatus (Peramelemorphia, Chaeropodidae), with a description of a new species from Central Australia, and use of the fossil record to trace its past distribution. Zootaxa 4566, zootaxa.4566.1.1.
  • Trouessart, E.L., 1897. Catalogus mammalium tam viventium quam fossilium. In Tomus 1, Fascic. III. Rodentia II. (Myomorpha, Hystrichomorpha, Lagomorpha.) new edn. R. Friedlander & Sohn, Berlin, 453–664.
  • Turner, J.R., 2004. Mammals of Australia. Pensoft: Sofia-Moscow.
  • Van Der Kaars, S., Miller, G.H., Turney, C.S., Cook, E.J., Nürnberg, D., Schönfeld, J., Kershaw, A.P. & Lehman, S.J., 2017. Humans rather than climate the primary cause of Pleistocene megafaunal extinction in Australia. Nature Communications 8, 1–7.
  • Waller, N.L., Gynther, I.C., Freeman, A.B., Lavery, T.H. & Leung, L.K.P., 2017. The Bramble Cay Melomys Melomys rubicola (Rodentia: Muridae): a first mammalian extinction caused by human-induced climate change? Wildlife Research 44, 9–21.
  • Watts, C.H.S. & Aslin, H.J., 1981. The Rodents of Australia. Angus and Robertson, Sydney.
  • Watts, C.H.S. & Kemper, C.M., 1989. Muridae. In Fauna of Australia. Volume 1B. Walton, D.W. & Richardson, B.J., eds, AGPS Publishers, Canberra, 939–956.
  • White, D.A., 1959. Progress report on regional geological mapping, northern Queensland, 1958. Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics.
  • White, D.A., 1965. The geology of the Georgetown/Clarke River area, Queensland. Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics.
  • Williams, S.E., 2006. Vertebrates of the Wet Tropics rainforests of Australia: species distributions and biodiversity. Cooperative Research Centre for Tropical Rainforest Ecology and Management.
  • Williams, S.E., Bolitho, E.E. & Fox, S., 2003. Climate change in Australian tropical rainforests: an impending environmental catastrophe. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences 27, 1887–1892.
  • Withnall, I.W., 1989. Revision of the stratigraphy of the Broken Rive area, north Queensland – Ordovician and Silurian units. Queensland Government Mining Journal 90, 213–218.
  • Withnall, I.W. & Lang, S.C., 1993. Geology of the Broken River Province, North Queensland. Queensland Geology 4, 1–289.
  • Woinarski, J.C., Braby, M.F., Burbidge, A.A., Coates, D., Garnett, S.T., Fensham, R.J., Legge, S.M., McKenzie, N.L., Silcock, J.L. & Murphy, B.P., 2019. Reading the black book: The number, timing, distribution and causes of listed extinctions in Australia. Biological Conservation 239, 108261.
  • Woinarski, J.C., Burbidge, A.A. & Harrison, P.L., 2015. Ongoing unraveling of a continental fauna: decline and extinction of Australian mammals since European settlement. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 112, 4531–4540.
  • Wood, A.E. & Wilson, R.W., 1936. A suggested nomenclature for the cusps of the cheek teeth of rodents. Journal of Paleontology 10, 388–391.
  • Wood Jones, F., 1925. A revision of the South Australian jerboa mice, with the description of a new species. Records of the South Australian Museum 3, 1–7.