Alistair Glen

researcher

Alistair Glen is …
instance of (P31):
humanQ5

External links are
P856official websitehttps://www.landcareresearch.co.nz/about-us/our-people/al-glen
P10283OpenAlex IDA5078757382
P496ORCID iD0000-0002-7777-7630
P1153Scopus author ID7006830359

P108employerManaaki Whenua – Landcare ResearchQ1801980
P735given nameAlistairQ2637103
AlistairQ2637103
P6104maintained by WikiProjectWikiProject Invasion BiologyQ56241615
P106occupationresearcherQ1650915
P5008on focus list of Wikimedia projectNZThesisProjectQ111645234
P21sex or gendermaleQ6581097
P802studentRobert VennellQ114871212

Reverse relations

author (P50)
Q56363304A comparison of horizontal versus vertical camera placement to detect feral cats and mustelids
Q90133087An Evaluation of Systematic Versus Strategically-Placed Camera Traps for Monitoring Feral Cats in New Zealand
Q56976041Antipredator responses of koomal (Trichosurus vulpecula hypoleucus) against introduced and native predators
Q56976074Assessment of risks to non-target species from an encapsulated toxin in a bait proposed for control of feral cats
Q92354175ClassifyMe: A Field-Scouting Software for the Identification of Wildlife in Camera Trap Images
Q33221549Complex interactions among mammalian carnivores in Australia, and their implications for wildlife management
Q56480234Connectivity and invasive species management: towards an integrated landscape approach
Q51176658Could controlling mammalian carnivores lead to mesopredator release of carnivorous reptiles?
Q124981500Does landscape composition influence the diets of feral cats in agroecosystems?
Q56412795Dominant predator odour triggers caution and eavesdropping behaviour in a mammalian mesopredator
Q34155404Ecosystem restoration with teeth: what role for predators?
Q56976165Effects of bait-station design on the uptake of baits by non-target animals during control programmes for foxes and wild dogs
Q56461160Eradicating multiple invasive species on inhabited islands: the next big step in island restoration?
Q122706369Evaluating scent detection dogs as a tool to detect pathogenic Phytophthora species
Q36226611Exploiting interspecific olfactory communication to monitor predators.
Q56433693Foraging Ermine Avoid Risk: behavioural responses of a mesopredator to its interspecific competitors in a mammalian guild
Q60450264I smell a rat! Estimating effective sweep width for searches using wildlife-detector dogs
Q36136066Invasive predators and global biodiversity loss
Q99233125Leveraging Motivations, Personality, and Sensory Cues for Vertebrate Pest Management
Q31139320Modelling landscape-level numerical responses of predators to prey: the case of cats and rabbits
Q125907268Monitoring and detection of feral cats on Auckland Island
Q56976169Monitoring bait removal in vertebrate pest control: a comparison using track identification and remote photography
Q114238645Niche Partitioning in a Guild of Invasive Mammalian Predators
Q112302117Niche partitioning in a guild of invasive mammalian predators
Q27311611Optimising camera traps for monitoring small mammals
Q107709335Proactive development of invasive species damage functions prior to species reintroduction
Q56976031Resolving the value of the dingo in ecological restoration
Q56975994Search strategies for conservation detection dogs
Q65556444Snacks in the city: the diet of hedgehogs in Auckland urban forest fragments
Q114102288Social and logistical challenges in managing invasive predators: insights from islands in Japan and New Zealand
Q56976175The control of dingoes in New South Wales in the period 1883- 1930 and its likely impact on their distribution and abundance
Q56976011The global impacts of domestic dogs on threatened vertebrates
Q56434758The next generation of rodent eradications: Innovative technologies and tools to improve species specificity and increase their feasibility on islands
Q56976057The success of GPS collar deployments on mammals in Australia
Q56976120Who's your daddy? Paternity testing reveals promiscuity and multiple paternity in the carnivorous marsupial Dasyurus maculatus (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae)

thesis committee member (P9161)
Q112935161A damage function for wild pig rooting in temperate rainforest
Q112901049Determining the spatial extent of the biodiversity outcomes of mammalian predator pest management
Q112930987Interspecific competition and olfactory communication between New Zealand’s invasive predators: unravelling and exploiting stoat behaviour for conservation
Q112937699Optimal monitoring and statistical modelling methods for feral cats and other mammalian predators in a pastoral landscape
Q112937721The Impact of Hedgehogs in Urban Forest Fragments

Q114871212Robert Vennellstudent ofP1066