Data
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft.title=Simpson Desert Small Reptile Trapping Data&rft.publisher=The University of Sydney&rft.description=This dataset contains information about reptiles and frogs captured in live traps at multiple sites in the Simpson Desert, since 1990. Traps are 16 cm in diameter and 60 cm deep. To increase trap success, a drift fence of aluminium wire screening (flywire) was set around the top of each trap. The fence was 30 cm high and ran for 2.5 m on each side of the pitfall opening to intercept and guide surface-active animals into the trap. The bottom ends of the pits were provided with a floor of wire screening to prevent captured animals from digging their way out, and all pits were capped with metal lids when not in use. Pitfall traps were arrayed in grids covering 1 ha, with each grid comprising 6 lines of 6 traps spaced 20 m apart. The top line of traps was established on the dune crest and the bottom line 100 m distant in the dune valley. Traps were opened for 1–6 nights on each grid at sampling intervals of usually 2–3 months and checked in the mornings and sometimes afternoons. Captured animals were identified, weighed, measured (snout-vent length, total length), and marked uniquely by toe clipping until 1993) or by ear notching (from 1994) before release. This dataset contains the Species, Family and Common names for reptiles trapped. The date, grid, sex,jaw length, and mass are also recorded for each trapping. The reptiles recorded include:  Ctenophorus clayey, Ctenophorus isolepis, Military Dragon (Ctenophorus nuchalis), Central Netted Dragon (Diporiphora winneckei), Lophognathus longirostris, Thorny devil (Moloch horridus), Bearded Dragon (Pogona vitticeps), Tympanocryptis Sp, Woma (Aspidites ramsayi), Boidae, Stimson’s Python (Liasis stimsoni), Desert Death Adder (Acanthophis pyrrhus), Yellow-faced Whip Snake (Demansia psammophis), Elapids, Fierce Snake (Oxyuranus ,microlepidotus), King Brown Snake (Pseudechis australis), Ringed Brown Snake (Pseudonaja modesta), Western brown Snake (Pseudonaja nuchalis), Narrow-banded Snake (Simoselaps fasciolatus), Little Spotted Snake (Suta punctata), Clawless Gecko (Crenadactylus ocellatus), Spiny-tailed Gecko (Diplodactylus ciliaris), Fat-tailed Diplodactylus (Diplodactylus conspicillatus), Jewelled Gecko (Diplodactylus elderi), Diplodactylus stenodactylus, Geckos, Gehyra Montium Tree Dtella (Gehyra variegata), Bynoe's Gecko (Heteronotia binoei), Beaded Gecko (Lucasium damaeum), Knob-tailed Gecko (Nephrurus levis), Beaked Gecko (Rhynchoedura ornata), Cyclorana cultripes, Desert Tree Frog (Litoria rubella), Limnodynastes spenceri, Limnodynastes tasmaniensis, Trilling Frog (Neobatrachus centralis), Desert Spadefoot Toad (Notaden nichollsii), Delma Nasuta, Delma Tincta, Lialis burtonis, Pygopodid, Pygopus nigriceps, Cryptoblepharus sp, Ctenotus ariadne, Ctenotus brooksi, Ctenotus calurus, Ctenotus dux, Ctenotus helenae, Ctenotus lateralis, Ctenotus leae, Ctenotus leonhardii, Panther Skink (Ctenotus pantherinus), Ctenotus piankai, Ctenotus regius, Ctenotus schomburgkii, Desert Skink (Egernia inornata), Narrow-banded Sand Swimmer (Eremiascincus fasciolatus), Lerista aericeps, Lerista labialis, Lerista xanthura, Menetia greyii, Menetia maini, Morethia ruficauda, Notoscincus watersi, Centralian Blue-tongued lizard (Tiliqua multifasciata), Ramphotyphlops endoterus, Ridge-tailed Monitor (Varanus acanthurus), Pygmy Goanna (Varanus brevicauda), Varanus eremius, Perentie (Earanus giganteus), Pygmy Mulga Monitor (Varanus gilleni), Sand Monitor (Varanus gouldii), Varanus tristis, Notoscincus ornatus and Frogs The research data is stored with a Microsoft Access database and is approximately 50MB and growing.&rft.creator=The University of Sydney&rft.creator=The University of Sydney&rft.creator=University of Sydney&rft.date=2012&rft.relation=http://sydney.edu.au/science/biology/sites/dickmanlab/publications.shtml&rft.coverage=137.84,-22.82 138.81,-22.82 138.81,-24.05 137.84,-24.03 137.84,-22.82&rft_rights=For rights information please contact the researcher.&rft_rights=For licensing information please contact the researcher.&rft_subject=ECOLOGY&rft_subject=BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES&rft_subject=ZOOLOGY&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Please use the contact information below to request access to this data.

Contact Information

Street Address:
Heydon-Laurence Building, A08, School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, NSW 200

aaron.greenville@sydney.edu.au
bobby.tamayo@sydney.edu.au
biosci.genericadmin@sydney.edu.au

Licence & Rights:

Other view details
Unknown

For licensing information please contact the researcher.

For rights information please contact the researcher.

Access:

Other view details

Available to researchers and government organisations. Please email aaron.greenville@sydney.edu.au or bobby.tamayo@sydney.edu.au

Brief description

This dataset contains information about reptiles and frogs captured in live traps at multiple sites in the Simpson Desert, since 1990. Traps are 16 cm in diameter and 60 cm deep. To increase trap success, a drift fence of aluminium wire screening (flywire) was set around the top of each trap. The fence was 30 cm high and ran for 2.5 m on each side of the pitfall opening to intercept and guide surface-active animals into the trap. The bottom ends of the pits were provided with a floor of wire screening to prevent captured animals from digging their way out, and all pits were capped with metal lids when not in use. Pitfall traps were arrayed in grids covering 1 ha, with each grid comprising 6 lines of 6 traps spaced 20 m apart. The top line of traps was established on the dune crest and the bottom line 100 m distant in the dune valley.
Traps were opened for 1–6 nights on each grid at sampling intervals of usually 2–3 months and checked in the mornings and sometimes afternoons. Captured animals were identified, weighed, measured (snout-vent length, total length), and marked uniquely by toe clipping until 1993) or by ear notching (from 1994) before release.

This dataset contains the Species, Family and Common names for reptiles trapped. The date, grid, sex,jaw length, and mass are also recorded for each trapping.

The reptiles recorded include: 

Ctenophorus clayey, Ctenophorus isolepis, Military Dragon (Ctenophorus nuchalis), Central Netted Dragon (Diporiphora winneckei), Lophognathus longirostris, Thorny devil (Moloch horridus), Bearded Dragon (Pogona vitticeps), Tympanocryptis Sp, Woma (Aspidites ramsayi), Boidae, Stimson’s Python (Liasis stimsoni), Desert Death Adder (Acanthophis pyrrhus), Yellow-faced Whip Snake (Demansia psammophis), Elapids, Fierce Snake (Oxyuranus ,microlepidotus), King Brown Snake (Pseudechis australis), Ringed Brown Snake (Pseudonaja modesta), Western brown Snake (Pseudonaja nuchalis), Narrow-banded Snake (Simoselaps fasciolatus), Little Spotted Snake (Suta punctata), Clawless Gecko (Crenadactylus ocellatus), Spiny-tailed Gecko (Diplodactylus ciliaris), Fat-tailed Diplodactylus (Diplodactylus conspicillatus), Jewelled Gecko (Diplodactylus elderi), Diplodactylus stenodactylus, Geckos, Gehyra Montium Tree Dtella (Gehyra variegata), Bynoe's Gecko (Heteronotia binoei), Beaded Gecko (Lucasium damaeum), Knob-tailed Gecko (Nephrurus levis), Beaked Gecko (Rhynchoedura ornata), Cyclorana cultripes, Desert Tree Frog (Litoria rubella), Limnodynastes spenceri, Limnodynastes tasmaniensis, Trilling Frog (Neobatrachus centralis), Desert Spadefoot Toad (Notaden nichollsii), Delma Nasuta, Delma Tincta, Lialis burtonis, Pygopodid, Pygopus nigriceps, Cryptoblepharus sp, Ctenotus ariadne, Ctenotus brooksi, Ctenotus calurus, Ctenotus dux, Ctenotus helenae, Ctenotus lateralis, Ctenotus leae, Ctenotus leonhardii, Panther Skink (Ctenotus pantherinus), Ctenotus piankai, Ctenotus regius, Ctenotus schomburgkii, Desert Skink (Egernia inornata), Narrow-banded Sand Swimmer (Eremiascincus fasciolatus), Lerista aericeps, Lerista labialis, Lerista xanthura, Menetia greyii, Menetia maini, Morethia ruficauda, Notoscincus watersi, Centralian Blue-tongued lizard (Tiliqua multifasciata), Ramphotyphlops endoterus, Ridge-tailed Monitor (Varanus acanthurus), Pygmy Goanna (Varanus brevicauda), Varanus eremius, Perentie (Earanus giganteus), Pygmy Mulga Monitor (Varanus gilleni), Sand Monitor (Varanus gouldii), Varanus tristis, Notoscincus ornatus and Frogs

The research data is stored with a Microsoft Access database and is approximately 50MB and growing.

Notes

This data was collected with the following Australian Research Council grant funding:

  • 1990 - Determinants of diversity of dasyurid marsupial communities.
  • 1990 to 1992 - Habitat selection or competition? An evaluation of factors that promote diversity in dasyurid marsupial communities in Arid Australia
  • 1991 to 1993 - Maintenance of high diversity in insectivorous marsupial communities in arid Australia: the role of predation.
  • 1993 to 1995 - Risk of predation: the effects of habitat use and community structure of arid zone small mammals.
  • 1995 to 1997 - Impact of feral predation on populations of small vertebrates in arid Australia.
  • 1995 to 2000 - Determinants of local abundance and diversity of small mammals in arid Australia; the role of oases and regional processes.
  • 1996 to 1998 - Determinants of abundance and diversity of marsupials in Arid Australia; role of facilitation.
  • 1998 to 1999 - Diversity of lizards in arid Australia: a keystone role for termites.
  • 1999 to 2001 - Morphological and functional plasticity in Australian populations of the House mouse, Mus musculus domesticus.
  • 2000 - The impact of rainfall on seed abundance and diversity in arid Australia.
  • 2001 to 2003 - Population dynamics of Australian desert rodents; effects of competition for food with ants.
  • 2004 to 2006 - Boom and bust: the role of fire and rain in driving the dynamics of seeds and rodents in arid Australia http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP0451749.
  • 2004 to 2008 - Desert island biogeography: vertebrate dynamics after fire-induced fragmentation of habitat in central Australia http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP0452475.
  • 2006 to 2009 - Avoiding environmental bankruptcy: the grazing impacts of red kangaroos and sheep http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/LP0668879.
  • 2007 to 2009 - Biodiversity enhancement in Arid Australia: the importance of micro-refugia and biotic interactions http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP0773754.
  • 2009 to 2013 - The renaissance predator: complex predator-prey interactions and vertebrate diversity in arid Australia http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP0988535.
  • 2010 to 2014 - Dynamic networks in a patchy landscape: will species interactions adjust to increased climatic extremes http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP1095632.

Data time period: 1990

This dataset is part of a larger collection

137.84,-22.82 138.81,-22.82 138.81,-24.05 137.84,-24.03 137.84,-22.82

138.325,-23.435

Subjects

User Contributed Tags    

Login to tag this record with meaningful keywords to make it easier to discover