Research and Publications
An assessment of the state of nature in the United Kingdom: A review of findings, methods and impact. Ecological Indicators, 94, 226-236.
(2018) Population variability in species can be deduced from opportunistic citizen science records: a case study using British butterflies. Insect Conservation and Diversity, 11, 131-142.
(2018) Prior specification in Bayesian occupancy modelling improves analysis of species occurrence data. Ecological Indicators, 93, 333-343.
(2018) (2017)
(2017)
Landscape simplification weakens the association between terrestrial producer and consumer diversity in Europe. Global Change Biology, 23, 3040-3051.
(2017) Synchrony in population counts predicts butterfly movement frequencies. Ecological Entomology, 42, 375-378.
(2017) Agricultural management and climatic change are the major drivers of biodiversity change in the UK. PLoS ONE, 11, e0151595.
(2016) 
(2016)
The State Of The Uk’s Butterflies 2015. Butterfly Conservation and the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Wareham, Dorset.
(2015) Can trait-based analyses of changes in species distribution be transferred to new geographic areas?. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 23, 1009-1018.
(2014) (2014)
A phylogenetically-informed trait-based analysis of range change in the vascular plant flora of Britain. Biodiversity and Conservation, 21, 171-185.
(2014) Are lizards feeling the heat? A tale of ecology and evolution under two temperatures. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 22, 834-845.
(2013) Towards a measure of functional connectivity: local synchrony matches small scale movements in a woodland edge butterfly. Landscape Ecology, 27, 1109-1120.
(2012) Measuring functional connectivity using long‐term monitoring data. Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 2, 527-533.
(2011) Hot, dry and different: Australian lizard richness is unlike that of mammals, amphibians and birds. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 19, 386-396.
(2010) (2010)