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