Jemma Cripps
Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, VIC, Australia
Jemma is a scientist with the Threatened Fauna Program at the
Arthur Rylah Institute for Environmental Research. She is currently working on a project implementing management actions for the recovery of Leadbeater’s Possum in the montane ash forests of the Victorian Central Highlands. Her early research focused on kangaroo ecology and management, including a PhD in disease ecology which she finished in 2014. She is interested in applied, collaborative research, including threatened species conservation, wildlife management and urban ecology.
Abstracts this author is a contributor to:
Climbing into the canopy: Arboreal camera trapping proves effective for broadscale surveys of the Critically Endangered Leadbeater’s possum, Gymnobelideus leadbeateri (#161)
11:10 AM
Jemma Cripps
S17: Challenges and solutions in using remote sensing equipment in mammal research and monitoring (2/4)
Improving detection probabilities for the Critically Endangered Leadbeater’s Possum (Gymnobelideus leadbeateri) using arboreal camera trapping (#164)
12:10 PM
Louise Durkin
S17: Challenges and solutions in using remote sensing equipment in mammal research and monitoring (2/4)
On-site variables improve the accuracy of a GIS-based occupancy model for a Critically Endangered arboreal marsupial, Leadbeater’s possum. (#178)
11:50 AM
Jenny Nelson
Open Session: CS5 MR9