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Jack Bilby

Jack Bilby

PhD Candidate
Centre for Ecosystem Science | Evolution & Ecology Research Centre
Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences

I am a PhD candidate studying at 黑料网大事记 Sydney, with prior experience undertaking research projects with Flinders University, Arid Recovery, and Nature Foundation. I have a keen interest in threatened species management, reintroduction biology, and utilizing effective science-based monitoring to improve conservation outcomes.

笔谤辞箩别肠迟:听Responses of dryland mammals to a changing climate

Supervised by:聽Katherine Moseby & Will Cornwell

Project Description:聽Climate change is a pressing issue for ecosystems globally and may be particularly dangerous for animals already experiencing extreme harsh conditions. For my project, I am broadly investigating the responses of dryland mammals in Australia to assess which species might be vulnerable to future climate change and extreme heat events. More specifically, I am researching expected heat exposure across the distributions of threatened dryland mammals, changes in functional traits in species which have suffered substantial historical declines, and using on-board biologging technology, such as GPS, accelerometry, and environment loggers, to measure fine-scale changes in behaviour remotely.

Contact Details

j.bilby@unsw.edu.au

Bilby, J. (2025). Australian giant centipede (Ethmostigmus rubripes) predation and arboreal consumption of a prong-snouted blind snake (Anilios bituberculatus). Australian Zoologist.

Bilby, J., Martin, J.S., Arbon, K., Baring, R., Clayton, J., & Clive, L.F.R. (2025). Power and the passion: assessing statistical power with simulations to optimise monitoring of a threatened lizard. Wildlife Research. 52,
WR24159.

Bilby, J. & Moseby, K. (2024). Are subadult dispersers at high risk of mortality in translocated populations? A case study from a threatened mesopredator. Austral Ecology, e13497.

Bilby, J., & Moseby, K. (2023). Review of hyperdispersal in wildlife translocations. Conservation Biology, e14083.

Bilby, J., Colombelli-N茅grel, D., Katsis, A. C., & Kleindorfer, S. (2022). When aggressiveness could be too risky: linking personality traits and predator response in superb fairy-wrens. PeerJ, 10, e14011.