Amy Robbins

Amy Robbins

Sep 06, 2018

Group 6 Copy 107
-3
    Please wait...

    About This Project

    Northern koala populations have declined rapidly in the last two decades and localised extinctions are predicted. Both habitat degradation and chlamydial disease are threats to koala conservation. Like humans and other animals, only some infected koalas develop chlamydial disease and we don't know why. We'll investigate whether habitat quality is a key factor in determining disease progression, and whether a synergistic interaction between these threats is exacerbating declines.

    Blast off!

    Browse Other Projects on Experiment

    Related Projects

    Blazing new trails to protect our forests: birds as bioindicators of trail impacts

    Millions of people use recreational trails each year. With participation in hiking projected to increase...

    Uncovering fungal biodiversity from contaminated brownfield and superfund sites in Southern California

    Fungal biodiversity in Southern California remains poorly documented, particularly in contaminated soils...

    Out for blood: Hemoparasites in white-tailed deer from the Shenandoah Valley in Northern Virginia

    Our research question centers about the prevalence and diversity of hemoparasites that infect ungulate poplulations...

    Backer Badge Funded