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Western Wildlife and Wildlife Notes Index

By Topic

This index covers Western Wildlife volumes 1 to 20 and Wildlife Notes 1 to 18. WW refers to the article appearing in Western Wildlife Newsletters (i.e. WW1.4(10) is Newsletter volume 1, number 4, page 10). WN refers to the Wildlife Note series (i.e. WN3 is Wildlife Note number 3).

Aquatic Invertebrates – see Invertebrates A Australian Flora Aboriginal Heritage  Australian plants as weeds in South Africa –  learning about country – WW14.2(19) WW20.1(12)  min-min lights – WW3.2(17)  root clusters of Western Australian plants: a  Ngadju kala: aboriginal fire knowledge in curiosity in context – WW9.2(1) Great Western Woodlands – WW20.1(6)  story of Muja the WA Christmas tree – B WW3.2(8) Balgas  why mankind tells stories – WW3.2(8)  balga flowering – WW12.2(16)  wild grapes bush tucker – WW12.1(14)  how long before balgas flower? – WW10.2(17)  – web-based identification key –  loss to parrots – WW1.3(10) WW18.4(15)  parrot proofing – WW1.4(10)  Acacia nilotica has reached the Kimberley! -  remarkable trees (tallest grasstree?) – WW7.1(14) WW14.4(16)  Acacia nilotica on the Durack River -  surviving the Dinosaurs- the Dasypogonaceae WW8.1(19) - WW11.4(16)  Acacia paradoxa: native or alien? – Bandicoots – see (native) WW9.3(18)  Acacia saligna genetics and invasiveness –  , propeller: a methuselah among WW16.4(14) plants! – WW15.5(11)  local acacia seeds for human consumption -  banksia woodlands in Western – WW8.1(14) responses to fire in – WW16.3(1)  most Australian wattles likely to remain  banksias – Are you lost in the bush? Let a Acacia – WW8.4(4) banksia help you out! – WW11.3(12)  value of prickles - WW8.1(9)  banksias, bardies and cockies – WW1.3(11)  wattle I plant – WW3.4(10)  banksias – impact of groundwater use and  wattle pancakes for lunch – WW5.2(14) decreased rainfall – WW12.2(6)  wattle – symbol of a nation – WW9.3(12)  banksias – rare plant survival – WW12.3(18)  Wellstead – almost wattled out! – WW8.3(5)  banksia woodland recovery after fire –  when is a wattle not an Acacia – when it’s a WW20.1(10) Racosperma!  using the timing of flowering by banksias to Allocasuarinas – see Trees monitor climate change – WW16.4(10) Amphibians Bats – see Mammals (native)  an odd find over east – WW17.3(10) Bees – see Invertebrates Ancient fauna/features Bilbies – see Mammals (native)  ancient rivers in the wheatbelt – WW4.4(1) Biodiversity  explaining Australia’s Pleistocene  biodiversity and farm forestry – WN12 – WW13.4(1)  biodiversity of the Carnarvon Basin -  Kimberley’s Devonian Great Barrier Reef - WW6.3(14) WN19.2(12)  biodiversity of an economic hotspot, the  trace at Kalbarri – WN19.2(12) Pilbara Biological Survey – WW13.3(6)  why did the megafauna become extinct? –  bushfire diversity can promote biodiversity – WW11.2(10) WW9.3(8) Animal ethics  bushland heritage – WW14.3(14)  legal aspects of trapping feral –  celebrating biodiversity on your block – WW6.3(12) WW14.2(8) Ants – see Invertebrates  do human observers appreciate plant ANZECC Working Group diversity? – WW15.1(6)  visit to WA – WW2.1(15)  economic aspects – WW4.1(16)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 1  global warming – adversely affect ‘global  Carnaby’s cockatoo, conserving – WW3.4(13) biodiversity hotspots’ – WW10.4(12)  Carnaby's cockatoo - a cocky in crisis -  islands - WW2.1(5) WW6.3(4)  hybridisation in nature – WW16.4(6)  Carnaby’s cockatoo – two families in one  International Year of Biodiversity – year! – WW11.2(7) WW14.2(8)  Carnaby’s cockatoo release – WW12.3(17)  South west – a region for global conservation  Carnaby’s cockatoo – is it a rain bird? – – WW17.4(12) WW17.4(16)  tree planting in Western Australia: enhancing  Carnaby’s cockatoos feasting on hakea seeds the opportunities for conservation of – WW17.4(17) biodiversity - WW5.4(14)  Carnaby’s cockatoos, individually marked: a  Warwick Bushland, biodiversity of – challenge and opportunity for keen WW14.3(4) photographers – WW18.1(1) Biological control (see also: Weeds)  Carnaby’s cockatoo immatures, meeting the  blackberries – WW3.3(20) challenge: photographic identification of  blackberry rust arrives in Denmark – banded WW18.3(6) WW13.2(6)  Carnaby’s cockatoo, tree hollows & fate of  bridal creeper – WW1.4(10), WW4.1(17) large hollow-bearing trees – WW18.4(4)  Paterson’s curse – WW1.4(10)  Carnaby’s in Candy’s Bush Reserve – Biosecurity WW19.1(7)  nursery plants – risk of pests and soilborne  ‘Cockatoo care’ – a public programme – pathogens – WW10.4(7) WW9.4(11)  protecting WAs ag and food sector and  cockie capers – WW14.2(9) environment – WW18.4(10)  cockie hunting (Carnaby’s cockatoos) – Birds (see also: Nests) WW14.3(11)  attracting them to your backyard – WW3.2(18)  courteous cockies – WW14.3(18)  Australasian bittern project – WW15.4(19)  crow or raven? – WW14.4(5)  Australasian bittern – things that go ‘boom!’ in  cuckoo pallid, out and about in the bush – the night – WW16.1(1) WW15.4(12)  Australasian bittern – Wildfires in Esperance  cuckoos – WW5.3(8) area – WW20.1(1)  cuckoos, caterpillars and cape lilacs -  barn owl or min-min lights – WW3.2(17) WW7.3(13)  beautiful bird – for a parrot! – WW16.3 (7)  de bait debate – WW17.2(18)  bird pollinator observations in carnivorous  diet analysis of malleefowl - WW7.4(3) plants - WW8.1(10)  DIY bird hide – WW9.2(12)  bird presence, what is the value of long-term  don’t walk where seabirds – datasets of – WW18.2(4) WW14.1(16)  bird’s-eye view (Carnaby’s cockatoos) –  eagles, nest observing – WW3.2(13) WW14.3(11)  eagles-picked clean – WW19.2(10)  birds of Rottnest Island – WW13.4(16)  effects of climate on breeding in Australian  birds on farms project – WW1.1(6) birds – WW8.4(10)  birds on farms update – WW2.2(2)  emu eggs, jewels in the crown – WW14.2(16)  birds in the eastern Wheatbelt – WW3.3(18)  evolution of conservation – “cockatubes” –  birds on roadsides – WW5.3(14) WW11.4(15)  birds of Lavender Nature Reserve –  future of Australia’s birds – WW4.1(1) WW18.1(16)  honeyeaters, competition between –  black cockatoo in banksias – WW1.3(11) WW2.2(15)  black cockatoo Friday – WW18.4(9)  honeyeaters, nectar nomads a natural history  black cockatoos, hungry – WW10.2(8) of – WW15.4(1)  black cockatoo research at the wildlife  increase in stock watering points in rangeland genetics lab – WW12.2(12) leads to a decline in native bird  blue-breasted fairy-wrens and vegetation populations – WW14.3(17) corridors – WW3.2(9)  individually marked wild Carnaby’s cockatoos:  boobooks chirruping – WW14.2(14) a challenge and opportunity for keen  boobook research – WW20.1(14) photographers – WW18.1(1)  bush stone-curlew – WW2.4(6)  inland dotterel – WW14.2(10)  bush stone-curlews and homesteads –  in tree belts through farmland in Frankland – WW9.1(7) WW2.2(1)  bustards – what’s the story? – WW9.4(3)  leg flags on waders – WW3.1(17)  miner’s egg turns into a real bustard! –  listen to the birds – WW12.3(20) WW18.4(15)  lorikeets, on the look-out for – WW12.2(8)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 2  magpie, Australian – WW5.2(1)  small land birds in salt affected areas in the  making farms less attractive to galahs, little northeastern wheatbelt – WW5.1(10) corellas and ringneck parrots – WW4.4(14)  southern boobook research – WW20.1(14)  malleefowl – WW2.1(1)  stream corridors for bird movement – WN2  malleefowl, diagnosing the decline using  swallows – WW13.3(15) sightings data – WW10.2(12)  swans on the swan – WW12.2(3)  malleefowl, marvellous – WW14.2(15)  tawny frogmouth – WW14.2(19)  malleefowl in Merredin Peak Reserve –  thick-billed grasswrens – WW4.2(6) WW12.1(11)  waterbird survey, Perth area – WW2.3(9)  malleefowl monitoring – WW16.1(10)  western ground parrot - WW7.4(16)  malleefowl active mounds on Kanandah –  western ground parrot – WW9.1(14) WW20.1(4)  western ground parrot – native seed-eating  monitoring for the past and the future - fauna – WW12.1(10) WW7.3(14)  western ground parrots distinct from eastern  mulga parrots (outback death trap) – ground parrots – WW13.3(17) WW17.1(3)  western ground parrot – Wildfires in  Nankeen night heron (aka rufous night heron) Esperance area – WW20.1(1) - WW19.1(6)  wedge-tailed eagle life-cycle – powerful  natural pest control – WW1.3(9) predators and passionate parents –  nectar nomads: a natural history of WW12.3(1) honeyeaters – WW15.4(1)  white-browed scrubwrens nesting –  needs of bird-watching tourists – WW14.3(16) WW19.1(10)  nesting in the wheatbelt - yellow-rumped  wings of change – what the birds are telling thornbill, Acanthiza chrysorrhoa - WW7.3(17) us – WW12.3(10)  new Atlas of Australian Birds – WW3.2(12)  wonderful woodswallows - WW6.2(8)  noisy scrub-bird in Darling Range – WW4.3(1)  woodlands through a treecreeper's eyes -  our scaly friend – WW17.2(18) WW6.4(1)  owl, sub- deposits reveal small  wrestling wrens – WW3.1(17) decline – WW14.3(13) Bloodroots (Haemodorum spp.)  owl survey – a community group first in WA –  bloodroots – WW4.4(18) WW5.1(7) Bobtails – see Reptiles  owl survey update - WW6.2(11) Boodies – see Mammals  owls in the south west of WA – WW5.1(5) Book reviews  paddock trees, value to birds – WW14.4(11)  Australian wildlife after dark - WW20.1(19)  pardalotes at our door – WW15.1(4)  Bird Minds – cognition and behaviour of Aust  parliament of crows – WW1.2(9) native birds – WW20.1(19)  parrots, effect on balgas – WW1.3(10)  Guide to cockroaches of Aust – WW19.2(14)  piebald cockie – WW13.3(13)  Guide to spiders of Aust – WW19.2(16)  practical bird feeder – WW3.1(10)  Id and ecology of SW Aust Orchids – a user-  ravens in Perth – WW4.1(12) friendly guide – WW19.1(16)  rainbow bee-eaters (chasing rainbows) –  Lifting bonnet on wheatbelt woodlands – WW17.2(17) WW19.2(16)  rainbow bee-eaters – busy bee-eaters –  Miniature Lives – id insects in your home and WW18.2(10) garden – WW20.1(19)  rainbow lorikeets – WW4.2(7)  WA explorations of John Septimus Roe 1829-  rainbow lorikeets at Katanning – WW16.3(19) 1849 – WW19.1(14)  raptors and – WW15.2(9) Bracken  red-eared firetails, courtship – WW14.2(11)  bracken - WW7.3(5)  red-tailed black cockatoos on the move – Bridal Creeper – see Weeds WW14.3(18) Bushcare  ring-neck parrots, plan your counterattack  funding 1997/98 – see Natural Heritage Trust against marauding - WW10.1 (11)  National Vegetation Initiative – WW2.1(11)  rufous treecreeper, wings in the wheatbelt –  developing a project – WW2.1(12) WW9.3(22) Bush Detective  sacred kingfisher nesting in christmas tree –  adder's tongue - WW7.4(8) WW19.2(5)  antlion – WW3.4(13)  shearwaters at Rottnest - WW8.1(1)  bag-shelter moth – WW4.2(10)  shearwaters, right footed – WW13.2(12)  banksia cone eaten by Carnaby’s cockatoos –  shorebirds – observers needed – WW8.2(8) WW12.3(16)  banksia moth – WW17.3(18)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 3  Barrow Island, guess the reason for a Butterflies – see Invertebrates management action - WW6.4(11)  burrowing crayfish – WW11.1(2) C  bloodwood apple - WW7.2(3) Cacti – see Weeds  cuckoo-spit – WW3.3(7) Calandrinias  cup moth – WW4.1(11)  calandrinias – spectacular succulents –  doublegee – WW4.3(19) WW11.4 (4)  gravel nodules - WW8.1(23) Calothamnus  egg case, whose is it – WW3.1(16)  Calothamnus gracilis –shrub layer is vital  Entometa moth caterpillar – WW18.2(7) habitat – WW14.2(10)  faceted rocks - WW7.1(24)  Calothamnus – when its OK to be one-sided –  feathers – WW8.4(5) WW15.5(4)  feral bee hive - WW6.3(3)  name changes on the way? – WW19.2(11)  fossil bee’s nest – WW1.3(7) Carbon  hawkmoth caterpillar – WW10.4(2)  carbon potential of saline land – WW18.4(18)  honkey nuts, who ate them – WW1.1(2) Carnivorous plants  house centipede – WW9.2(6)  bird pollinator observations in carnivorous  lichens – WW3.2(16) plants - WW8.1(10)  lizard trap – WW12.3(13)  fire, flowers and sundews - WW7.4(8)  mangrove seedling – WW9.1(3)  pollinator observations in carnivorous plants  marris, damaged bark – WW2.1(19) and associated species - WW7.4(6)  marron mushrooms? – WW13.2(9) Cats  mimicry – hakea fruit and caterpillar –  declared protected in 1921 – WW2.3(12) WW11.2(10)  gone wild in 1921 – WW2.3(12)  more honkey nuts – WW1.4(6)  have you seen a big cat? – WW12.4(6)  mudlark couple – who’s who? – WW4.4(2)  innovative cat trap - WW6.2(15)  nature’s potter (potter wasp) – WW9.4(7)  leafy sundew, Drosera stolonifera,  patterns in the litter (trapdoor spider) WW10.2(19) – WW11.4(7)  make your own cat trap – WW5.2(12)  pink-eared duck - WW5.4(2)  and control – WW1.2(7)  proteoid root or buried bottlewashers –  someone’s pet in your bushland? – WW2.2(8) WW12.3(18)  puffball – WW12.1(8) Chamelaucium  quillwort – WW5.3(18)  Wembley wax – WW13.2(13) Changes to Scientific Names  scats, who left them – WW1.2(13)  marri becomes Corymbia – WW1.1(10)  spitfires – WW13.1(9)  marri changes back to –  spot the bird - WW6.1(10) WW3.2(13)  strange diggings – WW14.3(5)  when is a wattle not an Acacia – when it’s a  swan’s nest – WW5.1(12) Racosperma!  clay trumpets - WW7.3(7) Chuditch – see Mammals  tracks - WW6.1(17) Climate change  trapdoor spider silken sock – WW12.4(13)  Australia gets warmer – WW10.2(19)  unusual eggs, seeds or buds? – WW17.3(9)  climate change – WW10.4(13)  velvet worm – WW10.2(13)  climate change – WW18.3(11)  what’s attacked this tree? (black cockatoos) –  did the first Australians contribute to the WW13.4(15) desertification of Australia? – WW9.4 (19)  who ate these honkey nuts? – WW11.3(5)  dispersal mechanisms and revegetation with  who built this? (wolf spider) – WW8.3(7) WA plants – WW4.3(4)  who lives behind the curtain? – WW17.4(11)  effects of climate on breeding in Australian  who lives in a house of sticks? – WW2.3(7) birds – WW8.4(10)  who made these droppings? – WW15.1(15)  fauna moves higher up mountains to keep  who made this? – WW13.3(4) cool – WW17.2(19)  who made this trail? – WW12.2(13)  guinea pigs in a laboratory for climate  whose egg? – WW18.4(5) change? - WW7.2(12)  whose egg (Lea’s frog) – WW19.1(3)  how does rising temperature affect ants? –  whose poo? And what’s the big thing in it? – WW17.2(20) WW5.2(13)  impact on distribution of genus Dryandra –  witches broom – WW9.3(15) WW4.2(8) Bush tucker  new climate change report – WW17.1(12)  wild grapes – bush tucker – WW12.1(14)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 4  Permo-Carboniferous glaciation of  hybridisation in nature – WW16.4(6) Gondwana: its impact on Western Australia -  impact of climate change – WW4.2(8) WW7.1(1) Dung Beetles – see Invertebrates  phylogeography - how genetic data can help Dunny bugs understand climate change impacts on  dunny-bugs - WW7.2(15) biodiversity – WW12.4(13)  profitable farming, perennials and climate E change – a new study – WW16.4(14) Echidna  thinking beyond today: a global perspective  echidna, widespread but seldom seen for local action – WW5.1(23) resident – WW14.2(12)  using the timing of flowering by Banksias to  living with echidnas – WN8 monitor climate change – WW16.4(10) Economics (see also: Ecotourism)  white-striped bats – bellwethers of climate  Agonis sp. coarse teatree oil potential – change? – WW14.4(4) WW4.2(5)  your carbon footprint – WW13.1(10)  Agonis fragrans essential oil - an update! - Cochlospermum WW6.1(9)  cochlospermum – WW19.2(8)  Australian native Platysace tubers: from the Corridors (see also: Revegetation and bush to your shopping basket - WW7.3(15) Restoration of Habitat)  bugs in the bushes – how oil mallees are  checklist for design – WW3.1(19) contributing to biodiversity in the Wheatbelt –  linking bush remnants – WW4.3(10) WW12.1(1)  trees and bird movement – WW2.3(1)  Busselton Shire offers rate rebates on LFW Covenants sites - WW7.1(15)  CALM Covenants – create your own private  Busselton Shire biodiversity incentive strategy reserve – WW5.3(7) – WW11.3(3)  covenanting celebration morning tea –  carbon storage of native plants on Merredin – WW13.2(9) unproductive soils examined – WW14.4(7)  nature conservation covenants – further tax  commercialising native flora profitably – concessions – WW8.3(13) WW9.3(10) Creeks – see Rivers  developing native perennial legumes as CSIRO pasture species for the WA Wheatbelt –  past and present research in WA – WW12.4(4) WW3.1(15)  farmland and bush care - an expense or an Cycads investment in productivity? - WW6.2(4)  cycads – WW15.4(16)  get paid for storing carbon in the soil – Cypress (Cupressaceae) WW11.4(14  cypress-pines in WA – WW15.1(12)  growers working together to develop the  cypress-pines and birds – WW15.2(6) sandalwood industry – WW9.3(7)  persistence of Callitris in a flammable  is continual economic growth the ideal to aim heathland – WW16.2(6) for? – WW12.2(11)  local Acacia seeds for human consumption - D WW8.1(14) Daisies  management guidelines for remnant  everlastings – WW4.4(6) vegetation being harvested for cutflowers –  everlastings, preserving – WW4.4(15) WN7  native gerbera – Trichocline spathulata –  nature-based farm tourism – making it WW14.2(13) happen! – WW8.2(1) Dalgytes – see Mammals (native)  nature conservation covenants – further tax Direct seeding concessions – WW8.3(13)  in low rainfall areas – WW4.1(8)  new booklet on managing private native forest  on farm in York – WW3.2(19) – WW9.2(11) Drains (see also: Rivers)  new mallee harvester launched –  deep drainage options to ‘reduce uncertainty’ WW14.3(10) – WW11.3(14)  oil mallee – the quiet achievers – WW11.1(17)  living drains – WW3.3(14)  profitable farming, perennials and climate Dryandra change – a new study – WW16.4(14)  different species – WW2.4(1)  salinity - some pluses - WW6.4(6)  dryandras are banksias! – WW12.3(6)  sandalwood-a tree crop for the future –  dryandras don’t have to be banksias! – WW5.2(13) WW12.4(3)  history of name – WW2.4(2)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 5  tax concessions now available with the Nature  cane toad - a potential threat in WA – Conservation Covenant Program - WW3.3(5) WW8.1(20)  cane toads cause mass freshwater crocodile  the SEARCH project - - WW6.1(3) deaths in River NT – WW13.1(12)  tourist radio – WW11.1(17)  cane toads cause mass mortality in native  using our native trees and shrubs to supply tadpoles – WW13.2(7) new industries - WW7.1(11)  cats caught on candid camera – WW15.4(7)  wattle pancakes for lunch – WW5.2(14)  ‘de bait debate’ continues… - WW17.3(13)  what's in a name? - a marketing dilemma -  European blackbird detected – WW19.2(7) WW7.4(9)  European wasp trap, adopt a – WW16.4(9) Ecotourism  Effectiveness of 1080 baits for fox control –  bed and breakfast – WW1.2(5) WW19.2(6)  nature-based farm tourism – making it  feral bees and how we coped with them - happen! – WW8.2(1) WW7.4(10)  so you want to get involved in ecotourism? –  feral control Jerramungup style – WW4.1(13) WW5.1(13)  feral deer – WW11.1(13)  would groups of tourists like your block? -  feral honey bee ‘sting’, summer time WW6.3(11) highlights the – WW17.3 (14) Edge Effects  feral pigs and Haemodorum bulbs on granite  wildlife and edges – WW2.1(18) – WW17.4(19) Engagement  feral pigs in the South West – WW8.4(6)  Prudence the (Western Ring-Tailed) Possum  feral pig eradication: Santa Cruz Island, struts her stuff! – WW19.2(15) California – WW15.1(6) Eremophilas  fox DNA project – can you help? –  eremophilas - emu bushes, poverty bushes - WW10.3(13) WW6.4(4)  foxes decline, feral cats increase –  80 years of grazing, fencing, then - an exciting WW14.3(17) discovery! (Eremophila koobabbiensis) -  have you seen a big cat? – WW12.4(6) WW7.3(9)  honeybees – space invaders – WW12.2(9)  growing Eremophilas in the wheatbelt –  honeybees – pollinator or nectar thief? – WW16.2(1) WW15.1(7) Eucalypts  honeybees and varroa mites – WW15.1(7)  chronic defoliation of flooded gum –  Indian palm squirrel – WW13.1(12) WW19.2(1)  innovative cat trap - WW6.2(15)  majestic red morrel – WW17.3(8)  invasive birds – starlings – WW10.4(8)  puzzle for the Eucalypt buffs – WW16.4(8)  laughing kookaburras are not wanted in WA -

WW7.4 (5)  legal aspects of trapping feral animals - F WW6.3(12) Fauna safety  live Chinese beetles in imported wooden  simple device to prevent small vertebrate articles – WW12.4(12) animals from drowning in swimming pools –  lorikeets, on the look-out for – WW12.2(8) WW3.4(7)  make your own cat trap – WW5.2(12) Fauna Surveys – see Surveys  more on big cats in WA – WW13.2(14) Fencing  more on the pesky fox – a foxymoron? –  cheaper fencing for remveg and reveg – WW9.3(20) WW2.1(13)  natural vermin control – WW4.2(14)  electric fencing to protect remnant vegetation  “nowhere to run, and nowhere to hide” co- - WW5.4(10) ordinated fox baiting and shooting March  so you want to build a fence, do you? – 2004 – WW8.2(19) WW5.3(12)  parakeets feral in the UK – WW13.2(7)  through NHT grants – see Bushcare  pesky fox – WW9.2(15)  vermin proof fencing - WW6.1(12)  pigs - WW4.1(12) Feral animals  rabbits - WW4.1(13)  are you dining in tonight? – WW8.2(19)  rabbits, control options  Asian house geckos on the move – WW8.4(7)  rabbits, permanent bait stations – WW4.1(13)  bumblebee among the raspberries! –  rabbitscan – WW13.3(19) WW17.3(15)  red card for the – WW9.3(21)  camels – managing Australia’s feral camels –  red card for the red fox – WW10.2(14) WW16.1(8)  red-eared sliders near Brisbane – WW8.3(15)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 6  red imported fire ants update – WW14.1(15)  using fire in bushland - why and how –  sliders – vigilance is vital – WW10.3(12) WW15.1(10)  spreading weeds – the hidden costs of rabbits  Wagin Woolorama – WW14.2(7) and foxes – WW13.4(10)  Wagin Woolorama – WW17.3(16)  starlings forensic fingerprinting – WW9.1(9)  walk on wild horse hills – WW10.4(3)  starlings – invasive birds – WW10.4(8)  Waroona Show – WW13.2(14)  tapeworms in sheep – another good reason to  western ringtail possums at Wonnerup House poison foxes – WW10.3(13) – WW13.2(11) Field Days (LFW)  wonderful Wongan wildlife – WW13.3(20)  acid saline seeps workshop – ooze and goop  Woolorama photo competition – WW18.3(15) – WW10.4(11)  Wubin bird watching day – WW11.3(11)  Albany celebration – WW10.4(3) Fire  Balingup Small Farm Field Day –  animal responses to fire in banksia woodlands WW17.3(19) in Western Australia – WW16.3(1)  botanical monitoring day at Wagin Lakes –  banksia woodland recovery after fire – WW12.1(14) WW20.1(10)  bushland management with friends, York &  bird response to fire in Great Western Bindoon – WW13.1(14) Woodlands – WW18.4(19)  bushland trails workshop – WW14.4(14)  bushfire diversity can promote biodiversity –  celebration at Margaret River – WW11.1(10) WW9.3(8)  Chittering coffee morning – WW12.1(15)  effect of fire on butterflies - WW7.4(1)  fauna monitoring training at Yelverton Brook  fire and Phyt cinn activity in SW Aust Eco Resort – WW13.2(11) heathlands – WW19.2(13)  gardening for wildlife workshop – WW17.2(10)  fire and recovery – WW16.2(10)  gardens for wildlife workshop – WW18.1(20)  fire, flowers and sundews - WW7.4(8)  granite outcrops, Tammin – WW3.1(1)  Fraus (Ghost moth) and Cord Rush –  great biodiversity bus tour – WW12.1(12) WW4.2(1)  Heron Lake Vineyard LFW celebration  fire-stimulated flowering, 45 million years of – afternoon – WW11.3(15) WW16.3(8)  Jerramungup’s ‘old man emu’ makes it to the  fungi respond to bushfires – WW13.2(1) show! – WW13.1(9)  impact of fire in Esperance area – WW20.1(1)  joint celebration! 10 years of Land for Wildlife,  impact of fire on food plants – 100 years of farming – WW11.1(9) WW12.4(13)  Koobabbie, Director General visits –  management of hills firebreaks – WW5.2(9) WW15.2(16)  monitoring fire and nature on your property –  Kulin flowers – WW18.1(15) WW17.2(14)  Lake Clifton, LFW open property visit and  Ngadju kala: aboriginal fire knowledge in morning tea at – WW18.1(14) Great Western Woodlands – WW20.1(6)  managing granite outcrops, ‘Rock On!’–  past fire intervals in Fitzgerald River National WW5.2(17) Park - WW7.1(10)  Margaret River coffee morning – WW11.1(11)  habitat management and fire in the  Mawson field day – WW13.1(8) south-west – WW10.3(1)  nature photography workshop – WW11.1(11)  Tenterden fire – ten years on – WW18.1(9)  newts, an odd find over east – WW17.3(10)  use of fire in small remnants – WN17  Perup fauna weekend – WW11.1(5)  wildlife rescue after Bridgetown and Balingup  Pinjarra morning tea and bush walk – fires – WW13.2(4) WW13.2(15) Fish  Porongurup collaboration – WW18.1(14)  fish ladder – WW9.1(15)  praise for LFW members (Harry & Merle  freshwater fishes of south-western Australia – Bardwell) – WW15.1(11) WW8.4(16)  profitable revegetation with sandalwood -  salamanderfish – WW2.3(4) WW6.1 (18) Flat-topped Yate – see Trees  propagating bushland plants training day – Flora WW13.1(13)  botanical collecting in Western Australia –  Regan’s Ford wildflowers – WW15.1(11) WW11.1(1)  South coast LFW celebrating the International  hybridisation in nature – WW16.4(6) Year of Biodiversity – WW15.1(14)  more Kulin plants identified – WW18.4(14)  South coast LFW ‘Reveal the Plant  restoring Jarrah forest geophytes – Challenge’ – WW12.4(10) WW17.4(6)  Toodyay coffee morning – WW13.4(18)  South West – a region for global conservation – WW17.4(12)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 7  what would your Kojonup bushland grow-40  Perth Urban Bushland Fungi Project – million years ago? – WW10.4(16) WW8.3(6) Flora Surveys – see Surveys  role of fungi in woodlands – WW3.3(6) Floras  truffles & Fungimap Conference – WW5.2(4)  vascular flora –  wonderful world of fungi – WW17.4(19) WW16.3(19)  floras past and present - WW6.4(10) G  how I came to produce a book - WW7.1(9) Galls Forestry  plant galls: the diverse abnormal growths on  biodiversity and farm forestry – WN12 plants resulting from their intimate Fossils – see Ancient fauna/features associations with parasitic organisms – Fox – see Feral animals WW17.2(11) Frogs  too old to be fooled by gall – WW19.1(11)  cane toad threat – WW3.3(5) Geology – see Landscapes  chytrid in south-west frogs – Granite outcrops WW13.4(3)  gnammas and their aquatic life – WW3.3(1)  does traffic noise affect calling frogs? –  granite landforms of the wheatbelt – a brief WW13.2(12) review – WW8.2(10)  frog matters - WW7.4(13)  granitites – a plant of the ‘forever hills’ –  frog Watching – WW4.3(18) WW11.2(13)  future of southwestern frogs – WW3.3(3)  how art the mighty fallen! Pygmy clubmoss –  green frog in my boot (poem) – WW16.2(13) WW11.2(13)  how well do you know your neighbours? (The  life on the rocks – a cracking good place to Western Spotted Frog story) – WW8.2(6) live – WW14.3(6)  kerb too high - WW6.3(1)  use of granite outcrops by the yellow admiral  mating systems in Australian frogs: the – WW2.4(3) quacking frog – WW9.4(6) Grasses  motorbike – noisy frogs – WW14.2(19)  Grass Patch Farm – WW4.1(19)  spotted-thigh frogs in bathroom –  identification of major groups – WW3.1(6) WW19.1(12)  making your native grasses grow –  what kind of frog? – WW4.3(14) WW5.1(20) Funding  managing native grasses as pasture: a  auction for landscape recovery – new Kojonup example - WW6.4(14) environmental conservation program –  native grasses in regeneration – WW2.1(13) WW8.2(20)  native grasses and fire – WW12.3(19)  Australian Bush Heritage Fund – WW3.4(1)  new native grass species – WW14.2(7)  Bushcare and NHT – see Natural Heritage  notes on growing native grasses – Trust WW14.2(3)  Envirofund – WW10.2(20)  notes on growing native grasses: Pt 2 –  Gordon Reid Foundation – WW1.1(12), WW14.3(8) WW1.2(15)  summer active native grasses – WW4.2(4)  Healthy Wetland – WW11.1(20)  wattle grass-Acacia anomala – WW10.4(17)  new funding opportunity for high conservation Grasstrees – see Balgas value properties in the south-west – Green Corps WW9.3(24)  bridal creeper control – WW2.4(10)  Shire of Augusta-Margaret River  Hills Forest Project – WW2.4(9) Environmental Grants – WW18.2(11)  South coast Biodiversity Protection Project – Fungi WW5.2(16)  armillaria root disease - WW5.4(8)  don’t forget the fungi! – WW14.2(12)  Corrigin Grevillea recovery plan - WW1.1(7)  fungi respond to bushfires – WW13.2(1)  Corrigin Grevillea: 12 years of recovery –  ghoul fungus – WW4.3(17) WW10.2(1)  hairy stereum, is it a lichen? – WW14.2(17)  great Grevillea hunt - WW5.4(4)  larger fungi – WW2.2(3)  great Grevillea hunt (part 2) - WW6.1(7)  luminous fungi – WW3.2(17)  are made for birds – WW14.2(15)  morel – WW4.2(13)  grevilleas in the northern agricultural region –  mycorrhizal fungi and rehabilitation – WW15.4(11) WW2.2(8) Groundwater – see Water  myxomycetes: the slime moulds - WW7.3(4) Groups  new fungi website launched – WW12.3(12)  Australian Trust for Conservation Volunteers – WW1.2(15)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 8  Birds Australia – WW2.2(16) Hydrology  Equestrian Landcare Association – WW1.2(9)  comparison of changes to water levels in  Friends of the Western Ground Parrot - deep bores – 1975 to 2004 – Helena WW7.2(15) Catchment, WA – WW8.4(9)  Green Corp – WW2.4(9)  groundwater trends in the northern  Green Corps south coast Biodiversity agricultural region – WW9.4(17) Protection Project – WW5.2(16)  impact of groundwater use and decreased  Land Management Society – WW3.2(20) rainfall on Banksia – WW12.2(6)  Malleefowl Preservation Group (Inc) –  impact of trees on groundwater levels in WW2.1(19) Merredin catchment – WW3.2(10)  Moora Woodlands, working with a Shire – Hypoxis WW14.2(12)  tiny stars – WW12.3(12)  Northampton Environmental Group congratulations – WW15.2(20) I  on track (Toodyay Friends of the River – Insectivorous plants WW18.1(19)  Albany pitcher plant – truly extraordinary plant  Stack-Cooper Reserve, Moora, official – WW14.2(19) opening – WW14.2(7)  fire, flowers and sundews - WW7.4(8)  Waterbird Conservation Group Inc –  pollinator observations in carnivorous plants WW2.3(10) and associated species - WW7.4(6)  Western Australian Native Orchid Study and International Conservation Group – WW1.2(15)  Tiritiri Matangi – a success story –  Western Australian Society of Amateur WW12.2(16) Herpetologists – WW1.4(14) Interstate  Western Banders Association – WW1.1(10)  cradling the NW coast of Tasmania – WW14.3(15) H Invertebrates Habitat  ants, African big-headed in a Perth bushland  creekline revegetation for wildlife – WN1 – WW14.3(17)  biodiversity and farm forestry – WN12  ants and lerps – WW18.3(3)  dead wood and wildlife – WN14  ants as bio-indicators of disturbance in urban  habitat for the red-tailed phascogale – bush - summary of a case study - WW7.3(10) WW17.2(1)  ants as defence force? - WW7.3(11) ants in  old trees and wildlife – WN13 your remnant – WW3.1(2)  paddock trees and wildlife – WN16  ants in your remnant – WW3.1(2)  requirements for native mammals – WN11  ants – how does rising temperature affect  tree hollows and wildlife – WN15 ants? – WW17.2(20)  turning farmland into fauna habitat – how do  aquatic invertebrates and river health – we know what success looks like? – WW1.3(13) WW18.3(1)  aquatic invertebrates, gnammas and their – Habitat Construction (see Revegetation and WW3.3(1) Restoration of Habitat)  aquatic invertebrates in gnammas, species Hakeas richness (did you know?) – WW17.2(19)  hakeas – WW4.4(10)  avoiding kangaroo ticks - WW6.3(18)  managing tar spot disease of Myrtle Hakea –  bag-shelter moth – WW4.2(10) WW14.1(4)  bees, native – WW1.3(6) Herbaria  bees in my bamboo! – WW8.3(10)  what wildflower is that? – WW10.3(16)  bees native, habitat for – WW17.3(3) Herbicides  beetle ‘push-ups’, mystery animal ‘droppings’  are the substances added to herbicides toxic – WW13.3(16) to humans? – WW17.2(19)  beetles like logs – WW14.3(12)  Fusilade®, be careful with – WW13.4(16)  bird dropping spider – masters of disguise –  glyphosate-resistant wild radish found near WW16.4 (3) Geraldton – WW18.3(13)  borer damage – WW14.4(15)  selective herbicides and weed control in direct  bugs in the bushes – how oil mallees are seeding areas – WW1.3(12) contributing to biodiversity in the Wheatbelt –  triazine resistant wild radish– WW4.3(13) WW12.1(1) Horses  butterflies, effect of fire on - WW7.4(1)  horses and bushcare – WW1.2(9)  butterflies in urban bushlands around Perth –  horses helping the conservation cause – WW13.4(8) WW17.2(19)  butterflies, white – WW5.4(11)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 9  butterfly, spotted jezebel – WW14.2(10)  moths, whistling – WW14.2(9)  butterfly, spotted jezebel & parasitic plants –  no bull about Myrmecia ants! – WW8.3(1) WW18.4(19)  pie-dish beetles - WW8.1(19)  butterfly, wood white or Jezebel – WW6.2(17)  returning the forgotten animals – bugs –  butterfly, yellow admiral use of granite WW8.3(8) outcrops – WW2.4(3)  sandgropers - WW7.2(1)  butterflies (wedding) spread their wings  sandgropers, unearthing the secrets of – across Aust – WW19.2(3) WW11.4(6)  Capillosa has a new bee species – WW16.4  scorpions – ancient life forms in Western (1) Australia – WW14.3(1)  case moths, types of case – WW2.3(7)  shield shrimp – WW13.4(18)  crayfish, burrowing – WW11.1(2)  some invertebrates can survive eating cane  crayfish, burrowing – thanks for your help! – toad eggs – WW17.1(12) WW12.1(3)  spineless wonders – WW5.1(21)  cuckoo bee – WW17.2(13)  spider, jumping – WW17.3(3)  cuckoos, caterpillars and cape lilacs -  spider wasps – WW15.1(9) WW7.3(13)  spiders – huntsman – WW14.1(8)  butterfly, yellow admiral – WW2.4(3)  spiders – natural pest control – WW5.1(16)  casemoth larvae – WW2.3(7)  spiders and woodlands go together –  caterpillars on Cape Lilacs - WW7.2(18) WW8.3(11)  Christmas spiders – WW4.1(16)  stygofauna – WW18.4(1)  cicadas - WW7.1 (18)  and 'clay trumpets' - WW7.3(16)  cossid moths – WW2.3(13)  termites and you – WW11.2(1)  dances with wolves – Australian wolf spiders  ticks, species and biology – WW3.1(8) – WW13.3(1)  toad bugs – WW13.2(4)  dragonflies – flying dragons – WW14.4(8)  velvet ant – WW12.2(14)  dung beetles – WW2.2(7)  wanderer butterfly – WW10.2(17)  dung beetles, services provided by  wasp, hairy flower – WW16.4 (3) – WW13.2(5)  wasp, smart little - WW7.2(6)  dung beetles, more species on the way –  wasps - sex, murder and deception – the WW18.1(13) private lives of thynnine wasps – WW15.2(1)  earwig flies? Ancient and mysterious insects –  white butterflies - WW5.4(11) WW12.1(5)  wasp, hairy flower – WW16.2(9)  european wasp programme update –  woolly bear caterpillar - WW7.3(12) WW17.3(11) Iridaceae  flying dragons or dragonflies – WW14.4(8)  native Iridaceae – WW19.1(8)  ghost moth and cord rush – WW4.2 (1) Irrigation  golden orb weaver spider – WW16.2(11)  from the Moore River in 1900’s – WW3.1(14)  grasshopper – giant green slantface – camouflage - WW16.3(9) J  insects – plant galls – WW17.2(11) Jacksonias  introduced earthworms bury lime in acid soils  use in revegetation – WW3.1(10) – WW13.2(7)  discovering DRF – Jacksonia velveta –  invertebrates in your remnant – WW1.1(4) WW5.3(16)  jewel bug on Pimelea argentea – WW14.2(18)  how Stinkwood got its name? – WW17.3(18)  ladybirds – WW14.1(14)  lessons from ants and small creatures – K WW11.1(16) Kangaroos – see Mammals  mail order menace – WW18.1(13) Kangaroo paws  marron mushrooms? – WW13.2(8)  red and green kangaroo paw: a floral emblem  mites, soil – WW11.3(1 of grace and beauty – WW17.2(6)  mites on a bumblebee – WW18.1(12) Kingia  mole crickets – WW8.4(1)  Kingia’s remarkable roots – WW13.1(1)  moth, cossid – WW2.3(13)  surviving the dinosaurs – the  moth, Entometa (caterpillar) – WW18.2(7) dasypogonaceae – WW11.4(16)  moth, hawk, caterpillar – WW10.4(2) Koalas – see Mammals  moth, tiger – WW7.3(12) Korthalsella  moth, white cedar – WW7.2(18)  strange parasite – WW8.4(8)  moths, mallee – WW4.3(6)  moths, studying – WW14.2(11)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 10  Permo-Carboniferous glaciation of L Gondwana: its impact on Western Australia - Lakes - see also: Wetlands WW7.1(1)  landholders and recovery planning: Toolibin  petrichor – WW17.3(9) Lake catchment – WW9.1(8)  recent mega-tsunamis in the ,  salt lakes, is there life in our inland – Pilbara and Kimberley areas of Western WW4.4(4) Australia – WW17.4(1) Lambertia  reconstructing links in a fragmented  Lambertia – Wild Honeysuckle – WW10.4(1) landscape – WW9.3(19) Landcare  reference soils of south-western Australia –  1999 State Landcare Awards – WW4.1(20) WW10.3(6)  2001 State Landcare Awards - WW wins WA Landuse section Sigma Landcare Media Award -  conservation planning in the southwest WW5.4(15) Australia ecoregion – where to allocate limited  cooperation pays off! – WW9.2(8) resources? – WW15.5(15)  Jenny Dewing runner-up in SLCC Landcare  dams on the Ord River – a photo history – Professional Award - WW5.4(15) WW17.1(6)  landcare and researchers working together –  planning using LUPIS – WW1.4(11) WW9.2(7)  LUPIS – see Landuse  thinking beyond today: a global perspective Legal for local action – WW5.1(23)  legal aspects of trapping feral animals - Land for Wildlife WW6.3(12)  celebrate! 250,000 ha of Land for Wildlife  so - you want to keep a pet reptile do you? Sites – WW12.4(1) Well, you can now! - WW7.3(22)  celebrating 30 years of protecting and  new biodiversity legislation for Western enhancing wildlife habitats (Victoria) – Australia – WW201.1(9) WW15.5(10) Lichens  celebration of the 2000th registration –  competition is a fact of life – WW12.3(19) WW13.3(3)  coral lichens – ocean or outcrop? –  Land for Wildlife celebrates 1000th registration WW17.2(16) - WW7.1(3)  mystic lichens - WW7.2(4)  Land for Wildlife gets with the times! – Local plants WW17.3(13)  learning about local plants – WW4.1(15)  LFW Victoria: 30 year celebration forum – Locust – see Pests WW16.3(3)  logo for WA – WW1.2(2) M  official launch in WA – WW1.2(1) Mammals (native)  origins of – WW1.1(3)  bat listening project gets under way –  presentation of the 600th sign - WW5.4(1) WW15.4(3)  visitor from New Zealand – WW16.3(5)  bats can live in very small hollows! –  welcome to – WW1.1(1) WW4.4(13) Landscapes and soils  bats, insect eaters – WW1.1(3)  acid scalds, identifying and managing on your  bats of Bungendore Park pamphlet – property – WW9.4(14) WW18.2(6)  carbon storage of native plants on  bats of the Ord River area – WW10.2(11) unproductive soils examined – WW14.4(7)  bats, tracking in rural landscapes –  changing Greenough Flats - WW6.4(12) WW15.5(14)  coastal considerations - WW8.1(6)  bats, unintended death trap for – WW18.3(9)  devil's soils: the soils that bite back -  bats, white-striped – bellwethers of climate WW8.1(12) change? – WW14.4(4)  granite landforms of the wheatbelt – a brief  bilby, chocolate for Easter – WW1.2(15) review – WW8.2(10)  black-flanked return to the Avon  how South-West WA’s landscapes formed – Valley -–WW5.3(10) WW5.3(4)  boodies – ecosystem engineers in the arid  identifying and managing acid scalds on your shrublands – WW12.2(15) property – WW9.4(14)  boodies and bilbies, ecosystem engineering –  iron-stone gravels and native vegetation - WW12.3(15) WW5.4(3)  – WW13.3(12)  old landscape altered, but not lost –  can rock wallabies disperse across farmland? WW17.4(19) - WW7.3(7)  chuditch-proof your chook pen! – WW10.2(10)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 11  dalgyte, demise of the - WW6.4(9)  quenda safe houses – WW3.3(17)  dalgytes are on the way back! – WW5.3 (1)  quokka habitat management and fire in the  dunnarts little long-tailed and fat-tailed, on south-west – WW10.3(1) Kanandah – WW20.1(4)  relict warrens in Western Australia’s  echidnas, living with – WN8 pastoral lands – WW5.1(18)  even more dibblers released at Peniup! –  remote cameras spot chuditch at Dryandra – WW8.2(15) WW13.4(13)  honey possum drowned – WW1.3(14)  requirements for native mammals – WN11  honeypossums –moved in – WW19.1(10)  small mammal decline, sub-fossil owl deposits  honey possum, impact of fire on the endemic reveal – WW14.3(13) – WW9.1(1)  spider wasp – WW15.1(9)  honey possums, impact of fire on food plants  understanding ring-tailed possums – – WW12.4(13) WW8.3(4)  hopping soil! dig up a treat in our  wallabies, tammar declared vermin in 1921 – remnant woodlands – WW5.1(3) WW2.1(16)  how ancient DNA was able to identify the  wallabies, tammar & black-gloved under the extinct rock- on Depuch Island - spotlight – WW12.3(13) WW7.3(6)  wambenger story – WW13.3(15)  kangaroo herbivory secrets of – WW9.2(9)  water rats (Hydromys chrysogaster) –  kangaroo grazing preferences after fire at WW14.3(13) Whiteman Park – WW10.2(6)  water rats (what is that lurking in the creek?) –  kangaroos, a contraceptive for – WW10.4(5) WW15.1(1)  kangaroos disperse canola seeds –  western , value of oil mallees WW12.2(11) as habitat for – WW14.1(1)  kangaroos – 2 joeys in 1 pouch – seeing  western ringtail possum – a resilient species double – WW14.1(12) or another taxon on the decline? – WW9.3(4)  kangaroo – why would a roo chew bones? –  western ringtail possum (Part 2) – WW9.4(1) WW18.2(9)  wetlands and fencing field day – WW17.1(14)  koalas much more common than they have  whale beachings at Busselton – WW9.3(1) been in the past? – WW9.3(13)  what is that lurking in the creek? – WW15.1(1)  mammals, requirements for native – WN11  , emergency conservation action to help  mardo as part of the household – WW15.5(8) save the – WW13.4(16)  nest boxes for wildlife – WN3  woylie, good result – WW15.3(1)  numbat country, this is – WW16.4(15)  woylie sandalwood story - hopping into a  numbats – living next door to Boyagin – bright future - WW7.3(1) WW11.3(10)  woylies find new Land for Wildlife homes –  numbat (wild girl) – WW16.2(3) WW5.1(1)  spotting numbat stripes – WW19.1(13) Mardo – see Mammals (native)  pebble-mound mice – WW13.3(9) Melaleucas  phascogale friendly place, Wagin –  broombush complex – WW11.4(8) WW10.2(15)  marvellous melaleucas – WW5.3(18)  phascogales, at home with brush-tailed –  name changes on the way? – WW19.2(11) WW17.1(1)  semi-aerial roots on paperbarks – a glimpse  phascogale red-tailed, habitat for the – of the ‘hidden half’ – WW15.4(10) WW17.2(1)  the SEARCH project - Melaleucas - WW6.1(3)  phascogale red-tailed, on Kanandah;  using the broombush key – increasing the pollinating round-fruit banksia (B. options for revegetation – WW12.1(13) sphaerocarpa) – WW20.1(4) Members' page  possum highway – WW14.3(12)  acacias of the Wellstead District –  possum, pygmy – WW14.2(18) WW10.4(18)  possum ringtail – information wanted in  Acacia saligna after fire – WW9.3(20) Albany – WW12.3(13)  albino Scarlet Robin - WW6.1(10)  possums, encouraging – WN6  antics – WW13.3(12)  possums, fencing out! – WW15.4(8)  apprehensive-looking youngster (brown  possums, living with (brochure) – May 2009 falcon) – WW13.4(17)  on Bald Island – WW10.1(3)  aviary without walls! – WW18.1(18)  potoroos on Bald Island – update –  beautiful bird – for a parrot! – WW16.3(7) WW14.4(15)  bird banding at ‘Waldja’ – WW17.4(9)  quendas, encouraging – WN5  bird dropping spider – masters of disguise –  quendas, living with (brochure) – July 2005 WW16.4(3)  birds and extreme heat – WW11.2(9)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 12  blazed tree on ‘Ardgowan Farm’ –  grow your own habitat at Balingup – WW16.3(11) WW18.3(10)  blazed tree questions lead to more questions  habitat for native bees – WW17.3(3) – WW16.3(11)  "hail to thee, blythe spirit" - WW7.4(15)  blue wrens – WW20.1(13)  happy taddy tale! – WW9.4(18)  boodie rats – WW13.3(12)  heron chick, our friendly – WW18.1(5)  bridal creeper York High School - WW6.1(10)  honey possum heaven! - WW6.3(20)  bush meringue? – WW15.2(9)  honey possums galore! – WW12.3(14)  bush stone-curlews and homesteads –  how much can one roo drink? – WW15.2(13) WW9.1(7)  how much can you eat? (Rosenberg’s monitor  bush stone-curlews revisited – WW13.2(10) eating rabbits) – WW17.2(3)  bushwalk in Boya – WW13.4(19)  importance of long-term weather observations  busy bee-eaters – WW18.2(10) – WW17.1(14)  butterfly, satin azure – WW18.1(10)  intriguing plant at Northampton – WW17.1(11)  CALM bush rangers at Albany Senior High  I spy…! – WW16.3(9) School - WW5.4(19)  jewel beetle, northern – WW18.1(17)  caring for a bobby – WW18.1(3)  John Masters bird hide, Toodyay –  carpet python returns to Gidgegannup – WW18.1(17) WW8.4(15)  joy of revegetation – WW13.1(14)  caterpillar, another Entometa – WW18.3(10)  kangaroo – why would a roo chew bones? –  children take their voices to Canberra WW18.2(9) (Baldivis Primary School) – WW14.1(13)  keeping weeds under control on a four  classroom in the bush - WW8.1(22) hectare bush block – WW17.4(8)  cloud of wanderers – WW10.2(17)  King’s skinks, a 20-year period of  community science in action – WW15.5(7) observations in a suburban garden–  crab, little spotty – WW18.1(18) WW16.1(14)  creating wildlife corridors – WW15.5(6)  Kitto 50,000:Nature 5,000,000! – WW11.4(10)  cuckoos, caterpillars and cape lilacs –  LFW at ‘Bilingurr’ – a Broome perspective – WW7.3(13) WW10.2(3)  cute little surprise – scrubwrens and  little white bat – Leucism – WW10.4(9) honeypossums – WW19.1(10)  looking through the phone book –  daft – or not? (dotterels) – WW17.1(10) WW13.3(14)  deadly embrace – WW18.2(9)  magic of the djitti djitti – WW18.3(14)  destocked floodplain – WW17.3(16)  masked woodswallow migration – WW17.1(9)  different flowering times of jarrah at Morangup  meet a bee-fly! – WW17.1(11) – WW17.2(7)  minnows, save the – WW16.1(13)  doing what comes naturally! (mating Gould’s  more about cape lilacs and caterpillars - monitors) – WW18.1(3) WW7.4(18)  dragonflies, food for – WW18.3(14)  more about snottygobble seedlings –  dugite in the garden – WW17.1(15) WW5.3(16)  wedge-tailed eagle colour changes w/ age –  more on the pesky fox – a foxymoron? – WW18.4(3) WW9.3(20)  eagle yarn – WW9.2(14)  moth, Helena Gum Moth (do you know this  eliminating bridal creeper – spreading the rust moth? – WW14.4(13) – WW9.1(11)  murdering animal – or, a case of biting off  exciting invasion (quendas) - WW6.3(17) more than you can chew (red- phascogale)  Ferreira family - WW6.1(10) – WW13.3(18)  fire and recovery – WW16.2(10)  nature appreciation in natural areas –  first harvest - oil mallees on 'sun valley' - WW15.1(5) WW7.1(16)  nature red in tooth and claw! - WW7.4(14)  first Moora cocky count – WW16.3(6)  Nell’s block restoration – WW13.4(19)  Flinders Park students visit Balijup farm –  nest too small – WW16.2(12) WW17.1(15)  new Grevillea named after Mary Squires -  fungal oddities – WW15.2(9) WW7.2(16)  ghostly image – WW13.4(12)  new idea for coping with ticks – WW8.2(13)  goldfields swift moth – WW8.4(15)  observing seasonal changes – a task for all  Gould's monitor - the hunter! - WW7.4(14) the senses – WW17.4(10)  great orchid hunt – WW11.4(13)  ordeal by drowning – WW18.3(10)  grevilleas in the northern agricultural region –  out and about in the bush: the pallid cuckoo – WW15.4(11) WW15.4(12)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 13  outsmarting Australia's most skillful feral -  wealth of experience and knowledge – WW7.4(15) WW17.1(15)  pesky fox – WW9.2(15)  web takes over the mailbox - WW8.1(23)  phascogale, it’s tiring work being a –  weedy success story! (rust on bridal creeper) WW13.4(17) – WW9.1(10)  phascogale box – WW20.1(13)  western ringtail possum – Coralie –  phone tower radiation and wildlife health – WW20.1(15) WW11.2(9)  white New Holland honeyeater – WW12.2(14)  picked clean (motion-activated camera,  wild girl – WW16.2(3) eagles) - WW19.2(10)  wonderful – but wet – walks! – WW17.4(3)  piebald cockie – WW13.3(13)  woylies at Wildwater - WW6.1(10)  pleasure or pain? – WW17.3(3)  "writing the wild" at Perup - an inspiring  poetry from ‘Writing the Wild’ at Perup – weekend - WW8.1(22) WW8.2(17)  young pallid cuckoo and yellow-rumped  Porongurup morning glory – WW14.4(12) thornbills - WW7.4(18)  proof is in the witnessing – WW17.1(9) Mice – see Mammals  pygmy possums saved – WW12.3(14) Micro-organisms  python on the rafters – WW11.4(11)  Lake Clifton thrombolite community listed as  python’s breakfast – WW17.3(7) critically endangered – WW14.2(6)  reptiles in the hills – WW15.2(12)  scumbook! – WW9.3(14)  salmon gum bolete – is this the biggest? –  stromatolites – living fossils – WW10.3(9) WW15.4(11) Mistletoe  sacred kingfishers – WW8.4(14)  friend or foe – WW3.2(5)  seeing double – WW14.1(12)  mistletoe – friend not foe! – WW11.1(8)  semi-aerial roots on paperbarks – a glimpse Monitoring of the ‘hidden half’ – WW15.4(10)  individually marked wild Carnaby’s cockatoos:  sharing with wildlife – the grapefruit puzzle – a challenge and opportunity for keen WW4.1(18) photographers – WW18.1(1)  shire of Augusta-Margaret River  information for camera trapping – Environmental Grants – WW18.2(11) WW17.1(12)  short circuit (welcome swallow)– WW17.1(10)  I spy …! – WW16.3(9)  should tadpoles be moved when the pond  monitoring fire and nature on your property – dries up? – WW9.2(14) WW17.2(14)  skinks – woodland – WW10.4(18)  monitoring for the past and the future -  slipper orchid – what plant is this? – WW7.3(14) WW15.1(15)  photographic monitoring of vegetation - WN9  slipper orchid – flower from those unknown  sand pads - using tracks to monitor fauna - leaves – WW15.2(13) WN10  slow down for fauna! – WW8.4(15)  value of old photographs - WW6.3(8)  snakes in the roof! – WW14.1(5) Monotremes  sometimes nature needs a helping hand! –  echidnas, living with – WN8 WW15.1(5) Moths – see Invertebrates  Squire Mary, congratulations on Order of Australia – WW13.2(10) N  story of red-tailed black cockatoos - Nardoo WW8.1(18)  nardoo – the clover-leaved fern - WW9.1(6)  tall tale but true – happy taddy tales part 2 – Native Grasses – see Grasses WW10.2(18) Natural Heritage Trust  Tenterden fire – ten years on – WW18.1(9)  funding 1997/98 – WW1.4(16)  termite release tower – WW11.2(9)  funding 1998/99 – WW2.4(12)  things that go bump in the day - WW13.4(14)  introduction and principles – WW2.1(9)  tiger snake for tea! – WW8.4(14)  overview – WW2.1(10)  those dam swans! – WW11.2(14) Nature Observation  triggerplant (poem) – WW18.3(10)  WA Naturalists Club, Yunderup Nature  Twang’s story – WW16.1(5) Observatory – WW1.2(14)  very warm night, a paved patio and three frog Nests species – WW17.2(16)  Carnaby’s cockatoo – WW1.1(5)  wambenger story – WW13.3(14)  evolution of conservation – “cockatubes” –  water rats (Hydromys chrysogaster) – WW11.4(15) WW14.3(13)  watching nests – WW2.2(13)  watching an eagle nest – WW3.2(13)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 14  nest boxes for wildlife – WN3  individually marked wild Carnaby’s cockatoos:  nest box observations – WW3.3(16) a challenge and opportunity for keen  osprey nesting platform construction – photographers – WW18.1(1) WW2.4(8)  photographic monitoring of vegetation – WN9  quenda safe houses – WW3.3(17)  Woolorama photo competition – WW18.3(15) Networking Phytophthora – see Plant diseases  neighbourhood days – WW4.1(14) Pimeleas Numbats – see Mammals  original banksias! - WW6.2(6) Planning (see Landuse) O Plant communities Obituaries  assessing changes in plant communities – Serventy, Vincent – WW13.1(15) WW8.3(12) Observation bores Plant diseases  preserving observation bores – WW10.3(7)  armillaria root disease - WW5.4(8) Oil Mallee – see Trees  beware of Eucalyptus (Guava) Rust – Orchids WW10.3(12)  hammer (Drakaea) orchid pollinators –  canker disease in Corymbia calophylla (marri) WW19.1(13) - WW6.3(16)  love potion – WW1.3(4)  canker marri – WW10.4(5)  rare orchid (Caladenia bryceana) –  dieback caused by : WW14.2(16) what is at risk and what can we save? –  underground orchid, keep your eyes peeled WW9.3(16) for the – WW11.3(18)  dieback found at Moorine Rock - WW1.4(10)  Western Australian orchids – the masters of  dieback-infested banksia woodlands affect deceit (Part 1) – WW12.1(6) bird species diversity – WW18.4(13)  Western Australian orchids – the masters of  dieback plant pathogen - WW3.3(12) deceit (Part 2) – WW12.2(1)  dieback protection on LFW properties –  Western Australian underground orchid, WW18.4(13) towards the conservation of – WW8.4 (13)  dieback workshops in Busselton Shire –  Western Australian underground orchid, WW15.5(14) unlocking the dark secrets – WW8.2(14)  does prickly moses suppress Phythophthora  wheatbelt remnant – WW1.3(3) dieback - WW10.4(6)  Fire and Phyt cinn activity in SW Aust P heathlands – WW19.2(13)  flooded gum - WW3.4(3), WW4.1(10) Palaeodrainage  jarrah dieback – WW19.1(1)  ancient rivers in the wheatbelt – WW4.4(1)  ‘marri app’ helps recognise Marri canker – Paterson’s Curse – see Weeds WW18.1(20) Peas  marri decline: possible causes and  discovering DRF – Jacksonia velveta – implications – WW15.2(10) WW5.3(16)  marri decline research project – WW17.4(5)  Gompholobium genus – glorious but little- studied legumes – WW13.3(10)  myrtle rust, adopt a tree to help guard against – WW17.3(12)  Hoveas – WW15.2(18)  myrtle rust found in Tasmania – WW19.2(4)  how Stinkwood got its name? – WW17.3(18)  phosphite injection– new video – WW18.4(13)  Jacksonia use in revegetation – WW3.1(10)  plant pathogen – WW3.3(12 )  prostrate flame flower: the long road to recovery – WW12.4(8)  rural tree dieback (diagram) – WW5.2(19)  recovery of a Sandplain Standout! (Daviesia  rust threat to our native bush - WW6.4(18) euphorbioides) - WW11.3  tar spot disease of Myrtle Hakea – WW14.1(4  Sturt’s Desert Pea – WW3.4(12) Pollination Pest control  bird pollinator observations in carnivorous  mouse control in crops – a natural alternative plants - WW8.1(10) (somebody should give a hoot!) – WW9.3(6)  bush picnic pollinators and plants –  natural borer control – WW15.1(9) WW4.1(14)  natural pest control – WW5.1(16)  by native animals – WW1.3(7)  locust – severe threat 2006 – WW10.4(12)  pollination – WW4.4(8) Phascogales – see Mammals  pollinator observations in carnivorous plants Photography and associated species - WW7.4(6)  pollinator - or nectar thief? – WW15.1(7)  pollinators-need to conserve – WW19.1(13) Possums – see Mammals (native)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 15 Potoroos – see Mammals (native)  linking bush remnants – WW4.3(10) Practicalities  management guidelines for remnant  installing a wallaby gate – WW18.2(6) vegetation being harvested for cutflowers –  Lake Mealup is back! – WW17.3(1) WN7  an unintended death trap for bats –  multiple values of – WW2.2(10) WW18.3(9) Reptiles Primrose  black tailed monitor – WW4.2(15)  primrose family in WA – WW16.3(16)  bobtails as scavengers – WW2.2(2) Propagation  caring for a bobby – WW18.1(3)  Australian scientists make world first  carpet python – WW1.4(3) discovery in seed germination – WW9.1(13)  difficult meal (snake swallowing bobtail) –  propagate cuttings to replenish the WW13.1(2) biodiversity in your Land for Wildlife – WN18  Jan’s banded snake – WW3.3(13) July 2013  King’s skinks, a 20-year period of  snottygobble – WW4.1(19) observations in a suburban garden –  using heat to break dormancy of WA legume WW16.1(14) and non-legume species – WW5.2(5)  King’s skinks in christmas tree – WW19.2(5) Pythons – see Reptiles  natural vermin control (Varanus tristis) – WW4.2(14) Q  oblong turtle, nestwatch project – WW12.3(8) Quandongs  python’s breakfast – WW17.3(7)  quandongs – WW18.3(7)  pythons for mouse control – WW1.4(4) Quendas – see Mammals (native)  Rosenberg’s monitor eating rabbits – Questionnaire WW17.2(3)  results of reader questionnaire Jan 2000 –  secret life of bobtail lizards – WW11.4(1) WW4.2(2)  south-western sandplain worm lizard –  results of LFW questionnaire Jan 2005 – WW3.2(13) WW9.2(2)  so - you want to keep a pet reptile do you?  results of LFW questionnaire Jan 2013 – Well, you can now! - WW7.3(22) WW17.3(6)  snakes in the roof! – WW14.1(5) Quiz Research  for volume 1 of WW – WW2.1  ants as bio-indicators of disturbance in urban  answers to volume 1 quiz – WW2.2(11) bush - summary of a case study - WW7.3(10)  for volume 2 of WW – WW3.1  biodiversity of the Carnarvon Basin - – see Mammals (native) WW6.3(14)  biodiversity of an economic hotspot, the R Pilbara Biological Survey – WW13.3(6) Rabbits – see Feral animals  black cockatoo research at the wildlife Rangelands genetics lab – WW12.2(12)  increase in stock watering points in rangeland  cats caught on candid camera – WW15.4(7) ecosystems leads to a decline in native bird  CSIRO bird and vegetation surveys in the populations – WW14.3(17) Buntine-Marchagee Recovery Catchment - Rare Flora WW7.2(11)  oh no!! Rare Flora!! - WW6.4(16)  diagnosing the decline of malleefowl using  prostrate flame flower: the long road to sightings data – WW10.2(12) recovery – WW12.4(8)  discovering our flora's hidden diversity -  rediscovery of Haloragis platycarpa – WW6.3(6) WW10.3(17)  do professionals and the general public share  hidden wonders of LFW properties (Salt the same vision of conservation? – myoporum, Myoporum turbinatum) – WW18.3(11) WW19.1(5)  fire and Phyt cinn activity in SW Aust  hammer orchid pollinators – WW19.1(13) heathlands – WW19.2(13) Recovery Plan  how ancient DNA was able to identify the  Corrigin grevillea – WW1.1(7) extinct rock-wallaby on Depuch Island - Regional Herbaria WW7.3(6)  volunteer program – WW2.1(17)  kangaroo grazing preferences after fire at Remnant Vegetation Whiteman Park – WW10.2(6)  ecological imperatives for conservation and  large woody debris – WW2.3(14) management of native vegetation - WW6.1(1)  legumes in native bush & agriculture –  Fitzgerald Biosphere Reserve project WW4.3(8) WW1.2(12)  marri decline research project – WW17.4(5)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 16  monsoon vine thickets of the Dampier  great Nambling salt flat wheelbarrow muster - Peninsula, Kimberley: culturally and WW7.1(19) ecologically significant communities –  Greening Challenge - helping environment, WW18.1(6) helping community - WW6.3(22)  past fire intervals in Fitzgerald River National  growing Juncus pallidus from seed – Park - WW7.1(10) WW4.4(14)  seedy gap in nature – WW14.4(6)  habitat construction on rock outcrops using  shape matters too! – WW18.2(1) paving slabs – WW4.1(12)  southern boobook research – WW20.1(14)  healthy ecosystems – inland wandoo  sustaining Gondwana initiative – WW11.3(17) woodland case study Wyalkatchem Nature  synaphea populations wanted – WW1.3(15) Reserve – WW10.3(14)  threatened flora populations wanted –  imitating nature – WW2.1(13) WW2.2(12)  implementing a biodiversity revegetation  using heat to break dormancy of WA legume project – WW8.2(3) and non-legume species – WW5.2(5)  jacksonias in – see Jacksonias  using our native trees and shrubs to supply  magic of moisture – how can we make the new industries - WW7.1(11) most of it? – WW9.2(5)  value of old photographs - WW6.3(8)  managing disturbance – a component of  viability and persistence of small isolated remnant restoration – WW14.4(1) populations of rare and threatened flora. Is  managing native grasses as pasture: a there hope? - WW5.4(12) Kojonup example - WW6.4(14)  what is the value of long-term datasets of bird  landholders and recovery planning: Toolibin presence? – WW18.2(4) Lake catchment – WW9.1(8)  woolly bear caterpillar - WW7.3(12)  native grasses in – see Grasses Resources  oil mallee in – see Trees  biosecurity apps MyWeedWatcher and  positive ‘Search Project’ results – WW9.1(4) FeralScan – WW20.1(18)  propagate cuttings to replenish the  Florabase – WW20.1(18) biodiversity in your Land for Wildlife – WN18  Frogwatch website – WW20.1(18)  putting the fungi back - kick start your reveg! -  fungi electronic guidebooks – WW20.1(18) WW6.3(18) Restoration of Riparian Zone – see  reconnections, a new landscape-scale Revegetation and Restoration of Habitat revegetation project on the south coast – Revegetation and Restoration of Habitat WW8  80 years of grazing, fencing, then - an exciting  regenerating woodlands – WW4.1(20) discovery! - WW7.3(9)  regenerating woodlands – similar to growing a  adding deadwood to revegetation areas crop! – WW4.2(12) speeds up ecosystem recovery –  restoring Jarrah forest geophytes – WW17.3(20) WW17.4(6)  alley farming in low rainfall areas – try it – it  revegetation for biodiversity – WW14.2(13) works! – WW11.1(6)  revegetation - from plans to implementation -  are we working for nature? – WW3.4(14) WW5.4(6)  climate change, dispersal mechanisms –  riparian restoration – WW2.1(13) WW4.3(4)  salt in Lake CY O’Connor – WW12.4(14)  connecting the Stirling Range to the south-  saltland rehabilitation – WW1.2(13) west forests – WW10.3(10)  sandalwood nuts – preparing Australian  creating wildlife corridors – WW15.5(6) agriculture for rising energy costs and water  creekline revegetation for wildlife – WN1 insecurity – WW11.1(4)  cyanide, more about – WW16.4(16)  search for carbon neutral planting sites –  decline in a remnant of salmon gum and york WW11.1(20) gum woodland, 1978 to 1997 – WW9.4(8)  seedballs - WW7.4(17)  does population size affect tree seed? –  seed collection for revegetation – WW14.1(6) WW12.3(18)  seed collection from native plants – WN4  drain restoration to habitat – WW3.3(14)  seed store and top soil, value of – WW11.2(5)  erosion control on Kings Park scarp -  shape matters too! – WW18.2(1) WW5.4(18)  shelterbelts in agricultural landscapes  eucalypts for use in saline revegetation - suppress invertebrate pests – WW11.1(7) WW7.1(6)  sheoaks in – see Trees  fire, use of in small remnants – WN17  smoke for broad-scale application –  flora road for Waddy Forest - WW7.2(10) WW5.2(15)  Gondwana link – ecological restoration at the  smoke germination chemical named: scale this country needs – WW8.4(17) Karrikinolide – WW14.2(6)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 17  soil seed banks – a tool to conserve and  reedia – a very extraordinary sedge – manage ecosystems against weed invasion – WW11.3(6) WW13.4(6)  wetland rushes – WW2.3(11)  stream corridors for bird movement – WN2  Talbot Hall Reserve regeneration project – S WW10.4(14) Sagittaria – see Weeds  thinking beyond today: a global perspective Salinity for local action -–WW5.1(23)  carbon potential of saline land – WW18.4(18)  time to plant a future - WW7.4(17)  coping with salt - the iceplant way –  turning farmland into fauna habitat – how do WW12.4(11) we know what success looks like? –  Salinity Action Plan biological survey of the WW18.3(1) agricultural zone – WW1.2(11)  use of sandbags in riparian restoration –  salinity: its effect on roads - WW5.4(16) WW3.2(14)  salinity - some pluses - WW6.4(6)  using heat to break dormancy of WA legume  salt creek – WW14.2(11) and non-legume species – WW5.2(5)  salt in Lake CY O’Connor – WW12.4(14)  Valema Farms - putting sustainability to the  secondary salinity also cause increased test - WW8.1(8) acidity in groundwater discharge –  value of prickles - WW8.1(9) WW17.2(20)  Warren and Donnelly Rivers riparian Salmon Gum – see Trees restoration – WW18.3(4) Samphire  wetting agents, penetrants, aren’t they the  salacious samphires – WW5.2(6) same thing? – WW11.4(12)  growing samphire - WW7.2(8)  whole-farm corridors – WW3.2(1)  WA plant makes top 10 new species list  yes, it works! - WW7.3(8) (Tecticornia bibenda) – WW13.2(13) Riparian Vegetation (see also: Wetlands; Sandalwood – see Trees Revegetation and Restoration of Habitat) Schools Rivers (see also: Revegetation and Restoration of  Flinders Park students visit Balijup farm – Habitat) WW17.1(15)  ancient rivers in the wheatbelt – WW4.4(1)  formation of “Friends” group – WW3.3(9)  aquatic invertebrates and river health –  Latham Primary School native seed collection WW1.3(13) and identification excursion – WW17.1(13)  creekline revegetation for wildlife – WN1  nesting platform – WW2.4(8)  dams on the Ord River – a photo history –  planting for the future – WW14.2(17) WW17.1(6)  tree planting – WW2.4(8)  drain restoration to habitat – WW3.3(14)  wildlife projects – WW1.3(14)  irrigation from the Moore River in 1900’s – Sedges (see also: Wetlands; Revegetation and WW3.1(14) Restoration of Habitat)  large woody debris – WW2.3(14)  wetland sedges – WW2.3(11)  riffles, importance of – WW2.1(8) Seed Collection  riparian restoration – WW2.1(13)  Botherling Springs Catchment Group project –  river, poem – WW14.2(15) WW2.1(14)  stream corridors for bird movement – WN2  seed collection for revegetation – WW14.1(6) Roadsides  seed collection from native plants – WN4  flora road for Waddy Forest - WW7.2(10)  secrets and mysteries of seed collection -  flora roads, vegetation surveys and roadside WW7.3(18) conservation – WW16.2(8)  Sustainable Seed Banks Project – WW4.1(7)  roadsides demonstrate original understorey – Sharp rush – see weeds WW3.4(10) Sheoaks – see Trees  values of roadside vegetation – WW1.4(1) Snails and slugs –  when is a road a Flora Road? – WW9.1(12)  snails and slugs in the bush - WW3.4(4) Rodents  native snails – WW4.2(13)  growing sandalwood for native rodents? - Snakes – see Reptiles WW7.2(14) Snottygobble  water rats (Hydromys chrysogaster) –  what’s in a name? – snottygobble – WW14.3(13) WW13.2(8) Rushes and sedges (see also: Wetland flora; Social & historical Revegetation and Restoration of Habitat)  are we losing our hard-won ‘sense of place’?  cord rush – WW4.2(1) – WW14.1(10)  pale rush Juncus pallidus growing from seed  bushland heritage – WW14.3(14) – WW4.4(14)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 18 Soils – see Landscapes Ticks – see Invertebrates Spiders – see Invertebrates Timber (see also: Trees) Streams – see Rivers  craftwood story – WW4.4(12) Stromatolites – see Micro-organisms  marri – WW1.1(9) Surveys  sheoak – WW3.4(6)  bushland plant survey project – WW2.2(13) Toads – see Frogs  bushland plants survey program in bushland Tortoises & turtles at Bodallin – WW3.1(13)  great relocate - WW6.2(14)  community fauna survey – Lowlands Coastal  oblong turtle - WW6.4(8) Reserve – WW11.1(14)  oblong turtle, nestwatch project – WW12.3(8)  fauna in the Fitzgerald Biosphere Reserve – Translocations WW17.1(12)  black-flanked wallabies return to the Avon  fauna on Kanandah (LFW property) – Valley -–WW5.3(10) WW20.1(4)  woylies find new Land for Wildlife homes –  horses helping the conservation cause – WW5.1(1) WW17.2(19)  woylie good result! – WW15.5(1)  new Beard vegetation map for WA – Trees (see also: Timber) WW18.4(17)  blazed tree, questions lead to more questions  northern wheatbelt flora survey – WW9.2(10) – WW16.3(11)  owl survey – a community group first in WA –  boab - beautiful and bizarre – WW18.4(16) WW5.1(7)  canker disease in Corymbia calophylla (Marri)  Wellstead district – WW1.2(10) - WW6.3(16) Sustainable Productivity  christmas tree, happy WA Christmas (tree!) –  restoration of riparian vegetation – see WW19.2(5) Revegetation and Restoration of Habitat  corridors for birds – WW2.3(1)  sustainability or ? – WW4.1(5)  cypress-pines in WA – WW15.1(12)  Valema Farms - putting sustainability to the  dead trees have a role in your remnant – test - WW8.1(8) WW16.3(10)  decline; jarrah dieback – WW19.1(1) T  decline; chronic defoliation of flooded gum – The Way We Were … WW19.2(1)  big tree on the banks of the Swan River in  flat-topped yate decline – WW3.3(10) 1697 – WW11.4(18)  flooded gum dieback – WW4.1(10)  boodie wall – WW8.2(14)  flooded gum, is this the biggest? –  changing times - wandoo for tannin - WW14.3(16) WW7.4(12)  gimlet, twistiest in the world – WW14.3(16)  direct seeding on farm in York – WW3.2(19)  sandalwood - growers working together to  domestic cat gone wild – WW2.3(12) develop the industry – WW9.3(7)  hints to settlers on tree preservation –  growing and managing swamp sheoak for WW3.3(19) multipurpose land use – WW16.1(6)  introduction of cats to the bush - WW6.4(9)  growing sandalwood for native rodents? -  irrigation from the Moore River in 1900’s – WW7.2(14) WW3.1(14)  heritage trees and land management -  out and about with Tommy and me – WW6.2(1) WW14.1(19)  hopping into a bright future - the woylie  ringbarking – why did this big tree die – sandalwood story - WW7.3(1) WW10.4(19)  impact on groundwater levels in Merredin  the fauna and flora of the State Barrier Fence catchment – WW3.2(10) – WW5.3(13)  Jilakin Jarrah – WW16.3(12)  visit to Newcastle by Marianne North in 1880  marri as a timber – WW1.1(9) – WW4.4(19)  marri decline: possible causes and  wagyl – reality in the myth? – WW11.4(18) implications – WW15.2(10)  wallabies and tammars declared vermin –  marri decline research project – WW17.4(5) WW2.1(16)  more on trees with sunstroke – WW12.1(9)  when times moved slower – WW18.3(8)  Nuytsia floribunda – 45 Million years of fire-  wildflowers (Emily Pellow) – WW16.2(15) stimulated flowering! – WW16.3(8) Threatened Ecological Communities  oil mallee, use in revegetation – WW2(1)  monsoon vine thickets of the Dampier  oil mallees, value as foraging habitat for the Peninsula, Kimberley: culturally and Western Pygmy Possum – WW14.1(1) ecologically significant communities –  old trees and wildlife – WN13 WW18.1(6)  paddock trees and wildlife – WN16

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 19  paddock trees, value to birds – WW14.4(11)  pH testing kit – make your own – WW10.4(13)  peppermints WA, decline in – WW15.2(17) Waterbirds – see Birds  red tingle, recruitment after fire – WW4.3(18) Watsonia – see Weeds  restoring the canopy health of declining native Weather trees – WW17.2(9)  pyrocumulus clouds – WW19.2(13)  rural tree dieback – WW5.2(19) Weeds  salmon gum study – WW3.2(16)  Acacia nilotica has reached the Kimberley! -  salmon gum and york gum woodland, decline WW7.1(14) in a remnant, 1978 to 1997 – WW9.4(8)  Acacia nilotica on the Durack River -  sandalwood–a tree crop for the future – WW8.1(19) WW5.2(13)  Acacia paradoxa: native or alien? –  sheoak – got writer’s block? Let a sheoak WW9.3(18) whisper to you! – WW12.2(9)  action plan for weed control – WW3.2(15)  sheoak serenity – WW14.2(16)  African boxthorn can be a nasty problem –  sheoak, how turn a sheoak tree into a sheoak WW16.3(14) bush! – WW16.3(13)  are the substances added to herbicides toxic  sheoaks, how they got their name – to humans? – WW17.2(19) WW1.4(12); using sheoak timber WW3.4(6)  arum lilies, sale banned – WW10.3(18)  sheoaks, use in revegetation – WW1.4(13)  arum – epiphyte! – WW18.4(11)  sheoaks, what they are – WW1.4(12)  Australian plants as weeds in South Africa –  social benefits on farms – WW2.2(6) WW20.1(12)  tree hollows and wildlife – WN15  Australia gives back to the Mediterranean –  tree planting in Western Australia: enhancing WW20.1(16) the opportunities for conservation of  berry heath (Erica baccans) – naturalising in biodiversity - WW5.4(14) WA? – WW18.4(12)  trees in decline, why are many? –  beware – little green monsters in the mulch! WW12.2(15) (sensitive plant, Mimosa pudica) –  trees with sunstroke? – WW11.2(8) WW17.3(17)  tuart, tree of life and death – WW14.2(18)  bindweed, newly-naturalised at Busselton –  what is happening with wandoo? - WW7.3(20) WW13.3(19)  wandoo, five years caring for – WW13.1(6)  blackberry, biological control – WW3.3(20)  wandoo, treasuring – a partnership in mutual  blackberry control – WW12.3(18) learning – WW14.4(10)  blackberry rust arrives in Denmark –  wandoo woodlands workshop – WW4.1(15) WW13.2(6)  wandoo worries - WW7.1(17)  bluebell creeper – a native plant goes feral –  water use – WW5.1(11) WW15.1(8)  wattle pancakes for lunch – WW5.2(14)  bridal creeper, biological control – WW1.4(10), pest of bridal creeper released –  York gum and salmon gum woodland, decline WW3.4(8), bio control - WW4.1(17) in a remnant, 1978 to 1997 – WW9.4(8)  bridal creeper – is it under control? – WW17.4(15) U  branched broomrape – WW5.1(6)  cacti – the weeds that stab you – WW18.3(12) V  cacti-biggest in Aust! – WW19.2(9) Veld Grass – see Weeds  CALM Herbarium’s weed information network Verticordias (WIN) – WW5.2(12)  bush cauliflower conservation – WW1.4(7)  canola seeds, roos disperse – WW12.2(11)  christmas morrison pollination – WW1.4(9)  castor oil rust – WW4.1(17)  how I came to produce a book - WW7.1(9)  caterpillars on your Cape Lilacs? - WW7.2(18)  Verticordia staminosa (Life on the Rocks – a  common Heliotrope killing in South cracking good place to be) – WW14.3(6) Australia – WW16.4(14)  what they are – WW1.4(5)  coping with salt - the iceplant way – WW12.4(11) W  cleavers – watch out for – WW19.1(9) Wallabies – see Mammals (native)  creating a guide to Esperance Weeds – Water WW15.5(12)  areas of secondary salinity also cause  designing windbreaks to trap blowing weed increased acidity in groundwater discharge – seeds – WW5.2(10) WW17.2(20)  does your backpack transport weed seeds? –  drain restoration – WW3.3(14) WW14.1(15)  how much water do trees use? – WW5.1(11)  onion weed kills horses – WW5.2(11)

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 20  eastern Australian bottlebrushes –  tropical soda apple – WW16.1(12) WW20.1(16)  typha at lake Mealup - WW7.1(12)  eliminating bridal creeper – spreading the rust  veld grass – WW3.1(11) WW9.1(11)  Warren and Donnelly Rivers riparian  false yellowhead (sticky stinkwort) Dittrichia restoration – WW18.3(4) viscosa – WW8.3(14)  watch out for Dolichos pea! – WW8.3(14)  fusilade®, be careful with – WW13.4(16)  watercress - WW7.4(11)  gamba grass, say no to! – WW12.2(10)  watsonia – WW1.2(9), WW2.4(10)  garden star-of-Bethlehem – WW20.1(16)  weed of the year – watsonia and gladiolus –  Geraldton Carnation Weed - Can you help WW3.2(15) please? – WW17.4(14)  weeds, are you the problem? - WW5.4(17)  giant reed – WW11.1(13)  weedy natives in Western Australia –  glyphosate-resistant wild radish found near WW13.1(4) Geraldton – WW18.3(13)  weedy success story! (bridal creeper) –  has Kochia been eradicated? – WW8.4(7) WW9.1(10)  horehound – WW9.1(11)  Western Australia’s State Weed Plan –  it was no accident – weeds introduced by WW4.1(6) Government agencies – WW11.1(13)  wet season stimulates weed growth –  keeping weeds under control on a four WW1.1(8) hectare bush block – WW17.4(8)  wheel cactus – WW18.3(12)  locusts the trees – WW16.2(14)  wild oats among native grasses in York  marsh bedstraw – WW20.1(16) gum/jam woodland – WW4.3(12)  Mimosa pigra found near Kununurra –  wild radish, triazine resistant – WW4.3(13) WW14.1(9)  wild radish, glyphosate-resistant found near  Montpelier broom – WW9.2(13) Geraldton – WW18.3(13)  mother of millions near Coolgardie –  wonga wonga vine – WW20.1(16) WW18.4(11)  natural weed suppression – WW2.4(9)  what it does – WW1.3(1)  parthenium weed found at Karratha –  Western Shield - reviewed - WW8.1(16) WW16.1(12) Wetland flora  Paterson’s curse, biological control –  arrowgrass – the Triglochins – WW10.3(8) WW1.4(10)  cord rush – WW4.2(1)  Paterson's curse - WW6.3(10)  new salt lake endemic wildflower  roadside weeds – a world-wide problem – (Tribonanthes) – WW11.4(9) WW14.1(15)  pale rush Juncus pallidus growing from seed  Roadside Conservation Committee’s – WW4.4(14) Roadside Weeds List – WW19.2(14)  rare plants – WW2.3(6)  sagittaria – WW1.2(8)  reedia – a very extraordinary sedge –  scarlet pimpernel, more about – WW16.4(7) WW11.3(6)  selection of additional Weeds of National  rushes and sedges – WW2.3(11) Significance – WW16.4(12)  wetland rushes – WW2.3(11)  selective herbicides and weed control in direct Wetlands seeding areas – WW1.3(12)  brackish wetlands can still have value for  sharp rush – WW10.4(10) wildlife – WW12.4(3)  Siam weed – WW4.2(11)  creation of – WW2.3(1)  Siam weed hasn’t gone away – WW18.1(12)  creation of – WW2.3(8)  skeleton weed review – WW13.2(7)  creekline revegetation for wildlife – WN1  soil seed banks – a tool to conserve and  is there life in our inland salt lakes? – manage ecosystems against weed invasion – WW4.4(4) WW13.4(6)  Lake Mealup is back! – WW17.3(1)  Sollya heterophylla – WW9.1(11)  peat – to burn or not to burn? - WW3.3(8)  Spanish heath (Erica lusitanica) – newly  Ramsar sites – WW4.4(5) naturalised in WA – WW17.3(10)  stream corridors for bird movement – WN2  spreading weeds – the hidden costs of rabbits  transforming farm dams into wetlands for and foxes – WW13.4(10) wildlife – WW11.2(6)  status of weeds on islands of WA – Whales – see Mammals WW19.2(14) Wildflower industry  Swan Weeds database – WW13.3(19)  commercial production – WW2.4(4)  tagasaste environmental problem – WW3.4(9)  management guidelines for remnant  tree mallow invades islands – WW10.2(16) vegetation harvested for cutflowers – WN7

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 21 Wildflowers  WWF focusing on wheatbelt woodlands –  autumn colours - WW6.2(12) WW4.4(11)  summer wildflowers of southern Western Woylies – see Mammals Australia – WW5.1(8) Windbreaks  designing windbreaks to trap blowing weed X seeds – WW5.2(10)  xanthorrhoeas, regeneration of – WW15.4(6)  windbreaks are worth creating – WW5.2(10) Wood Y  dead wood and wildlife – WN14 Yams Woodlands  warrine – the local yam – WW8.2(9)  fungi, role in woodlands of – WW3.3(6)

 hopping soil! Woylies dig up a treat in our remnant woodlands -–WW5.1(3)  wandoo woodlands workshop – WW4.1(15) Z

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 22 Western Wildlife and Wildlife Notes Index

By Author

This index covers Western Wildlife volumes 1 to 20 and Wildlife Notes 1 to 17. WW refers to the article appearing in Western Wildlife newsletters (i.e. WW1.4 is newsletter volume 1, number 4). WN refers to the articles appearing in Wildlife Notes (i.e. WN3 is note number 3)

A  Abbott, Ian – WW3.4 “Dieback” in Flooded Gum  Abbott, Ian – WW6.4 The Demise of the Dalgyte  Abbott, Ian – WW12.2 Balga Flowering  Achour, Pierre-Ulric – WW7.3 Ants as Bio-indicators of Disturbance in Urban Bush - Summary of a Case Study  Achour, Pierre-Ulric – WW8.3 No Bull About Myrmecia Ants!  Adamson, Heather – WW3.1 Jacksonias for Revegetation  Adamson, Heather – WW3.3 Bird Report – Eastern Wheatbelt  Adamson, Heather – WW4.2 Summer Active Native Grasses Support Agriculture and Wildlife  Adamson, Heather – WW5.2 Make Your Own Cat Trap  Adamson, Heather – WW7.3 Nesting in the Wheatbelt - Yellow-rumped Thornbill, Acanthiza chrysorrhoa  Adamson, Heather – WW17.2 Chasing Rainbows  Adamson, Heather – WW17.2 A Cuckoo Bee  Adamson, Heather – WW18.1 LFW Open Property Visit and Morning Tea and Lake Clifton  Adamson, Heather – WW18.1 A Little Spotty Crab  Aplin, Ken – WW3.3 Southwestern Frogs – from Ancient Past to Uncertain Future  Appleyard, Steve – WW8.1 The Devil's Soils: the Soils That Bite Back  Appleyard, Steve – WW9.4 Identifying and Managing Acid Scalds on Your Property  Appleyard, Steve – WW10.4 Make Your Own pH Testing Kit  Armstrong, Roger – WW3.3 Dieback – Plant Pathogen  Ashburner, Jessica – WW15.4 Cats Caught on Candid Camera  Atkins, Ken – WW6.4 Oh No!! Rare Flora!!  Atkins, Ken – WW7.3 Yes, It Works (revegetation)  Atkins, Ken – WW17.4 The South West – a Region for Global Conservation B  Baker, Katherine – WW13.1 Kingia’s Remarkable Roots  Bancroft, Wes & Garkaklis Mark - WW8.1 Shearwaters at Rottnest  Barber, Paul – WW17.2 Restoring the Canopy Health of Declining Native Trees  Barblett, Pat – WW5.1 So You Want to Get Involved in Ecotourism?  Barker, Caril – WW15.5 Creating Wildlife Corridors  Barnett, Jay – WW8.2 A New Idea for Coping With Ticks  Barrett, Brent – WW9.1 A Riddle is No Joke  Barrow, Jim – WW5.3 How South-West WA’s Landscapes Formed  Barrow, Jim – WW5.4 Iron-stone Gravels and Native Vegetation  Bartle, John – WW9.1 Positive ‘Search Project’ Results  Bartle, John – WW14.3 New Mallee Harvester Launched  Batchelor, Kathryn – WW17.4 Bridal Creeper – Is It Under Control?  Batini, Frank – WW8.4 Comparison of Changes to Water Levels in Deep Bores – 1975 to 2004 – Helena Catchment, Western Australia  Batley, Michael – WW16.4 Capillosa Has a New Bee Species  Batty, Andrew, Mark Brundrett, Jeremy Bougoure, Kingsley Dixon – WW8.4 Towards the Conservation of the Western Australian Underground Orchid  Baxter, Avril – WW2.1 Riffles as Part of River Habitat  Baxter, Avril – WW2.4 Bridal Creeper – Everybody’s Problem  Baxter, Avril – WW3.1 Managing Granite Outcrops  Baxter, Avril – WW3.1 Native Grasses – the Unsung Heroes  Baxter, Avril – WW3.4 Are We Working for Nature?

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 1  Baxter, Avril – WW4.1 Direct Seeding Does Work in Low Rainfall Areas  Baxter, Avril – WW4.2 Summer Active Native Grasses Support Agriculture and Wildlife  Baxter, Avril – WW4.2 Regenerating Woodlands – Similar to Growing a Crop!  Baxter, Avril – WW5.2 Sandalwood – A Tree Crop for the Future  Baxter, Avril & Dewing, Jenny - WW6.4 Managing Native Grasses as Pasture: A Kojonup Example  Baxter, Avril – WW7.4 Changing Times - Wandoo for Tannin  Baxter, Avril – WW8.1 Valema Farms - Putting Sustainability to the Test  Baxter, Avril – WW8.1 The Classroom in the Bush  Baxter, Avril – WW8.2 A Boodie Rat Wall  Baxter, Avril – WW9.1 Bush Stone-Curlews and Homesteads  Baxter, Avril – WW9.1 Eliminating Bridal Creeper – spreading the rust  Baxter, Avril & Carl Beck – WW9.2 Cooperation pays off!  Baxter, Avril & Hussey, Penny – WN17 The Use of Fire in Small Remnants  Baxter, Avril – WW11.2 – Trees With Sunstroke?  Baxter, Avril & Friend, Tony – WW11.3 Living Next Door to Boyagin  Baxter, Avril & Kitto, Grantham – WW11.4 Kitto 50,000 : Nature 5,000,000!  Baxter, Avril – WW12.1 Botanical Monitoring Day at Wagin Lakes  Baxter, Avril – WW13.1 Great Tips on Beautiful Plants  Baxter, Avril – WW13.1 Vincent Serventy – An Inspiration to Many  Baxter, Avril – WW13.3 The Murdering Animal – or, a Case of Biting Off More Than You Can Chew  Baxter, Avril – WW14.1 Snakes in the Roof!  Baxter, Avril – WW14.3 Bushland Heritage  Baxter, Avril – WW17.2 How Much Can You Eat?  Baxter, Avril – WW17.3 The Majestic Red Morrell  Baxter, Avril – WW17.3 A Destocked Floodplain  Baxter, Avril – WW17.4 The Wonderful World of Fungi  Baxter, Avril – WW18.1 Kulin Flowers  Baxter, Avril – WW18.1 Birds of Lavender Nature Reserve  Baxter, Avril – WW18.3 When Times Moved Slower  Baxter, Avril – WW18.3 The Magic of the Djitti Djitti  Baxter, Avril – WW18.3 Woolorama Photo Competition  Baxter, Avril – WW18.4 Black Cockatoo Friday  Baxter, Avril – WW18.4 More Kulin plants identified  Baxter, Avril – WW 19.1 And the world gets warmer…  Bayly, Ian – WW3.3 Gnammas and their Aquatic Life  Bayly, Whispie – WW16.3 I Spy …!  Beatty, Stephen & Morgan, Dave – WW8.4 Freshwater Fishes of South-Western Australia  Beatty, Peter – WW9.2 New Booklet on Managing Private Native Forest  Beecham, Brett – WW2.4 Bush Stone-curlew  Beecham, Brett – WW3.4 Are We Working for Nature?  Bell, Una – WW14.2 Some Notes on Growing Native Grasses  Bell, Una – WW14.3 Notes on Growing Native Grasses: Pt 2  Bendtsen, Kim – WW6.2 The Great Relocate  Berhane, Dawit – WW3.2 The Impact of Trees on Groundwater Levels in a Discharge Area of the Merredin Catchment  Berry, Oliver – WW10.3 The Fox DNA Project – Can You Help?  Blanchard, Ed & Linda – WW5.1 Making Your Native Grasses Grow  Blyth, John – WN2 Stream Corridors for Bird Movement  Blyth, John – WW6.2 Wonderful Woodswallows  Boniface, Julia – WW9.1 Weedy Success Story!  Bougher, Neale – WW3.3 Fungi Work for Healthy Trees, Shrubs and Soil 24 Hours a Day; Wheatbelt Woodlands are Rich in Fungi  Bougher, Neale & Tommerup, Inez - WW6.3 Putting the Fungi Back - Kick Start Your Reveg!  Bougher, N & Hart R – WW 8.3 Perth Urban Bushland Fungi Project  Bousfield, Greg – WW2.3 The Creation of Awatukee Wetland  Bousfield, Julie – WW2.3 The Creation of Awatukee Wetland  Bradby, Keith & Morris, Vicky – WN4 Seed Collection from Native Plants  Bradby Keith – WW8.4 Gondwana Link – Ecological Restoration at the Scale this Country Needs  Bradshaw, Wendy – WW11.1 Mistletoe – Friend not Foe!

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 2  Bramwell, Emma – WN5 Encouraging Quendas  Bramwell, Emma – WN6 Encouraging Possums  Bramwell, Emma – WW2.1 Visit to WA of ANZECC Working Group on Nature Conservation on Private Land  Bramwell, Emma – WW3.2 Attracting Birds to your Backyard  Bramwell, Emma – WW3.3 Living Drains  Bramwell, Emma & Moller, Sophie – WW9.3 New Funding Opportunity for High Conservation Value Properties in the South-West  Breen, David & O’Dwyer, Alison – WW10.4 Talbot Hall Reserve Regeneration Project  Bremner, Mary – WW4.1 Sharing With Wildlife – the Grapefruit Puzzle  Bremner, Mary – WW5.1 Small Land Birds in Salt Affected Areas in the Northeastern Wheatbelt  Brims, Margaret – WW7.3 Myxomycetes: the Slime Moulds  Brooker, Belinda – WW4.2 Thick-billed Grasswrens  Brooker, Michael & Lesley – WW3.2 Blue-breasted Fairy-wrens Depend on Vegetation Corridors  Brooker, Michael & Lesley – WW5.3 Cuckoos  Brooker, Lesley – WW9.2 DIY Bird Hide  Brown, Andrew – WW1.3 Orchids of a Small Bushland Remnant in the Wheatbelt  Brown, Andrew – WW12.1 Western Australian Orchids – the Masters of Deceit  Brown, Andrew – WW12.2 Western Australian Orchids – the Masters of Deceit (Part 2)  Brown, Kate – WW4.3 Managing Wild Oats Among Native Grasses in a York Gum/Jam Woodland  Brown, Liz – WW1.3 Pollinate or Perish  Brundrett, Mark & Vanda Longman – WW20.1 Recovery of Banksia Woodland after Fire  Bryant, Joe - WW19.2 Picked clean  Burbidge, Allan – WW6.3 Biodiversity of the Carnarvon Basin  Burbidge, Allan – WW13.3 Western Ground Parrots Distinct From Eastern Ground Parrots  , Neil – WW9.3 Bushfire Diversity Can Promote Biodiversity  Burrows, Neil – WW17.2 Horses Helping the Conservation Cause  Butcher, Ryonen – WW1.3 Wanted – New Populations of Synaphea!  Butler, Roy – WW16.4 More About the Scarlet Pimpernel  Byrne, Margaret – WW6.3 Discovering Our Flora's Hidden Diversity  Byrne, Margaret – WW11.4 The Broombush Complex  Byrne, Oonagh – WW16.4 Please Help - Adopt a European Wasp Trap  Byrne, Oonagh – WW17.3 Update on the European Wasp Programme C  Cale, Belinda – WW3.4 Conserving Carnaby’s Cockatoo  Canham, Caroline – WW16.4 Using the Timing of Flowering by Banksias to Monitor Climate Change  Carr, Ann – WW1.2 B&B and Farm Bushland  Carter, Marie – WW16.3 The First Moora Cocky Count  Caswell, Martin – WW18.4 What lies beneath…?  Chambers, Jane – WW9.3 Scumbook!  Chapman, Andrew – WW20.1 Family Vision protects Bush Remnant (Kanandah fauna survey)  Chapman, Tamra & Pitman, Helen – WW10.2 Hungry Black Cockatoos  Cherriman, Simon – WW12.3 Powerful Predators and Passionate Parents – the Life Cycle of a Wedge- tailed Eagle  Cherriman, Simon – WW17.1 Outback Death Trap  Chinnock, Bob – WW6.4 Eremophilas - Emu Bushes, Poverty Bushes  Clarke, Alan & Sarah Comer – WW20.1 Wildfires in the Esperance area  Clarke, Karen – WW14.3 Biodiversity of Warwick Bushland  Clarke, Mike – WW14.4 Carbon Storage of Native Plants on Unproductive Soils Examined  Clarke, Mike – WW18.4 Study reveals carbon potential of saline land  Clarke, Wayne & Desrae – WW7.3 Monitoring for the Past and the Future  Clarke, Desrae – WW18.1 The John Masters Bird Hide, Toodyay  Coate, Kevin – WW6.3 Would Groups of Tourists Like Your Block?  Coates, David & Yates, Colin – WW5.4 Viability and Persistence of Small Isolated Populations of Rare and Threatened Flora. Is There Hope?  Coates, Dave, Phil Ladd & Colin Yates – WW14.3 Life on the Rocks – a Cracking Good Place to Live  Collins, Kathy – WW16.2 A Green Frog in My Boot (poem)  Collins, Kevin – WW11.3 Are You Lost in the Bush? – Let a Banksia Help You Out!

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 3  Colmer, Tim – WW15.4 Semi-aerial Roots on Paperbarks – a glimpse of the ‘hidden half’  Comer, Sarah & Alan Clarke – WW20.1 Wildfires in the Esperance area  Commander, Philip – WW4.4 Ancient Rivers in the Wheatbelt  Common, Ian – WW4.3 Mallee Moths  Cook, Glenn – WW17.1 Importance of Long-term Weather Observations  Cooper, Don – WW7.1 Using Our Native Trees and Shrubs to Supply New Industries  Cranfield, Ray – WW7.2 Mystic Lichens  Cranfield, Ray – WW8.4 Strange Parasite  Crombie, Stuart – WW5.1 How Much Water Do Trees Use?  Crowe, Fleur – WW13.1 Your Carbon Footprint => Measure => Policy => Reduce => Switch => Off-set => Communicate D  Dadd, Claire – WW16.2 Growing Eremophilas in the Wheatbelt  Dadour, Ian – WW2.2 Dung Beetles  Danks, Alan – WW4.3 Noisy Scrub-bird in the Darling Range  Davies, Carol – WW4.4 Preserving Everlastings  Davies, Murray – WW1.4 Hay Sheds and Heart Attacks  Davies, Peter – WW2.3 Large Woody Debris are Important Habitat in Rivers  Davies, Stephen – WW9.2 Northern Wheatbelt Flora Survey  Davies, Stephen – WW13.3 Pebble-mound Mice  Davis, Mick – WW13.4 Remote Cameras Spot Chuditch at Dryandra  Davis, Robert – WW8.2 How Well Do You Know Your Neighbours? (The Western Spotted Frog Story)  Davison, Elaine – Unwanted Hitchhikers  Davison, Elaine – WW14.1 Managing Tar Spot Disease of Myrtle Hakea  Davison, Elaine – WW19.1 Jarrah dieback  Dawson, Kathy – WW18.3 Warren and Donnelly Rivers Riparian Restoration  Dawson, Rick and Denis A Saunders – WW18.1 Individually Marked Wild Carnaby’s Cockatoos: a challenge and opportunity for keen photographers  Dawson, Rick, Denis Saunders and Peter Mawson – WW18.4 Carnaby’s cockatoo, tree hollows and the fate of large hollow-bearing trees  Day, John - WW7.4 What's in a Name? - A Marketing Dilemma  de Burgh-Day, Geraldine – WW3.1 Irrigation from the Moore River  de Burgh-Day, Geraldine – WW15.4 Fencing Possums Out!  Dempster, Hazel – WN18 Propagate Cuttings to Replenish the Biodiversity in Your Land for Wildlife  Dennings, Susanne – WW2.1 The Marvellous Malleefowl – It’s Gnow or Never!  De Tores, Paul, Nadine Guthrie, Jennifer Jackson & Ian Bertram – WW9.3 The Western Ringtail Possum – a Resilient Species or Another Taxon on the Decline?  De Tores, Paul, Susanne Rosier, Nadine Guthrie, Jennifer Jackson & Ian Bertram – WW9.4 The Western Ringtail Possum (Part 2)  Dewing, Jenny – WW3.2 Sand Bags: a Technique for Establishing Fringing Vegetation in Boggy Sites  Dewing, Jenny – WW3.2 Weed Action Plan  Dewing, Jenny – WW4.1 A Method for Propagating Snottygobble  Dewing, Jenny – WW4.3 Linking Bush Remnants  Dewing, Jenny – WW5.1 Owl Survey – A Community Group First in WA  Dewing, Jenny – WW5.4 Revegetation - From Plans to Implementation  Dewing, Jenny – WW6.2 Update on the Community Owl Survey  Dewing, Jenny & Baxter, Avril - WW6.4 Managing Native Grasses as Pasture: A Kojonup Example  Dixon, Bob – WW3.1 Veld Grass – Friend or Foe?  Dixon, Bob & Moonie, Peter - WW5.4 Erosion Control on Kings Park Scarp  Dixon, Bob & Krauss, Siegy – WW10.2 The Corrigin Grevillea: 12 Years of Recovery  Dixon, Kingsley – WW1.1 The Corrigin Grevillea Recovery Plan  Dixon, Kingsley – WW5.2 Using Heat to Break Dormancy of WA Legume and Non-legume Species  Dixon, Kingsley – WW7.4 Fire, Flowers and Sundews  Dixon, Kingsley – WW8.2 Unlocking the Dark Secrets of the Western Australian Underground Orchid  Dixon, Kingsley – WW9.1 Australian Scientists Make World First Discovery in Seed Germination  Doley, Alison – WW6.4 Salinity - Some Pluses  Doley, Alison – WW7.3 80 Years of Grazing, Fencing, Then - an Exciting Discovery!  Doley, Alison – WW9.2 Should Tadpoles be Moved When the Pond Dries Up?

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 4  Doley, Alison – WW10.3 Preserving Observation Bores  Doley, Alison – WW10.3 Tapeworms in Sheep – Another Good Reason to Poison Foxes  Dowling, Eliza – WW1.1 Wet Season Stimulates Weed Growth  Dowling, Eliza – WW2.2 Control – or Blast the Bunnies!  Dumbrell, Ian – WW17.3 Adopt a Tree to Help Guard Against Myrtle Rust  Dunlop, Nic – WW15.4 Bat Listening Project Gets Under Way  Dufty, Prue – WW12.1 Using the Broombush Key – Increasing the Options for Revegetation  Dugand, Alison – WW14.3 Cradling the NW Coast of Tasmania  Dunlop, Nic – WW12.3 Wings of Change – What the Birds Are Telling Us  Dunlop, Nic and Bob Bullen – WW14.4 White-striped Bats – Bellwethers of Climate Change? E  Edmonds, Aaron – WW11.2 Sandalwood Nuts: preparing Australian agriculture for rising energy costs and water insecurity  Elliott, Alan – WW11.4 The Evolution of Conservation – “Cockatubes”  Elsasser, Emily – WW16.3 How to Turn a Sheoak Tree Into a Sheoak Bush!  Emmott, Tim & Woodall, Geoff – WW9.3 Growers Working Together to Develop the Sandalwood Industry  English, Brian – WW13.3 Boodie rats  Erickson, Rica – WW1.4 Memories of Roadsides  Everaardt, Annika – WW9.1 The Impact of Fire on the Endemic Honey Possum F  Falconer, Fiona – WW5.1 Thinking Beyond Today: A Global Perspective for Local Action  Falconer, Fiona – WW7.2 Flora Road for Waddy Forest  Falconer, Fiona – WW13.3 Antics  Falconer, Fiona – WW15.2 Director General Visits “Koobabbie”, Coorow  Falconer, Fiona – WW15.5 Night Moves – Tracking Bats in Rural Landscapes  Falconer, Fiona – WW15.4 Out and About in the Bush: the pallid cuckoo  Falconer, Fiona – WW17.4 Marri Decline Research Project  Falconer, Fiona – WW18.1 The Satin Azure Butterfly  Falconer, Fiona – WW18.4 The spotted jezebel butterfly and parasitic plants  Farr, Janet – WW3.3 Flat-topped Yate – What is Rural Tree Decline?  Fisher, Judy – WW1.3 Your Local School and Land for Wildlife  Fisher, Judy – WW13.4 Soil Seed Banks – a Tool to Conserve and Manage Ecosystems Against Weed Invasion  Fisher, Judy – WW18.1 Monsoon Vine Thickets of the Dampier Peninsula, Kimberley: culturally and ecologically significant communities  Flaherty, Chloe – WW16.2 Persistence of Callitris in a Flammable Heathland  Framenau, Volker – WW13.3 Dances With Wolves – Australian Wolf Spiders  French, Malcolm & Nicolle, Dean – WW7.1 Eucalypts for Use in Saline Revegetation  Friend, Tony – WW5.3 Dalgytes Are on the Way Back!  Friend, Tony – WW8.2(15) Even More Dibblers Released at Peniup!  Friend, Tony – WW10.3 Potoroos on Bald Island  Friend, Tony & Baxter, Avril – WW11.3 Living Next Door to Boyagin  Froend, Ray – WW12.2 Impact of Groundwater Use and Decreased Rainfall on Banksia  Fry, Stephen – WW19.1 I thought I was too old to be fooled by a gall! G  Gardiner, Bruce & O'Connor, Michael – WW6.4 The Changing Greenough Flats  Gardiner, Cameron – WW3.4 Australian Bush Heritage Fund  Garkaklis, Mark – WW5.1 Hopping Soil! Woylies Dig Up a Treat in Our Remnant Woodlands  Garkaklis, Mark & Murphy, Marie – WW 7.3 Hopping Into a Bright Future - the Woylie Sandalwood Story  Garkaklis, Mark & Bancroft, Wes – WW8.1 Shearwaters at Rottnest  Gathe, Jan – WW2.1 Community Regional Herbaria Volunteer Program  Gentle, Robin – WW15.4 Regeneration of Xanthorrhoeas  George, Alex – WW5.1 Summer Wildflowers of Southern Western Australia  George, Alex –WW6.2 Autumn Colours  George, Alex – WW15.5 Calothamnus – When Its OK to be One-sided

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 5  George, Elizabeth – WW1.4 Verticordias: What Are They, Where Can They Be Found and Why Do They Need Protection?  George, Elizabeth – WW7.1 How I Came to Produce a Book  Gibbs, Heather – The Effects of Climate on Breeding in Australian Birds.  Giles, Jacqueline – WW6.4 The Oblong Turtle  Gill, Wayne – WW12.1 The ‘Great Biodiversity Bus Tour’  Gill, Wayne – WW13.4 Things That Go Bump in the Day  Gill, Wayne – WW15.5 Creating a Guide to Esperance Weeds  Gill, Wayne – WW16.2 A Nest Too Small  Gill, Wayne – WW17.3 Land for Wildlife Gets With the Times!  Gill, Wayne – WW17.4 Observing Seasonal Changes – a Task for All the Senses  Gill, Wayne – WW19.1 The hidden wonders of LFW properties!  Gill, Wayne - WW19.2 A happy WA Christmas (Tree)!  Gole, Cheryl – WW3.2 Mapping the Birds of Rural Landscapes: Where Are Our Birds Now?  Griffin, Susan and Greg – WW14.3 Bird’s-eye View  Griffiths, Kayley – WW18.3 Meeting the Challenge: photographic identification of banded Carnaby’s Cockatoo immatures  Griffiths, Mike – WW7.3 Termites and 'Clay Trumpets'  Griffiths, Mike – WW12.4 Have You Seen a Big Cat?  Griffiths, Mike – WW13.2 More on Big Cats in WA  Griffiths, Sharon – WW10.2 LFW at ‘Bilingurr’ – a Broome perspective  Griffiths, Sharon – WW18.1 A Northern Jewel Beetle  Grist, Alan – WW1.3 Weed Control in Direct Seeding Areas – Selective Herbicides  Gunby, Chris – WW8.3 Understanding Ring-tailed Possums  Gunness, Ann – WW2.2 Bushland Plant Survey Project H  Haight, Ruth – WW11.4 The Secret Life of Bobtail Lizards  Hall, Claire – WW5.2 Windbreaks Are Worth Creating  Hall, Claire – WW7.1 Land for Wildlife Celebrates 1000th Registration  Hall, Claire – WW9.3 Wattle – Symbol of a Nation  Hall, Claire – WW10.3 Stromatolites – Living Fossils  Hall, Claire – WW12.2 Space invaders!  Hall, Claire – WW12.3 Listen to the Birds  Hall, Claire – WW14.4 Flying Dragons – or Dragonflies  Hall, Claire & Sylvia Leighton – WW16.3 LFW Victoria: 30 year celebration forum  Hall, Claire – WW17.2 Red and Green Kangaroo Paw: a floral emblem of grace and beauty  Hall, Claire – WW17.4 Who Lives Behind the Curtain?  Hall, Claire – WW18.3 Quandongs  Hamilton-Brown, Sheila – WW2.2 Was Baron Von Mueller the Last Person to See the Native Vegetation at Greenough Flats?  Hampton, Jordan – WW8.4 Feral Pigs in the South West  Hare, D – WW9.2 An Eagle Yarn  Harper, Mal – WW11.1 Alley Farming in Low Rainfall Areas – try it – it works!  Harper, Mal – WW12.1 Malleefowl in Merredin Peak Reserve  Harper, Mal – WW13.1 Mawson Field Day  Harris, Richard – WW14.4 Managing Disturbance – a Component of Remnant Restoration  Hart, Quentin – WW16.1 Managing Australia’s Feral Camels  Hart, Roz & Bougher, Neale - WW8.3 Perth Urban Bushland Fungi Project  Harvey, Mark – WW14.3 Scorpions – Ancient Life Forms in Western Australia  Hassell, Cleve - WW7.1 Past Fire Intervals in Fitzgerald River National Park  Heath, Rebecca and Emily Lewis – WW18.4 Biosecurity: protecting WA’s agriculture and food sector and the environment  Hennings, Tasha – WW18.4 The miners’ egg turns into a real bustard!  Henshaw, Allan – WW17.3 A Python’s Breakfast  Hercock, Marion – WW6.2 Heritage Trees and Land Management  Hercock, Marion – WW16.3 Questions About a Blazed Tree Lead to More Questions  Herpich, Melissa – A Native Plant Goes Feral – Bluebell Creeper  Heterick, Brian – WW3.1 Ants in Your Remnant

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 6  Heterick, Brian – WW11.2 Termites and You  Heydenrych, Barry – WW 8.4 Reconnections, a New Landscape-scale Revegetation Project on the South Coast  Hingston, Bob – WW16.1 Growing and Managing Swamp Sheoak for Multipurpose Land Use  Hobbs, Richard – WW3.1 CSIRO’s Past and Present Research in Western Australia  Hogan, Jayne – A Noisy Awakening!  Hopper, Stephen – WW4.3 Climate Change, Dispersal Mechanisms and Revegetation With WA Plants  Hopper, Stephen – WW17.4 Feral Pigs and Haemodorum Bulbs on Granite  Hort, Fred – WW17.3 Pleasure or Pain?  Horwitz, Pierre – WW3.3 Wetlands in Southwestern Australia and their Organic Material – to Burn or Not to Burn?  Houston, Terry – WW1.3 Native Bees  Houston, Terry – WW7.2 Can You Find a Sandgroper?  Houston, Terry – WW8.4 Mole Crickets  Houston, Terry – WW11.4 Unearthing the Secrets of Sandgropers  Houston, Terry – WW13.3 Mystery Animal ‘Droppings’ are Beetle ‘Push-ups’  Howat, Sheila – WW13.2 Wildlife Rescue After Bridgetown and Balingup Fires  Howat, Sheila – WW13.3 A Piebald Cockie!  Howat, Sheila – WW18.1 An Aviary Without Walls!  Howat, Sheila – WW18.1 Gardens for Wildlife Workshop  Howat, Sheila – WW18.3 ‘Grow Your Own Habitat’ at Balingup  Howat, Sheila – WW19.1 Native plant propagation workshop  Howat, Sheila – WW19.1 Watch out for cleavers  Huggett, Andrew – WW7.2 CSIRO Bird and Vegetation Surveys in the Buntine-Marchagee Recovery Catchment  Hussey, Penny – WN1 Creekline Revegetation for Wildlife  Hussey, Penny – WN3 Nest Boxes for Wildlife  Hussey, Penny – WN9 Photographic Monitoring of Vegetation  Hussey, Penny & Mawson, Peter – WN11 Requirements for Native Mammals  Hussey, Penny – WN13 Old Trees and Wildlife  Hussey, Penny – WN14 Dead Wood and Wildlife  Hussey, Penny – WN15 Tree Hollows and Wildlife  Hussey, Penny – WN16 Paddock Trees and Wildlife  Hussey, Penny & Baxter, Avril – WN17 The Use of Fire in Small Remnants  Hussey, Penny – WW1.2 Minister Launches Land for Wildlife  Hussey, Penny – WW1.3 Disaster – Drowned Honey Possum  Hussey, Penny – WW2.1 Biodiversity Revegetation – Habitat Islands  Hussey, Penny – WW3.2 Luminous Fungi  Hussey, Penny – WW3.3 The Curse of the Everlastings  Hussey, Penny – WW3.4 Wattle I Plant?  Hussey, Penny – WW3.4 Roadsides Demonstrate Original Understorey  Hussey, Penny – WW3.4 What’s in a name…? (Sturt’s Desert Pea)  Hussey, Penny – WW4.1 Christmas Spiders  Hussey, Penny – WW4.1 A Grass Patch  Hussey, Penny – WW4.4 Bloodroots  Hussey, Penny – WW5.2 Dune Onion Weed Kills Horses  Hussey, Penny – WW5.4 The White Butterflies  Hussey, Penny – WW7.1 Cicadas  Hussey, Penny – WW8.2 Warrine – The Local Yam  Hussey, Penny – WW9.1 Nardoo – the Clover-Leaved Fern  Hussey, Penny – WW10.3 Arrowgrass – the Triglochins  Hussey, Penny – WW10.4 Sharp Rush  Hussey, Penny – WW10.4 What Would Your Kojonup Bushland Grow – 40 million years ago?  Hussey, Penny – WW10.4 The way we were  Hussey, Penny – WW11.2 Why Did the Megafauna Become Extinct?  Hussey, Penny – WW11.2 How Art the Mighty Fallen!  Hussey, Penny – WW11.3 Granitites – a Plant of the ‘Forever Hills’  Hussey, Penny – WW11.4 Surviving the Dinosaurs – the Dasypogonaceae  Hussey, Penny – WW12.1 More on Trees with Sunstroke  Hussey, Penny – WW12.2 Say No to Gamba Grass!

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 7  Hussey, Penny – WW12.2 Roos Disperse Canola Seeds  Hussey, Penny – WW12.3 Tiny Stars  Hussey, Penny – WW12.4 Coping With Salt – the Iceplant Way  Hussey, Penny – WW12.4 Salt in Lake CY O’Connor  Hussey, Penny – WW13.2 Ecosystem Services Provided by Dung Beetles  Hussey, Penny & Walley, Trevor – WW13.2 What’s In a Name? – Snottygobble  Hussey, Penny – WW13.3 Wonderful Wongan Wildlife!  Hussey, Penny – WW14.1 Ladybirds  Hussey, Penny – WW15.1 Cypress-pines in WA  Hussey, Penny – WW15.2 Hoveas  Hussey, Penny – WW15.4 Cycads  Hussey, Penny – WW16.3 Primrose Family in WA  Hussey, Penny – WW17.3 Responses to the Questionnaire Survey  Hussey, Penny – WW17.3 How Stinkwood Got Its Name?  Hussey, Penny – WW18.1 More Species of Dung Beetles on the Way  Hussey, Penny – WW18.3 Do Professionals and the General Public Share the Same Vision of Conservation?  Hussey, Penny – WW18.3 A New Plant Family? The Simulacraceae  Hussey, Penny – WW18.4 The Boab – beautiful and bizarre  Hussey, Penny – WW19.1 The native Iridaceae  Hussey, Penny - WW19.2 Cochlospermum  Huston, Bob – WN8 Living With Echidnas  Huston, Bob – WW2.3 Curious Cossids  Huston, Bob – WW3.3 Jan’s Banded Snake  Huston, Bob – WW3.3 Quenda Safe Houses I  Irwin, Anne – WW11.2 Carnaby’s Cockatoo – Two Families in One Year! J  Jackson, Kate – WW9.1 When is a Road a Flora Road?  Jasper, Rosemary – WW7.2 Growing Sandalwood for Native Rodents?  Jasper, Rosemary – WW8.1 The Value of Prickles  Jasper, Rosemary – WW8.3 Spiders and Woodlands Go Together  Jasper, Rosemary – WW9.2 The Magic of Moisture – How Can We Make the Most of it?  Jayasekera, Aruni – WW10.4 Does Prickly Moses suppress Phytophthora dieback  Jenkins, Sommer – WW9.2 Landholders and Researchers Working Together  Johnson, Peter – WW15.5 Celebrating 30 Years of Protecting and Enhancing Wildlife Habitats (LFW Victoria)  Johnstone, Ron and Tony Kirkby – WW9.4 ‘Cockatoo Care’ – a Public Programme  Jones, Anthea – WW8.3 Nature Conservation Covenants – Further Tax Concessions K  Kammann, Alice – WW2.1 Riparian Restoration Improves Whole Farm Productivity  Keating, Colma – WW3.1 Bushland Plants Survey Program – Buddy Kent’s Bushland at Bodallin  Keighery, Greg – WW1.2 Salinity Action Plan – Biological Survey of the Agricultural Zone  Keighery, Greg – WW13.1 Weedy Natives in Western Australia  Keighery, Greg – WW20.1 Australian Plants as Weeds in South Africa  Keighery, Greg – WW20.1 Weeds to watch  Keighery, Greg – WW20.1 Australia gives back to the Mediterranean  Kemp, Cherie & Switzer, Carolyn – WW7.1 Shire of Busselton Offers Rate Rebates on LFW Sites  Kemp, Cherie – WW9.3 Whale Beachings at Busselton  Kemp, Cherie & John McKinney – WW11.3 Busselton Shire Biodiversity Incentive Strategy  Kemp, Cherie – WW15.2 Decline in WA Peppermints  Kemp, Cherie – WW15.5 Dieback Workshops in Busselton Shire  Kemp, Cherie – WW17.4 Wonderful – but wet – walks!  Kemp, Cherie – WW18.1 NatureMap  Kemp, Cherie – WW18.2 Shire of Augusta-Margaret River Environmental Grants  Kemp, Cherie – WW18.2 Bushrangers Enjoy the Bush

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 8  Kemp, Cherie – WW19.1 Centennial Park Dunsborough – Western Ringtail Possum Sanctuary Zone  Kemp, Cherie - WW19.2 Prudence the Possum struts her stuff!  Kennewell, Mathew – WW16.3 African Boxthorn Can Be a Nasty Problem  King, Stephanie – WW18.3 Ordeal by Drowning  Kinnear, Adrianne – WW11.3 Soil Mites  Kirby, Peta & Gerry – WW7.1 The First Harvest – Oil Mallees on 'Sun Valley'  Kitto, Johnson – WW6.3 Legal Aspects of Trapping Feral Animals  Kitto, Grantham & Baxter, Avril – WW11.4 Kitto 50,000 : Nature 5,000,000!  Kivell, Zara – WW12.1 Bushland Management with Friends! LFW Coffee Morning at Chittering  Kivell, Zara – WW12.2 Tiritiri Matangi – a Success Story  Kivell, Zara – WW12.3 Carnaby’s Cockatoo Release  Kivell, Zara – WW13.1 Bushland Management with Friends, York and Bindoon  Kivell, Zara – WW18.3 Ants and Lerps  Knight, Jan & Wilmot, Peter – WW7.1 Typha at Lake Mealup  Knight, Jan & Wilmot, Peter – WW17.3 Lake Mealup is Back!  Krauss, Siegy & Dixon, Bob – WW10.2 The Corrigin Grevillea: 12 Years of Recovery L  Ladd, Phil, Colin Yates & Dave Coates – WW14.3 Life on the Rocks – a Cracking Good Place to Live  Ladyman, Bill – WW5.4 Electric Fencing to Protect Remnant Vegetation  Lambeck, Robert – WW1.4 LUPIS: A Decision-supporting Tool for Integrated Land-use Planning  Lambers Hans, Michael W Shane & Erik J Veneklaas – WW9.2 Root clusters of Western Australian plants: a curiosity in context  Lambie, John – WW9.2 Pesky Fox  Lamont, Byron – Banksias, Bardies and Cockies – a Finely-tuned Balance  Lamont, Byron & Rafferty, Christine – WW10.2 Kangaroo Grazing Preferences After Fire at Whiteman Park  Lamont, Byron – 45 Million Years of Fire-stimulated Flowering! – WW16.3  Lamont, David – WW1.2 The Cat’s Home, Al-cat-raz  Lamont, David – WW4.2 The Weed with Wings: Rainbow Lorikeets  Lamont, David – WW5.4 Salinity: Its Effect on Roads  Lander, Nicholas – WW4.4 Everlastings  Langlands, Peter – WW7.3 The Woolly Bear Caterpillar  Leighton, Sylvia – WN12 – Biodiversity and Farm Forestry  Leighton, Sylvia – WW3.2 Yewben – a Wigwam for a Goose’s Bridle  Leighton, Sylvia – WW4.4 A Craftw3ood Story  Leighton, Sylvia – WW5.1 Natural Pest Control  Leighton, Sylvia – WW5.1 Spineless Wonders  Leighton, Sylvia – WW5.2 Rock On!  Leighton, Sylvia – WW7.2 Land for Wildlife Goes Sailing  Leighton, Sylvia – WW8.1 The Web Takes Over the Mail Box  Leighton, Sylvia – WW9.1 A Fish Ladder  Leighton, Sylvia – WW9.3 Reconstructing Links in a Fragmented Landscape  Leighton, Sylvia – WW10.3 Connecting the Stirling Range to the South-west Forests  Leighton, Sylvia – WW11.1 Community Fauna Survey – Lowlands Coastal Reserve  Leighton, Sylvia – WW11.1 Lessons from Ants and Small Creatures  Leighton, Sylvia – WW11.2 The Value of Seed Store and Top Soil  Leighton, Sylvia – WW12.4 South Coast LFW ‘Reveal the Plant Challenge’  Leighton, Sylvia – WW13.1 Jerramungup’s ‘Old Man Emu’ Makes it to the Show!  Leighton, Sylvia – WW14.1 Are We Losing Our Hard-won ‘Sense of Place’?  Leighton, Sylvia & Claire Hall – WW16.3 LFW Victoria: 30 year celebration forum  Leighton, Sylvia & McQuoid, Nathan – WW16.4 A Puzzle for the Eucalypt Buffs  Leighton, Sylvia – WW17.3 Summer Time Highlights the Feral Honey Bee ‘Sting’  Leighton, Sylvia – WW18.1 The Tenterden Fire – Ten Years On  Leighton, Sylvia – WW18.2 Why Would a Roo Chew Bones?  Leighton, Sylvia – WW19.1 Spotted-thighed frogs in the bathroom!  Leighton, Sylvia - WW19.2 Wedding butterflies spread their wings across Australia  Lewis, Elaine, Catherine Baudains & Caroline Mansfield – WW12.3 Nestwatch Project: the Oblong Turtle

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 9  Lewis, Emily and Rebecca Heath – WW18.4 Biosecurity: protecting WA’s agriculture and food sector and the environment  Llorens, Tanya – WW18.2 Shape Matters Too!  Lloyd, Dale – WW18.3 An Unintended Death Trap for Bats  Lloyd, David – WW19.1 A cute little surprise  Lloyd, Sandy – WW1.2 Weed Alert!  Lloyd, Sandy – WW4.1 Western Australia’s State Weed Plan: A New Strategy in the War on Weeds  Lloyd, Sandy – WW18.1 Mail Order Menace  Lloyd, Sandy – WW18.3 Cacti – the Weeds That Stab You  Lohr, Mike – WW20.1 Southern Boobook Research  Longman, Vanda & Mark Brundrett – WW20.1 Recovery of Banksia Woodland after Fire  Lowrie, Allen – WW7.4 Pollinator Observations in Carnivorous Plants and Associated Species  Lowrie, Allen – WW8.1 Bird Pollinator Observations in Carnivorous Plants  Luck, Gary – WW2.1 Wildlife and Edges  Luck, Gary – WW6.4 Woodlands Through a Treecreeper's Eyes  Lyons, Anita – WW12.1 Bugs in the Bushes M  MacIver, Jessie – WW13.3 Looking Through the Phone Book  Maddock, Bert – WW17.3 Habitat for Native Bees  Maesepp, Ella – WW9.3 Red Card for the Red Fox  Main, Bert – WW4.2 Fire, Fraus and the Cord Rush  Majer, Jonathan – WW1.1 Invertebrates in Your Remnant  Majer, Jonathan – WW3.1 Ants in Your Remnant  Majer, Jonathan & Recher, Harry – WW5.4 Tree Planting in Western Australia: Enhancing the Opportunities for Conservation of Biodiversity  Majer, Jonathan & Stehlik, Daniela; Haslam McKenzie, Fiona; & Zhang, Dong-Ke – WW11.3 The Sustaining Gondwana Initiative  Majer, Jonathan – WW16.3 Dead Trees Have a Role in Your Remnant  Malavisi, Peter – WW14.3 Possum Highway  Malcolm, Clive – WW7.2 Growing Samphire  Manning, Liz & Smith, Teagan – WW10.3 Healthy Ecosystems – Inland Wandoo Woodland Case Study Wyalkatchem Nature Reserve  Manning, Liz – WW13.1 Five Years Caring for Wandoo  Manning, Liz – WW14.4 Treasuring Wandoo – a Partnership in Mutual Learning  Manning, Liz & Dennings, Suzanne – WW16.1 Malleefowl Monitoring  Mantle, Kellie – WW12.1 Thanks for Your Help! (burrowing crayfish)  Marbus, Cielito – WW15.2 Marri Decline: Possible Causes and Implications  Marchant, Neville – WW5.2 The CALM Herbarium’s Weed Information Network (WIN)  Marriott, Neil – WW5.4 The Great Grevillea Hunt  Marriott, Neil – WW6.1 The Great Grevillea Hunt (Part 2)  Marston, Greg and Maxine – WW17.4 Bird Banding at ‘Waldja’  Marston, Greg – WW17.4 Feasting on Hakea Seeds  Massam, Marion – WW3.3 - Cane Toad – a Potential Threat in WA  Massam, Marion – WW4.1 Feral Pig Problems  Massam, Marion & Wright, Lisa – WW12.2 On the Look-out for Lorikeets  Maslin, Bruce & Orchard, Tony – WW8.4 Most Australian Wattles Likely to Remain Acacia  Masters, Carolina – WW16.1 a 20-year Period of Observations of King’s Skinks Living Freely in a Suburban Garden  Masters, Jim – WW2.3 Farmtree Corridors and Dams Bringing Birds Back to the Barnyard  Mathwin, Kath – WW3.4 Tagasaste – Environmental Problem  Mawson, Peter & Orell, Peter - WN10 Sand Pads - Using Tracks to Monitor Fauna  Mawson, Peter & Hussey, Penny – WN11 Requirements for Native Mammals  Mawson, Peter – WW7.3 So - You Want to Keep a Pet Reptile Do You? Well, You Can Now!  Mawson, Peter – WW9.3 Mouse Control in Crops – A Natural Alternative (Somebody Should Give a Hoot!)  Mawson, Peter, Denis Saunders and Rick Dawson – WW18.4 Carnaby’s cockatoo, tree hollows and the fate of large hollow-bearing trees  Maxwell, Marika – WW10.3 Quokka Habitat Management and Fire in the South-west  McArthur, Bill – WW8.3 Assessing Changes in Plant Communities

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 10  McArthur, Bill – WW10.3 Reference Soils of South-western Australia  McCrum, Eric – WW4.4 Pollination  McElroy, Robyn – WW3.3 Warwick SHS Bushland  McEvoy, Sarah – WW1.4 Biodiversity Conservation and Wildflower Production of Bush Cauliflower (Verticordia eriocephala) – Conflict or Compatibility?  McFarlane, Terry – WW3.1 Native Grasses – the Unsung Heroes  McKinney, John & Kemp, Cherie – WW11.3 Busselton Shire Biodiversity Incentive Strategy  McLaughlin, Sue – WW4.3 Frog Watching  McMahon, Leonie – WW6.3 Carnaby's Black-Cockatoo: A Cocky in Crisis  McNee, Shapelle – WW1.3 Loss of Grasstrees in Remnant Vegetation  McQuoid, Nathan & Leighton, Sylvia – WW16.4 A Puzzle for the Eucalypt Buffs  Meney, Kathy – WW2.3 Wetland Rushes and Sedges  Mercer, Jack – WW7.3 What is Happening With Wandoo?  Millar, Melissa – WW14.1 Seed Collection for Revegetation: guidelines for determining the requirement for local seed  Millard, Blondie – WW10.4 Acacias of the Welstead District  Miller, Kennedy – WW6.2 Farm Land and Bush Care - an Expense or an Investment in Productivity?  Miller, Kingsley – WW1.1 Even a Stump Will Do!  Mills, Helena – WW14.3 The Twistiest Gimlet in the World!  Moir, Margaret – WW8.3 Returning the Forgotten Animals – Bugs  Moir, Margaret – WW8.3 Bees in My Bamboo!  Moller, Sophie & Bramwell, Emma – WW9.3 New Funding Opportunity for High Conservation Value Properties in the South-West  Moller, Sophie – WW17.3 Beware – Little Green Monsters in the Mulch!  Moller, Sophie – WW20.1 New Biodiversity Legislation for WA  Moonie, Peter & Dixon, Bob - WW5.4 Erosion Control on Kings Park Scarp  Moore, Susan & Munro, Jennifer – WW9.1 Landholders and Recovery Planning: Toolibin Lake Catchment  Morgan, Dave & Beatty, Stephen – WW8.4 Freshwater Fishes of South-Western Australia  Morris, Cliff – WW6.3 Greening Challenge - Helping Environment, Helping Community  Morris, Vicky & Bradby, Keith – WN4 Seed Collection from Native Plants  Morton, Lincoln & Robinson Chris - WW8.1 Local Acacia Seeds for Human Consumption  Moulton, Brian – WW2.2 Social Benefits of Trees on Farms  Mueller, Otto – WW1.2 Escape to an Island  Munro, Jennifer & Moore, Susan – WW9.1 Landholders and Recovery Planning: Toolibin Lake Catchment  Murphy, Chris – WW16.2 Wild Girl  Murphy, Marie & Garkaklis, Mark – WW7.3 Hopping Into a Bright Future - the Woylie Sandalwood Story  Murphy, Mike – WW14.1 Seeing Double  Murphy White, Susie – WW8.2 Implementing a Biodiversity Revegetation Project N  Newbey, Brenda – WW1.1 Birds on Farms  Newbey, Brenda – WW2.2 Birds on Farms – Update  Newbey, Brenda – WW5.3 Birds on Roadsides  Newbey, Brenda – WW7.4 Western Ground Parrot  Newbey, Steve – WW11.2 Transforming Farm Dams into Wetlands for Wildlife  Nicol, Dion & Ryan, Megan – WW12.4 Developing Native Perennial Legumes as Pasture Species for the WA Wheatbelt  Nicolle, Dean & French, Malcolm – WW7.1 Eucalypts for Use in Saline Revegetation  Noble, Jim – WW5.1 Relict Bettong Warrens in Western Australia’s Pastoral Lands O  Obbens, Frank – WW11.4 Calandrinias – Spectacular Succulents  O'Connor, Michael & Gardiner, Bruce – WW6.4 The Changing Greenough Flats  O’Connor, Michael, Suzanne Prober, Emma Yuen & Les Schultz – WW20.1 Ngadju kala: Aboriginal fire knowledge in the Great Western Woodlands  O’Donoghue, Mike – WW2.3 Rare Plants in Wet Areas  O’Donoghue, Mike – WW2.4 It’s Blooming Flowers

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 11  O’Dwyer, Alison & Breen David – WW10.4 Talbot Hall Reserve Regeneration Project  Oldfield, Barrie – WW7.1 The Great Nambling Salt Flat Wheelbarrow Muster  Orchard, Tony and Maslin, Bruce – WW8.4 Most Australian Wattles Likely to Remain Acacia  Orell, Peter & Mawson, Peter – WN10 Sand Pads - Using Tracks to Monitor Fauna P  Paap, Trudy – WW6.3 Canker Disease in Corymbia calophylla (Marri)  Page, Kimberley – WW17.2 Coral Lichens – Ocean or Outcrop?  Papenfus, Diana – WW17.3 Unusual eggs, seeds or buds?  Parsons, Blair – WW10.2 Diagnosing the Decline of Malleefowl Using Sightings Data  Pate, John – WW4.3 Legumes in Native Bush and Agriculture: Potential Roles in Fixation and Cycling of Nitrogen?  Pate, John – WW15.5 A Mardo as Part of the Household  Pate, John – WW17.1 At Home with Brush-tailed Phascogales  Patrick, Sue – WW2.2 Multiple Values of Remnant Vegetation, an Example from the Avon District  Paine, Gordon – WW3.1 Ticks  Parlevliet, Gerry – WW9.3 Commercialising Native Flora Profitably  Parsons, Michael, Carol Lander & Bryon Lamont – WW9.2 Secrets of Kangaroo Herbivory  Payne, Amanda and Stuart – WW18.4 Eagle eyes  Payne, Joan – WW2.3 Mary Carroll Park Wetland from a Waterbird Conservation Group Perspective  Payne, Wendy – WW5.3 CALM Covenants – Create Your Own Private Reserve  Pearson, David – WW1.4 Scaly Friends – Carpet Pythons  Penna Anne-Marie – WW10.4 Invasive Birds- Starlings and their impacts  Phillips, Ryan – WW15.2 Sex, Murder and Deception – the Private Lives of Thynnine Wasps  Pickering, Robyn – WW15.4 The Australasian Bittern Project  Pickering, Robyn – WW16.1 Things That go ‘Boom!’ in the Night – the Australasian Bittern  Pieroni, Margaret – WW2.4 Dryandras – They Are Not All Prickly Shrubs!  Pieroni, Margaret – WW16.4 Hybridisation in Nature  Pitman, Helen & Chapman, Tamra – WW10.2 Hungry Black Cockatoos  Pittman, Jan – WW15.2 Reptiles in the Hills  Pittman, Jan – WW18.1 Our Friendly Heron Chick  Platt, Steve – WW 1.1 Origins of Land for Wildlife  Platt, Steve – WW17.2 Monitoring Fire and Nature on Your Property  Playford, Phillip – WW7.1 The Permo-Carboniferous Glaciation of Gondwana: Its Impact on Western Australia  Playford, Phillip – WW17.4 Recent Mega-tsunamis in the Shark Bay, Pilbara and Kimberley Areas of Western Australia  Podger, Frank – WW3.3 Dieback – Plant Pathogen  Porter, Bob – WW8.1 A Story of Red-tailed Black Cockatoos  Porter, Bob – WW15.4 Grevilleas in the Northern Agricultural Region  Porter, Fleur – WW8.2 Nature-based Farm Tourism – Making it Happen!  Potter, Shauna – WW16.4 Selection of Additional Weeds of National Significance  Pouliquen-Young, Odile – WW4.2 Impact of Climate Change on the Distribution of the Genus Dryandra  Powell, Robert – WW2.4 The Use of Granite Outcrops by the Yellow Admiral Butterfly  Powell, Robert – WW10.4 Bee Poles  Power, Vicki & Scarparolo, Daniel – WW16.4 This is Numbat Country  Price, Adrian – WW16.2 Locusts – the Trees  Prideaux, Gavin – WW13.4 Explaining Australia’s Pleistocene Extinctions  Prince, Geoff – WW7.2 A Smart Little Wasp  Prober, Suzanne, Emma Yuen, Michael O’Connor & Les Schultz – WW20.1 Ngadju kala: Aboriginal fire knowledge in the Great Western Woodlands Q

R  Randall, Rod – WW5.4 Weeds, Are You the Problem?  Randall, Rod – WW11.4 Wetting Agents, Penetrants, Aren’t They the Same Thing?

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 12  Rafferty, Christine & Lamont, Byron – WW10.2 Kangaroo grazing preferences after fire at Whiteman Park  Recher, Harry – WW4.1 The Future of Australia’s Birds: A Personal Opinion  Recher, Harry & Majer, Jonathan – WW5.4 Tree Planting in Western Australia: Enhancing the Opportunities for Conservation of Biodiversity  Recher, Harry – WW15.2 Cypress-pines and Birds  Recher, Harry – WW15.4 Nectar Nomads: a natural history of honeyeaters  Redreau, Dorothy – WW13.2 Blackberry Rust Arrives in Denmark  Redreau, Dorothy – WW15.5 Community Science in Action  Redreau, Dorothy – WW17.4 An Old Landscape Altered, But Not Lost  Redreau, Dorothy – WW18.4 Dieback protection on LFW properties  Redreau, Dorothy – WW18.4 Looking for Erica  Reynolds, Steve – WW6.3 A Kerb Too High  Roberts, Dale – WW9.4 Mating Systems in Australian Frogs: the Quacking frogs  Riley, Karen & Dale Roberts – WW13.4 Chytrid Fungus in South-west Frogs  Rippey, Elizabeth – WW8.1 Coastal Considerations  Robinson, Chris – WW1.2 Fitzgerald Biosphere Reserve – Remnant Vegetation Project  Robinson, Chris – WW4.2 Agonis Oil and the Curse of Potential  Robinson, Chris – WW6.1 Agonis fragrans essential oil - an update!  Robinson, Chris – WW6.1 Field Day on Profitable Revegetation with Sandalwood Attracts Interest  Robinson, Chris & Morton, Lincoln – WW8.1 Local Acacia Seeds for Human Consumption  Robinson, Richard - WW5.4 Armillaria Root Disease  Robinson, Richard – WW13.2 Fungi Respond to Bushfires  Rohl, Liesl – WW 2.4 It’s Blooming Flowers  Rohl, Liesl & Smith, Russell – WN7 Management Guidelines for Remnant Vegetation Being Harvested for Cutflowers  Rossetto, Maurizio – WW1.1 The Corrigin Grevillea Recovery Plan  Rowley, Ian – WW5.2 The Australian Magpie  Rushton, Juliet – WW15.1 Pardalotes at Our Door  Rutherford, Bill – WW12.3 Shorebirds – Observers Needed  Ryan, Megan & Nicol, Dion – WW12.4 Developing Native Perennial Legumes as Pasture Species for the WA Wheatbelt  Rye, Barbara – WW6.2 Pimeleas - the Original Banksias! S  Sadler, Brian – WW7.2 Guinea Pigs in a Laboratory for Climate Change? Observing Our Own Responses  Salter, Glenys – WW16.2 Our Piece of Paradise  Sanders, Angela – WW18.3 Turning Farmland into Fauna Habitat – how do we know what success looks like?  Saunders, Denis – WW6.1 The Ecological Imperatives for Conservation and Management of Native Vegetation  Saunders, Denis – WW9.4 Decline in a Remnant of Salmon Gum and York Gum Woodland, 1978 to 1997 – WW9.4(8)  Saunders, Denis – WW14.3 Cockie Hunting  Saunders, Denis – WW17.4 Carnaby’s Cockatoo – Is It a Rain Bird?  Saunders, Denis and Rick Dawson– WW18.1 Individually Marked Wild Carnaby’s Cockatoos: a challenge and opportunity for keen photographers  Saunders, Denis – WW18.2 What is the Value of Long-term Datasets of Bird Presence?  Saunders, Denis, Peter Mawson and Rick Dawson – WW18.4 Carnaby’s cockatoo, tree hollows and the fate of large hollow-bearing trees  Saunders, Kathy – WW5.3 The Fauna and Flora of the State Barrier Fence  Savage, Alan – WW4.4 Is There Life in Our Inland Salt Lakes?  Scarparolo, Daniel & Power, Vicki – WW16.4 This is Numbat Country  Schofield, Louise – WW7.4 Frog Matters  Schultz, Les, Suzanne Prober, Emma Yuen & Michael O’Connor – WW20.1 Ngadju kala: Aboriginal fire knowledge in the Great Western Woodlands  Seabrook, Joanna – WW1.2 A Parliament of Crows  Seabrook, Joanna – WW2.2 Moving House  Seabrook, Joanna – WW3.2 Direct Seeding

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 13  Seabrook, Joanna – WW7.1 Wandoo Worries  Seaman, Sue – WW6.3 An Exciting Invasion  Shea, Dr Syd – WW 1.1 Welcome to Land for Wildlife  Shedley, Erica – WW10.3 What Wildflower is That?  Short, Jeff – WW17.2 Habitat for the Red-tailed Phascogale  Short, Marie – WW14.1 The Value of Oil Mallees as Foraging Habitat for the Western Pygmy Possum  Siemon, Graeme – WW1.1 Marri – The Forgotten Timber  Siemon, Graeme – WW3.4 Using Sheoak Timber  Singe, David – WW4.3 Linking Bush Remnants  Slack Smith, Shirley – WW3.4 Snails and Slugs in the Bush  Smart, Ann – WW1.3 Birds, Trees – and Fly Strike  Smart, Claire, Melissa Weybury and Peter Speldewinde – WW15.1 What is That Lurking in the Creek?  Smith, Jackie – WW19.1 The nankeen night heron  Smith, Mick – WW1.3 Aquatic Invertebrates and River Health  Smith, Rod – WW18.2 Busy Bee-eaters  Smith, Russell & Rohl, Liesl – WN7 Management Guidelines for Remnant Vegetation Being Harvested for Cutflowers  Smith, Teagan – WW9.3 Acacia paradoxa: Native or Alien?  Smith, Teagan – WW10.2 Chuditch-proof your chook pen!  Smith, Teagan – WW10.4 – Little White Bat  Smith, Teagan & Manning, Liz – WW10.3 Healthy Ecosystems – Inland Wandoo Woodland Case Study Wyalkatchem Nature Reserve  Smithson, Ann – The Genus Gompholobium – Glorious But Little-studied Legumes  Speed, Russell – WW9.4 Groundwater Trends in the Northern Agricultural Region  Spencer, Peter – WW7.3 How Ancient DNA Was Able to Identify the Extinct Rock-wallaby on Depuch Island  Spooner, Amanda – WW10.4 Lambertia – Wild Honeysuckle  Sprigg, Tricia – WW11.4 A Python on the Rafters!  Stack, Gillian – WW11.3 Recovery of a Sandplain Standout!  Stack, Gillian – WW20.1 Phascogale box (on David and Denni Garnett’s property)  Stack, Gillian – WW20.1 Coralie (a juvenile western ringtail possum on John Miller’s property)  Standering, Allan and Julie – WW16.2(10) Fire and Recovery  Start, Tony – WW1.2 Bats, The Forgotten Insect Eaters  Start, Tony – WW3.2 Mistletoe – Friend or Foe?  Start, Tony & Handasyde Tricia – WW6.3 The Value of Old Photographs  Start, Tony – WW8.1 Western Shield – Reviewed  Start, Tony – WW17.1 Dams on the Ord River – a Photo History  Storey, Andrew – WW2.3 Large Woody Debris are Important Habitat in Rivers  Strauss, Monica – WW4.2 Natural Vermin Control  Strelein, Marie – WW11.3 Keep Your Eyes Peeled for the Underground Orchid  Sturis, Jana – WW16.2 Flora Roads, Vegetation Surveys and Roadside Conservation  Sutton, Carole – WW3.3 Bird Nesting Boxes  Sutton, Carole – WW7.4 Feral Bees and How We Coped With Them  Sutton, Eric – WW18.1 Doing What Comes Naturally!  Sweedman, Luke – WW11.1 Botanical Collecting in Western Australia  Switzer, Carolyn and Kemp, Cherie – WW7.1 Shire of Busselton Offers Rate Rebates on LFW Sites  Syme, Katrina – WW2.2 The Larger Fungi  Syme, Katrina – WW5.2 Truffles (and the Fungimap Conference) T  Tauss, Cate – WW11.3 Reedia – A Very Extraordinary Sedge  Taylor, Jan – WW7.2 Dunny-bugs  Taylor, Neil & Gail – WW6.1 Vermin Proof Fencing  Thiele, Kevin – WW12.3 Dryandras are Banksias!  Thompson, Peter – WW1.3 Weed Control in Direct Seeding Areas – Selective Herbicides  Thompson, Graham – WW2.3 The Aestivating Salamanderfish – Where Do All the Fish Go?  Thygesen, Julie – WW4.1 Sustainable Seed Banks Project  Tieu, Anle – WW5.2 Using Heat to Break Dormancy of WA Legume and Non-legume Species  Titelius, Herbert – WW5.2 Management of Hills Firebreaks

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 14  Todd, Benson – WW12.4 Prostrate Flame Flower: the Long Road to Recovery  Tommerup, Inez – WW3.3 Fungi Work for Healthy Trees, Shrubs and Soil 24 Hours a Day; Wheatbelt Woodlands are Rich in Fungi  Tommerup, Inez & Bougher, Neale – WW6.3 Putting the Fungi Back - Kick Start Your Reveg!  Tonkin, Margaret – WW16.1 Save the Minnows!  Tregonning, Jo – WW14.1 Children Take Their Voices to Canberra  True, Denise – WW1.4 Biodiversity Conservation and Wildflower Production of Bush Cauliflower (Verticordia eriocephala) – Conflict or Compatibility?  Turner, Shane – WW14.4 Seedy Gap in Nature  Twidale, CR & Bourne JA – WW8.2 Granite Landforms of the Wheatbelt – A Brief Review  Twigg, Laurie – WW13.4 Spreading Weeds – the Hidden Costs of Rabbits and Foxes  Twigg, Laurie - WW19.2 Questions arise regarding the effectiveness of 1080-baits for fox control U

V  Valentine, Leonie E & Wilson, Barbara – WW16.3 Animal Responses to Fire in Banksia Woodlands in Western Australia  Valton, Pamela – WW5.3 So You Want to Build a Fence, Do You?  Valton, Pamela – WW8.1 "Writing the Wild" at Perup - an Inspiring Weekend  van der Waag, Jessica – WW7.4(3) Diet Analysis of Malleefowl  van Leeuwen, Stephen – WW13.3 Biodiversity of an Economic Hotspot, the Pilbara Biological Survey  Vear, Kevin – WW3.3 Dieback – Plant Pathogen  Vickridge, Peter – WW11.2 Those Dam Swans!  Vickridge, Peter – WW13.3 A Wambenger Story  Viela, Vikki – WW18.4 Whose egg? W  Walley, Trevor – WW3.2 The Story of Muja  Walley, Trevor – WW3.2 Why Mankind Tells Stories  Walley, Trevor – WW12.1 Wild Grapes – Bush Tucker  Walley, Trevor – WW12.2 Got Writer’s Block? – Let a Sheoak Whisper to You!  Walley, Trevor & Hussey, Penny – WW13.2 What’s In a Name? – Snottygobble  Walmsley, Rachel – WW19.1 Carnaby’s in Candy’s Reserve  Warburton, Greg – WW18.1 On Track  Waterhouse, Barbara – WW4.2 Siam Weed – Coming Home With the Troops?  Watkins, Gareth – WW15.5 A Woylie Good Result!  Watkins, Rita – WW2.2 Study of Birds in Tree Belts Through Farmland at Frankland, Western Australia  Webb, Maggie – WW18.1 Caring For a Bobby  Wells, Brice – WW9.3 Wings in the Wheatbelt – the Rufous Treecreeper  Wells, Shirley – WW13.1 The Joy of Revegetation  Wellstead Heritage Committee – WW8.3 Wellstead – Almost Wattled Out!  Wheeler, Ian – WW5.1 Owls in the South West of Western Australia  Wheeler, Judy – WW6.4 Floras Past and Present  White, Lyn – WW18.3 Triggerplant poem  White, Nicole – WW12.2 Black Cockatoo Research at the Wildlife Genetics Lab  Whitford, Kim – WW16.3 Jilakin Jarrah  Wildy, Jodi – WW13.3 Bush Detective – Who Made This? (wolf spider)  Wilkes-Jones, Tamara – WW19.1 Spotting numbat stripes  Williams, Matt – WW7.4 Effect of Fire on Butterflies  Williams, Matt – WW13.4 Butterflies in Urban Bushlands Around Perth  Williamson, Julie – WW15.2 How Much Can One Roo Drink?  Williamson, Julie and Duncan – WW17.4 Keeping Weeds Under Control on a Four Hectare Bush Block  Williamson, Julie – WW20.1 Blue Wrens  Wills, Allan – WW12.1 Earwig Flies? Ancient and Mysterious Insects  Wills, Allan – WW17.2 Plant Galls: the diverse abnormal growths on plants resulting from their intimate associations with parasitic organisms  Wills, Allan – WW19.2 Chronic defoliation of Flooded Gum

WWIndex_Topic&Author_July_2014 15  Willyams, David – WW17.4 Restoring Jarrah Forest Geophytes  Wilmot, Peter & Knight, Jan – WW7.1 Typha at Lake Mealup  Wilmot, Peter & Knight, Jan – WW17.3 Lake Mealup is Back!  Wilson, Barbara & Leonie E Valentine – WW16.3 Animal Responses to Fire in Banksia Woodlands in Western Australia  Wilson, Meg – WW9.4 A Happy Taddy Tale!  Wilson, Meg – WW10.2 A Tall Tale But True – Happy Taddy Tales Part 2  Wilson, Paul – WW5.2 Salacious Samphires  Witham, Danielle – WW15.5 Conservation Planning in the Southwest Australia Ecoregion – Where to Allocate Limited Resources?  Withers, Philip – WW2.3 The Aestivating Salamanderfish – Where Do All the Fish Go?  Woodall, Geoff – WW7.3 Australian Native Platysace Tubers: From the Bush to Your Shopping Basket  Woodall, Geoff & Emmott, Tim – WW9.3 Growers Working Together to Develop the Sandalwood Industry  Woodburn, Tim – WW3.4 Pest of Bridal Creeper Released  Woodward, Mary – WW15.2 Here It Is – the Flower From Those Unknown Leaves!  Woodward, Mary – WW19.1 Whose egg? – Lea’s Frog.  Wyre, Gordon – WW1.3 Western Shield: What is it and What is it Doing? X

Y  Yates, Colin & Coates, David – WW5.4 Viability and Persistence of Small Isolated Populations of Rare and Threatened Flora. Is There Hope?  Yates, Colin, Phil Ladd & Dave Coates – WW14.3 Life on the Rocks – a Cracking Good Place to Live  Yeomans, Vanessa – WW4.1 Flooded Gum Dieback  Young, Jennifer – WW4.4 Hakeas  Young, Joanna – WW9.3 Dieback Caused by Phytophthora cinnamomi: what is at risk and what can we save?  Yuen, Emma, Suzanne Prober, Michael O’Connor & Les Schultz – WW20.1 Ngadju kala: Aboriginal fire knowledge in the Great Western Woodlands Z  Ziembicki, Mark – WW9.4 What’s the Bustard’s Story?

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