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Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
34
Citations
4862
World Ranking
7591
National Ranking
588

Overview

Tracey L. Rogers is affiliated with the University of New South Wales in Australia and has a research focus primarily within Environmental Science and Earth and Planetary Sciences. Their body of work spans various subfields including Ecology, Oceanography, Developmental Biology, Atmospheric Science, and Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics.

Their main research topics encompass Marine animal studies overview, Underwater Acoustics Research, Animal Vocal Communication and Behavior, Isotope Analysis in Ecology, Arctic and Antarctic ice dynamics, Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, and Marine and fisheries research.

Tracey L. Rogers has published frequently in several academic journals, with notable publication venues including:

  • Scientific Reports
  • The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
  • Frontiers in Marine Science
  • Ecology and Evolution
  • Marine Ecology Progress Series

Their recent papers cover diverse topics within marine science and ecology. Selected publications include:

  • Multiple pygmy blue whale acoustic populations in the Indian Ocean: whale song identifies a possible new population, 2021, Scientific Reports
  • Artificial eyespots on cattle reduce predation by large carnivores, 2020, Communications Biology
  • Evaluating the performance of the Bayesian mixing tool MixSIAR with fatty acid data for quantitative estimation of diet, 2020, Scientific Reports
  • A new blue whale song-type described for the Arabian Sea and Western Indian Ocean, 2020, Endangered Species Research
  • Respiratory microbiota of humpback whales may be reduced in diversity and richness the longer they fast, 2020, Scientific Reports

Tracey L. Rogers collaborates regularly with several researchers, frequently co-authoring with:

  • Alicia I. Guerrero
  • Neil R. Jordan
  • Gary Truong
  • Emmanuelle C. Leroy
  • Ben Maslen

Best Publications

  • Moving in the Anthropocene : global reductions in terrestrial mammalian movements

    Marlee A. Tucker;Katrin Böhning-Gaese;William F. Fagan;John M. Fryxell

  • Diet and phylogeny shape the gut microbiota of Antarctic seals: a comparison of wild and captive animals

    Tiffanie M. Nelson;Tracey L. Rogers;Alejandro R. Carlini;Mark V. Brown

  • Evolutionary predictors of mammalian home range size: body mass, diet and the environment

    Marlee A. Tucker;Terry J. Ord;Tracey L. Rogers

  • Responses of Antarctic pack-ice seals to environmental change and increasing krill fishing

    Jaume Forcada;Philip N. Trathan;Peter L. Boveng;Ian L. Boyd

  • The Gut Bacterial Community of Mammals from Marine and Terrestrial Habitats

    Tiffanie M. Nelson;Tracey L. Rogers;Mark V. Brown

  • Determination of steroid hormones in whale blow: It is possible

    C. J. Hogg;T. L. Rogers;A. Shorter;K. Barton

  • Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis reveals seasonal variation in the diet of leopard seals

    Sophie A. Hall-Aspland;Tracey L. Rogers;Rhondda B. Canfield

  • Skull mechanics and implications for feeding behaviour in a large marsupial carnivore guild: the thylacine, Tasmanian devil and spotted‐tailed quoll

    M.R.G. Attard;U. Chamoli;T.L. Ferrara;T.L. Rogers

  • Examining predator-prey body size, trophic level and body mass across marine and terrestrial mammals

    Marlee A. Tucker;Tracey L. Rogers

  • Density Can Be Misleading for Low-Density Species: Benefits of Passive Acoustic Monitoring

    Tracey L. Rogers;Michaela B. Ciaglia;Holger Klinck;Colin Southwell

  • BEHAVIORAL SIGNIFICANCE OF UNDERWATER VOCALIZATIONS OF CAPTIVE LEOPARD SEALS, HYDURGA LEPTONYX

    T. L. Rogers;Douglas H. Cato;M. M. Bryden

  • The timing of pupping by pack-ice seals in East Antarctica

    Colin Southwell;Knowles Kerry;Paul Ensor;Eric J. Woehler

  • Summer diet of leopard seals (Hydrurga leptonyx) in Prydz Bay, Eastern Antarctica

    S. A. Hall-Aspland;T. L. Rogers

  • Influence of biological and ecological factors on hematological values in wild Little Penguins, Eudyptula minor.

    N Sergent;T Rogers;M Cunningham

  • The marine mammal microbiome: current knowledge and future directions

    Tiffanie M Nelson;Amy Apprill;Janet Mann;Tracey L Rogers

  • A new approach to the solution of the linear mixing model for a single isotope: application to the case of an opportunistic predator

    S. A. Hall-Aspland;A. P. Hall;T. L. Rogers

  • Review of Underwater and In-Air Sounds Emitted by Australian and Antarctic Marine Mammals

    Christine Erbe;Rebecca Dunlop;K. Curt S. Jenner;Micheline-N. M. Jenner

  • Does size matter? Examining the drivers of mammalian vocalizations.

    Kobe Martin;Marlee A. Tucker;Tracey L. Rogers

  • Uncommon or cryptic? Challenges in estimating leopard seal abundance by conventional but state-of-the-art methods

    Colin Southwell;Charles G.M. Paxton;David Borchers;Peter Boveng

  • Sympathy for the devil: captive-management style did not influence survival, body-mass change or diet of Tasmanian devils 1 year after wild release

    Tracey Rogers;Samantha Fox;David Pemberton;Phil Wise

  • Trace element analysis in the serum and hair of Antarctic leopard seal, Hydrurga leptonyx, and Weddell seal, Leptonychotes weddellii.

    Rachael Gray;Paul Canfield;Tracey Rogers

  • Spatial movement of adult leopard seals (Hydrurga leptonyx) in Prydz Bay, Eastern Antarctica

    T. L. Rogers;C. J. Hogg;A. Irvine

Frequent Co-Authors

John P. Y. Arnould
John P. Y. Arnould Deakin University
Colin Southwell
Colin Southwell Australian Antarctic Division
Janet M. Wilmshurst
Janet M. Wilmshurst Landcare Research
Torsten Thomas
Torsten Thomas University of New South Wales
Mark V. Brown
Mark V. Brown University of Technology Sydney
Ezequiel M. Marzinelli
Ezequiel M. Marzinelli University of New South Wales
Christopher J. Fogwill
Christopher J. Fogwill Cranfield University
Lionel Carter
Lionel Carter Victoria University of Wellington
Jonathan G. Palmer
Jonathan G. Palmer University of New South Wales
Sarah J. Richardson
Sarah J. Richardson Landcare Research

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