C
Carlo Pacioni
Researcher at Arthur Rylah Institute for Environmental Research
Publications - 47
Citations - 579
Carlo Pacioni is an academic researcher from Arthur Rylah Institute for Environmental Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Bettongia penicillata. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 39 publications receiving 463 citations. Previous affiliations of Carlo Pacioni include University of Western Australia & Murdoch University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Contribution of genetics to ecological restoration
TL;DR: A view of research gaps, future directions and challenges in the genetics of restoration is provided, finding that studies could make better use of the extensive toolbox developed by applied fields in genetics.
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Genetic diversity loss in a biodiversity hotspot: ancient DNA quantifies genetic decline and former connectivity in a critically endangered marsupial.
Carlo Pacioni,Helen Hunt,Morten E. Allentoft,Morten E. Allentoft,Timothy G. Vaughan,Adrian F. Wayne,Alexander Baynes,Dalal Haouchar,Joe Dortch,Michael Bunce +9 more
TL;DR: Calculations of genetic diversity showed that these were significantly higher in the past and that there was a high degree of gene flow across the woylie's historical range, demonstrating the value of integrating aDNA data into current‐day conservation strategies.
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Effects of habitat fragmentation on population structure and long‐distance gene flow in an endangered marsupial: the woylie
TL;DR: This study enhances not only the knowledge about the ecology of woylies but also the genetic consequences of habitat fragmentation and reiterates the strength and pertinence of molecular techniques in similar investigations.
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Genetic outcomes from the translocations of the critically endangered woylie
TL;DR: This research used mitochondrial and nuclear DNA markers to assess the genetic outcomes of translocated woylie populations and found that these populations have lost genetic variability, differentiated from their source population and the supplementation program appears to have failed.
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Characterizing the post‐recolonization of Antechinus flavipes and its genetic implications in a production forest landscape
Jose Luis Mijangos,Carlo Pacioni,Peter S. Spencer,Mia J. Hillyer,Mia J. Hillyer,Michael D. Craig,Michael D. Craig +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors employed core concepts in the field of population genetics to address questions of genetic diversity and gene flow in recolonizing faunal populations, using a small and vagile marsupial (Antechinus flavipes) inhabiting a mined landscape under restoration.