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Dean R. Paini
Researcher at Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
Publications - 61
Citations - 2458
Dean R. Paini is an academic researcher from Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Introduced species & Thrips. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 60 publications receiving 1902 citations. Previous affiliations of Dean R. Paini include University College Dublin & University of Florida.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Global threat to agriculture from invasive species
TL;DR: Overall, the biggest agricultural producers (China and the United States) could experience the greatest absolute cost from further species invasions, however, developing countries, in particular, Sub-Saharan African countries, appear most vulnerable in relative terms.
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Sexual size dimorphism in fallow deer (Dama dama): do larger, heavier males gain greater mating success?
Alan G. McElligott,Martin P. Gammell,Hilda C. Harty,Dean R. Paini,Desmond T. Murphy,James T. Walsh,Thomas J. Hayden +6 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that larger mature fallow bucks have advantages over other males when competing for matings, and sexual selection therefore continues to act on sexual size dimorphism in this species.
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Opinion: Sustainable development must account for pandemic risk.
Moreno Di Marco,Moreno Di Marco,Michelle L. Baker,Peter Daszak,Paul J. De Barro,Evan A. Eskew,Cecile Godde,Tom Harwood,Mario Herrero,Andrew J. Hoskins,Erica Johnson,Erica Johnson,William B. Karesh,Catherine Machalaba,Javier Navarro Garcia,Dean R. Paini,Rebecca Pirzl,Mark Stafford Smith,Carlos Zambrana-Torrelio,Simon Ferrier +19 more
TL;DR: Without an integrated approach to mitigating the disease emergence consequences of environmental change, countries’ abilities to achieve SDGs and GHSA targets will be compromised.
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Impact of the introduced honey bee (Apis mellifera) (Hymenoptera: Apidae) on native bees: A review
TL;DR: Research into honey bee/native bee competition has focused on floral resource overlap, visitation rates or resource harvesting, but it is found that many studies have problems with sample size, confounding factors or data interpretation.
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The role of global trade and transport network topology in the human-mediated dispersal of alien species.
Natalie C Banks,Natalie C Banks,Natalie C Banks,Dean R. Paini,Dean R. Paini,K.L. Bayliss,K.L. Bayliss,Mike Hodda,Mike Hodda +8 more
TL;DR: For the first time, studies from several perspectives, approaches and disciplines are synthesised to derive the fundamental characteristics of network topology determining the likelihood of spread of organisms via trade and transport networks.