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PhD candidate, Charles Darwin University

Hayley Geyle is a PhD candidate in the Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods at Charles Darwin University. Her research interests include threatened species conservation and introduced predators and their management.

Experience

  • 2016–present
    Research scientist, Charles Darwin University
  • 2016–present
    Research scientist, Deakin University

Education

  • 2015 
    Deakin University , Bachelor of Environmental Science (Hons)

Publications

  • 2020
    Reptiles on the brink: identifying the Australian terrestrial snake and lizard species most at risk of extinction,
  • 2020
    Big trouble for little fish: Australian freshwater fishes in imminent risk of extinction,
  • 2020
    Targeted sampling successfully detects the cryptic and declining arboreal marsupial (Phascogale pirata) in northern Australia,
  • 2020
    Imperfect species detection, road use and assessing population change of introduced mammalian predators,
  • 2020
    Invertebrate consumption by feral cats Felis catus in Australia,
  • 2020
    Predation by introduced cats Felis catus on Australian frogs: compilation of species records and estimation of numbers killed,
  • 2019
    Introduced cats Felis catus eating a continental fauna: inventory and traits of Australian mammal species killed,
  • 2019
    Introduced cats (Felis catus) eating a continental fauna: the number of mammals killed in Australia,
  • 2019
    Continental-scale assessment reveals inadequate monitoring for threatened vertebrates in a megadiverse country,
  • 2019
    Metrics of progress in the understanding and management of threats, and their application to Australian birds,
  • 2018
    Towards meaningful monitoring: a case study of a threatened rodent,
  • 2018
    A spatial overview of the global importance of Indigenous lands for conservation,
  • 2018
    Quantifying extinction risk and forecasting the number of impending Australian bird and mammal extinctions,
  • 2017
    Top-down control of species distributions: feral cats driving the regional extinction of a threatened rodent in northern Australia. ,