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Loren Fardell

(she/her)
Research Fellow, The University of Queensland

Loren is a community wildlife ecologist that uses ethology, habitat assessment, and conservation biology and physiology practices to understand the dynamics of ecosystems in disturbed environments. Her research focuses on multidimensional human activity and predator to prey relationships, to understand pressures and responses. She uses progressive and minimally invasive methods to observe human activities, the associated introduced and novel species, habitat structure, and community ecology in relation to the functional behaviour and fear and stress responses of extant wildlife. She aims to aid wildlife conservation in disturbed habitats through understanding pressure responses, landscapes of fear and stress impacts, and ecological based management opportunities. Her research has included investigating predator and competitor based alternatives to rodent management; small mammal persistence in patchy urban environments considering human disturbances and introduced predators; and impacts of habitat disturbances on green and golden bell frog persistence.

Experience

  • –present
    Research Fellow, The University of Queensland

Education

  • 2022 
    The University of Sydney, Doctor of Philosophy (Biology)