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Scientific Papers in Refereed Journals

1973-1985
1986-1990
1991-1995
1996-1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis © Rick Shine


Some of these papers are available as pdf files.

Otherwise, to request a reprint please contact Mel.

218. Bonnet, X., G. Naulleau, and R. Shine. 1999. The dangers of leaving home: dispersal and mortality in snakes. Biological Conservation 89:39-50.
219. Madsen, T., and R. Shine. 1999. The adjustment of reproductive threshold to prey abundance in a capital breeder. Journal of Animal Ecology 68:571-580.
220. Harlow, P., and R. Shine. 1999. Temperature-dependent sex determination in the frillneck lizard, Chlamydosaurus kingii (Agamidae). Herpetologica 55:205-212.
221. Scanlon, J. D., M. S. Y. Lee, M. W. Caldwell, and R. Shine. 1999. The paleoecology of the primitive snake Pachyrhachis. Historical Biology 13:127-152.
222. Shine, R., and M. S. Y. Lee. 1999. A reanalysis of the evolution of viviparity and egg-guarding in squamate reptiles. Herpetologica 55:538-549.
223. Olsson, M., T. Birkhead, and R. Shine. 1999. Can relaxed time constraints on sperm production eliminate protandry in an ectotherm? Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 66:159-170.
224. Witzell, H., T. Madsen, T. Westerdahl, R. Shine, and T. von Schantz. 1999. MHC variation in birds and reptiles. Genetica 104:301-309.
225. Madsen, T., and R. Shine. 1999. Rainfall and rats: climatically-driven dynamics of a tropical rodent population. Australian Journal of Ecology 24:80-89.
226. Shine, R., Ambariyanto, P. S. Harlow, and Mumpuni. 1999. Reticulated pythons in Sumatra: biology, harvesting and sustainability. Biological Conservation 87:349-357.
227. Madsen, T., and R. Shine. 1999. Life-history consequences of nest-site variation in tropical pythons (Liasis fuscus). Ecology 80:989-997.
228. Shine, R., Ambariyanto, P. S. Harlow, and Mumpuni. 1999. Ecological attributes of two commercially-harvested python species in northern Sumatra. Journal of Herpetology 33:249-257.
229. Whitaker, P. B., and R. Shine. 1999. When, where and why do people encounter Australian brownsnakes (Pseudonaja textilis, Elapidae)? Wildlife Research 26:675-688.
230. Whitaker, P. B., and R. Shine. 1999. Responses of free-ranging brownsnakes (Pseudonaja textilis, Elapidae) to encounters with humans. Wildlife Research 26:689-704.
231. Elphick, M., and R. Shine. 1999. Sex differences in optimal incubation temperatures in a scincid lizard species. Oecologia 118:431-437.
232. Sues, L., and R. Shine. 1999. Morelia amethistina (Australian scrub python). Male-male combat. Herpetological Review 30:102.
233. Simon, P., R. Whittaker, and R. Shine. 1999. Morelia spilota (Australian carpet python) Caudal luring. Herpetological Review 30:102-103.
234. Shine, R., and S. J. Downes. 1999. Can pregnant lizards adjust their offspring phenotypes to environmental conditions? Oecologia 119:1-8.
235. Shine, R. 1999. Why is sex determined by nest temperature in many reptiles? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 14:186-189.
236. Sumner, J., C. Moritz, and R. Shine. 1999. Shrinking forest shrinks skink: morphological change in response to rainforest fragmentation in the Prickly Forest Skink, Gnypetoscincus queenslandiae. Biological Conservation 91:159-167.
237. How, R. A., and R. Shine. 1999. Ecological traits and conservation biology of five fossorial "sand-swimming" snake species (Simoselaps: Elapidae) in southwestern Australia. Journal of Zoology (London) 249:269-282.
238. Olsson, M., and R. Shine. 1999. Plasticity in frequency of reproduction in an alpine lizard, Niveoscincus microlepidotus. Copeia 1999:794-796.
239. Shine, R. 1999. Egg-laying reptiles in cold climates: determinants and consequences of nest temperatures in montane lizards. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 12:918-926.
240. Naulleau, G., X. Bonnet, M. Vacher-Vallas, R. Shine, and O. Lourdais. 1999. Does less-than-annual production of offspring by female vipers (Vipera aspis) mean less-than-annual mating? Journal of Herpetology 33:688-691.
241. Bonnet, X., D. Bradshaw, R. Shine and D. Pearson. 1999. Why do snakes have eyes? The (non-) effect of blindness in island tigersnakes. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 46:267-272.
242. Shine, R. 1999. Reply to Girondot and Pieau (temperature-dependent sex determination in reptiles). Trends in Ecology and Evolution 14:360.
243. Madsen, T., R. Shine, M. Olsson, and H. Wittzell. 1999. Restoration of an inbred adder population. Nature 402:34-35.
244. Shine, R., M. M. Olsson, I. T. Moore, M. P. Lemaster, and R. T. Mason. 1999. Why do male snakes have longer tails than females? Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 266:2147-2151.
245. Olsson, M. M., and R. Shine. 1999. Locomotor impairment of gravid lizards: is the burden physical or physiological? Journal of Evolutionary Biology 13:263-268.
246. Downes, S. J., and R. Shine. 1999. Do incubation-induced changes in a lizard's phenotype influence its vulnerability to predators? Oecologia 120:9-18.
247. Bonnet, X., R. Shine, G. Naulleau, and O. Lourdais. 1999. What is the appropriate timescale for measuring "costs of reproduction" in a typical capital breeder, the asp viper? Evolutionary Ecology 13:485-497.
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