Sandra Anderson, MSc.
Senior Technician
Ecology, Evolution and Behaviour
Phone: 3737599 x87214 (City Campus) or x85290 (Tamaki)
Fax: 3737668
Thomas Building 110N 1002 or Tamaki Campus Rm 733.343
Email: sh.anderson@auckland.ac.nz
See here for Ecology and Animal Behaviour Lab, and Tamaki Ecology Lab
Research Interests
1. The role of plant-animal mutualisms in the pollination and seed dispersal of the NZ flora
I am interested in the importance of mutualistic interactions to maintaining native ecosystems. The implication of both local and national declines in the suite of native pollinators and seed dispersers in New Zealand have been only briefly considered, and the pollination and seed dispersal requirements of many native plants are still poorly understood. In addition the introduction and naturalisation of a range of bird and insect species, as well as flowering and fruiting plants, has altered the original pattern of these interactions. My research aims to identify mutualisms between the native flora and fauna, and to assess the impact of changes in these on ecosystem function. The research objective is to enable us to predict vulnerability in mutualistic interactions, so that management of native biodiversity can be optimised.
2. Population dynamics and dispersal of individuals in a new environment
Understanding the behaviour and population dynamics of both native and alien species introduced to a new system is critical to biodiversity conservation in New Zealand. I am interested in the population dynamics of translocated species, as well as the mechanics and dispersal of alien animals and plants invading new sites.
Recent Publications
(2011).
Cascading effects of bird functional extinction reduce pollination and plant density.
Science 331: 1068–1071. DOI: 10.1126/science.1199092.
(2010).
Mutualisms with the wreckage of an avifauna: the status of bird pollination and fruit dispersal in New Zealand.
New Zealand Journal of Ecology (34):66-85.
(2007).
Widespread failure of bird pollination mutualisms on the New Zealand mainland.
New Zealand Journal of Botany 45: 291.
(2006).
The relative (un)importance of introduced animals as pollinators and dispersers of native plants.
In Biological Invasions in New Zealand (ed. R. B. Allen & W. G. Lee). Springer, Berlin.
(2006).
Birds as pollinators and dispersers: a case study from New Zealand.
Acta Zoologica Sinica (52): 112-115.
(2006).
Management of plant invasions mediated by frugivore interactions.
Journal of Applied Ecology 43:848-857.
(2006).
A moving feast: the influence of landscape context on bird-mediated seed rain into conservation areas.
Fifteenth Australian Weeds Conference Papers and Proceedings (ed. C. Preston, J.H. Watts and N.D. Crossman).
(2006).
Modern pollen-vegetation relationships along transects on the Whangapoua Estuary, Great Barrier Island, northern New Zealand.
Journal of Biogeography pp17.
(2006).
Application of palynology to describe vegetation succession in estuarine wetlands on Great Barrier Island, northern New Zealand.
Journal of Vegetation Science 17.
(2006).
Sequential impacts of Polynesian and European settlement on vegetation and environmental processes recorded in sediments at Whangapoua Estuary , Great Barrier Island, New Zealand.
Regional Environmental Change pp16.
(2005).
Serial population bottlenecks and genetic variation: Translocated populations of the New Zealand Saddleback (Philesturnus carunculatus rufusater).
Conservation Genetics 6(1) 1-14.
(2005).
Intercepting the first rat ashore.
Nature 437 (20) 1107.
(2004).
The vegetation sequence at Whangapoua Estuary, Great Barrier Island, New Zealand.
New Zealand Journal of Botany 42:565-588.
(2004).
Bird species diversity and abundance before and after eradication of possums and wallabies on Rangitoto Island, Hauraki Gulf, New Zealand.
New Zealand Journal of Ecology 28(1): 143-149.
(2003).
Breeding biology of bellbirds on Tiritiri Matangi Island.
Notornis 50: 75-82.
(2003).
The relative importance of birds and insects as pollinators of the New Zealand flora.
New Zealand Journal of Ecology 27 (2): 83-94.
(2003).
Sightings of North Island tomit (Petroica macrocephala toitoi) on Rangitoto Island, Hauraki Gulf, Auckland.
Notornis 50:115-116.
(2003).
The bird community of Kaitoke wetland, Great Barrier Island.
Notornis 50: 201-209.
(2003).
Is interdependence of native fauna and flora an issue for future survival of native plants?.
Canterbury Botanical Society 37: 88-98.
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