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Dive into the research topics where Nicholas Carlile is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicholas Carlile.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2016

High prevalence of Salmonella and IMP-4-producing Enterobacteriaceae in the silver gull on Five Islands, Australia

Monika Dolejska; Martina Masarikova; Hana Dobiasova; Ivana Jamborova; Renata Karpíšková; Martin Havlicek; Nicholas Carlile; David Priddel; Alois Cizek; Ivan Literak

Objectives The objective of this study was to investigate the silver gull as an indicator of environmental contamination by salmonellae and carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) in south-east Australia. Methods A total of 504 cloacal samples were collected from gull chicks at three nesting colonies in New South Wales, Australia [White Bay (n = 144), Five Islands (n = 200) and Montague Island (n = 160)] and were examined for salmonellae and CPE. Isolates were tested for carbapenemase genes and susceptibility to 14 antibiotics. Clonality was determined by PFGE and MLST. Genetic context and conjugative transfer of the carbapenemase gene were determined. Results A total of 120 CPE of 10 species, mainly Escherichia coli (n = 85), carrying the gene blaIMP-4, blaIMP-38 or blaIMP-26 were obtained from 80 (40%) gulls from Five Islands. Thirty percent of birds from this colony were colonized by salmonellae. Most isolates contained the gene within a class 1 integron showing a blaIMP-4-qacG-aacA4-catB3 array. The blaIMP gene was carried by conjugative plasmids of variable sizes (80–400 kb) and diverse replicons, including HI2-N (n = 30), HI2 (11), A/C (17), A/C-Y (2), L/M (5), I1 (1) and non-typeable (6). Despite the overall high genetic variability, common clones and plasmid types were shared by different birds and bacterial isolates, respectively. Conclusions Our data demonstrate a large-scale transmission of carbapenemase-producing bacteria into wildlife, likely as a result of the feeding habits of the birds at a local waste depot. The isolates from gulls showed significant similarities with clinical isolates from Australia, suggesting the human origin of the isolates. The sources of CPE for gulls on Five Islands should be explored and proper measures applied to stop the transmission into the environment.


Emu | 2001

A trial translocation of Gould's Petrel ( Pterodroma leucoptera leucoptera )

David Priddel; Nicholas Carlile

Abstract Aside from a few pairs recently discovered breeding on nearby Boondelbah Island, the Goulds Petrel (Pterodroma leucoptera leucoptera) is limited to a single breeding colony located on Cabbage Tree Island, New South Wales. The translocation of birds from Cabbage Tree Island to establish a new colony elsewhere, or to augment the small colony on Boondelbah Island, is an option currently being considered to aid the long-term conservation of this endangered species. We undertook a trial translocation of nestlings within their current breeding grounds on Cabbage Tree Island. This involved removal of the nestlings from the natal nest, denying them further parental care, relocating them to an artificial nest box and feeding them artificially. Thirty nestlings were translocated between gullies on Cabbage Tree Island after they had attained specific plumage characteristics thought to occur just prior to their first emergence from their nests. The translocated nestlings were confined to their adopted nest boxes for the first 3 days and artificially fed every third day until they fledged. The experimental translocation and the associated use of artificial feeding resulted in a small increase in fledging weight, but caused no reduction in fledging success, and had no effect on the timing of departure of the fledglings. Three translocated fledglings have returned to Cabbage Tree Island since their departure in April 1995; all returned to their adopted nest site, one being recovered only a few metres from the nest from where it fledged. This study demonstrated that translocations of Goulds Petrel nestlings can be achieved without any discernible detriment to the individual birds involved.


Emu | 2008

Population size, breeding success and provenance of a mainland colony of Little Penguins (Eudyptula minor)

David Priddel; Nicholas Carlile; Robert Wheeler

Abstract Although most Little Penguins (Eudyptula minor) breed on offshore islands, several small colonies occur on the mainlands of New Zealand and Australia, including mainland Tasmania. Unlike island colonies, most mainland colonies have declined over recent decades, several having gone extinct. A mainland colony of Little Penguins in North Harbour, Sydney, Australia, was monitored over three consecutive breeding seasons (2002–03 to 2004–05). The number of known nesting pairs was 49–56 per annum. The mean number of eggs laid per pair (2.45), eggs hatched per pair (1.84), fledglings produced per pair (1.71), hatching success (0.72) and breeding success (0.70) were among the highest reported from Australian colonies. Underlying these figures was a particularly high proportion of pairs that double-brooded (14–31% per annum, mean 24%). Fledging mass as a percentage of mean adult mass (103%) was also high. Together, these results suggest that food at the North Harbour colony was abundant during the period of study. Fledglings first returned to the colony at 1–4 years of age and first bred at 2–4 years of age. The recruitment rate of fledglings produced at the North Harbour colony was up to 15%, much higher than that recorded elsewhere. Banding recoveries (1997–2005) show that the North Harbour colony contains a substantial number of immigrants that have come from as far afield as Phillip Island, 761 km south of Sydney. Individuals banded at North Harbour have been recovered as far away as Sydenham Inlet, Victoria, 485 km to the south. The mixed provenance of the North Harbour population demonstrates that it is not isolated, either demographically or genetically, from other colonies in south-eastern Australia.


Bird Conservation International | 2012

Establishment of a new, secure colony of Endangered Bermuda Petrel Pterodroma cahow by translocation of near-fledged nestlings

Nicholas Carlile; David Priddel; Jeremy L. Madeiros

Until recently, Bermuda Petrel Pterodroma cahow (IUCN Category: ‘Endangered’) bred only in sub-optimal habitat on four small islets in north-east Bermuda. Although intensive management of the population since 1962 has led to a substantial increase in population size (now approaching 100 pairs), the nesting habitat on these four islets is being increasingly inundated, eroded and destroyed by high seas associated with hurricanes and storms. To ensure the long-term conservation of the species a decision was made to establish a new colony at a more secure site on nearby Nonsuch Island, where they once bred in large numbers. Between 2004 and 2008, 104 near-fledged nestlings were translocated to artificial burrows on Nonsuch Island, where they were hand-fed meals of fish and squid. All but three translocated birds fledged successfully, with the first returning to Nonsuch Island in February 2008. The first Bermuda Petrel egg on Nonsuch Island in more than 300 years was laid in January 2009, and the resultant fledgling departed in June of the same year. By the end of the 2009/10 breeding season, a total of 18 Bermuda Petrels have been recorded on Nonsuch Island, 17 were translocated as near-fledged nestlings, and one bird came from the existing colonies. A total of five eggs have been produced, resulting in two fledglings. The establishment of this new colony, at a site that is much more secure than the existing nesting sites, greatly enhances the conservation prospects of the species and demonstrates the importance of translocation as a tool for the conservation of threatened seabirds.


Emu | 2006

An evaluation of three field techniques for sexing Gould's Petrels (Pterodroma leucoptera) (Procellariidae)

Terence W. O'Dwyer; David Priddel; Nicholas Carlile; J. A. Bartle; William A. Buttemer

Abstract Many petrels show no obvious sex-linked dimorphism in plumage or size and consequently many researchers fail to sex the living individuals they study. Several methods of sex discrimination that do not rely on plumage- or obvious size-dimorphism can be used to sex live petrels. The effectiveness of three such techniques was evaluated: body condition at the time of laying, cloacal inspection, and discriminant function analysis (DFA) of external morphometrics. Goulds Petrel (Pterodroma leucoptera leucoptera) was used as the subject species. Sexing of breeding adults on the basis of body condition at laying proved to be highly accurate (100% of birds sexed correctly) but required detailed knowledge of the breeding biology. Following training, cloacal inspection proved to be an accurate (96%) method of determining the sex of breeding adults, but not of chicks. Unlike molecular sexing, the latter two methods of sex discrimination provide immediate knowledge of the sex of individuals in the field. DFA of external morphometrics predicted the sex of adults with an accuracy of 73% and the sex of near-fledged chicks with an accuracy of 66%. However, the probability of correct assignment of sex was low in most cases and, therefore, this is the least useful of the three techniques assessed here.


Bird Conservation International | 2012

Breeding biology and population increase of the Endangered Bermuda Petrel Pterodroma cahow

Jeremy L. Madeiros; Nicholas Carlile; David Priddel

The Bermuda Petrel Pterodroma cahow was thought to have become extinct early in the 17ᵗʰ century due to a combination of hunting by human colonists and predation by introduced rats, cats, dogs and pigs. However, single individuals were found on four occasions during the first half of the 20ᵗʰ century, and in 1951 a small population was discovered breeding on several rocky islets in north-east Bermuda. Recovery actions began in 1962 when the population numbered just 18 pairs, dispersed among five small islets. Although rats extirpated one of these five colonies in 1967, the population has grown steadily to 56 breeding pairs in 2000. We investigated the breeding phenology, productivity and population size of the Bermuda Petrel between 2000/2001 and 2007/2008. Each year, the birds began arriving in Bermuda around mid-October. They departed on a pre-breeding exodus between 19 November and 14 December, returning after 32–56 days to lay a single egg between 31 December and 31 January. Eggs hatched from 16 February to 26 March after a mean (± SD) incubation period of 53 ± 2 days, and young fledged from 15 May to 25 June after a mean fledging period of 91 ± 5 days. Between 2000/2001 and 2007/2008, reproductive output ranged from 29 to 40 fledglings per annum. Mean annual breeding success (62%) was reasonably high relative to other Procellariiformes, largely due to the provision of artificial (concrete) nesting burrows. In 2008, the population numbered 85 breeding pairs. Monitoring since 1961 indicates the population has been increasing exponentially, doubling approximately every 22 years. This rate of increase, together with the increased incidence of storm damage, is making it progressively more impracticable to construct sufficient concrete burrows on the current nesting islets to accommodate all breeding pairs. The vulnerability of these sites to accelerating storm damage and erosion as a result of anthropomorphic climate change is now the greatest threat to the Bermuda Petrel.


New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research | 2016

Coupling bio-logging with nutritional geometry to reveal novel insights into the foraging behaviour of a plunge-diving marine predator

Gabriel E. Machovsky-Capuska; David Priddel; Philip Hw Leong; Peter Jones; Nicholas Carlile; Lesley Shannon; Dean Portelli; Alistair McEwan; A. V. Chaves; David Raubenheimer

ABSTRACT It is widely believed that predators maximise their energy intake while foraging and consume prey that are nutritionally similar. We combined GPS data loggers, miniaturised cameras, dietary sampling and nutritional geometry to examine the nutritional variability in the prey and selected diet, and foraging performance, of the masked booby (Sula dactylatra tasmani), a wild carnivore and marine top predator. Data loggers also revealed no significant differences between sexes in the foraging performance of chick-rearing adults. Females provided more food to their chicks than the males and, regardless of the nutritional variability of prey consumed, both sexes showed similar amounts of protein and lipid in their diets. Miniaturised cameras combined with nutritional analysis of prey provided, for the first time, fine-scale detail of the amounts of macronutrients consumed in each plunge dive and the overall foraging trip. Our methodology could be considered for future studies that aim to contribute to the general understanding of the behavioural and physiological mechanisms and ecological and evolutionary significance of animal foraging (e.g. energy expenditure budgets and prey selection for self- and offspring-feeding that could lead to sex-specific foraging strategies).


International journal for parasitology. Parasites and wildlife | 2015

Epidemiology and molecular phylogeny of Babesia sp. in little penguins Eudyptula minor in Australia

Ralph Eric Thijl Vanstreels; Eric J. Woehler; Valeria Ruoppolo; Peter Vertigan; Nicholas Carlile; David Priddel; Annett Finger; Peter Dann; Kimberly Vinette Herrin; Paul Thompson; Francisco Carlos Ferreira Junior; Érika Martins Braga; Renata Hurtado; Sabrina Epiphanio; José Luiz Catão-Dias

Highlights • We examined blood smears from 263 wild little penguins in southeastern Australia.• Babesia sp. was detected in penguins in New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania.• True prevalence is estimated between 3.4% and 4.5%.• Babesia sp. from little penguins is closely related to B. poelea and B. uriae.• Babesia infections were assymptomatic.


Emu | 2014

Pelagic distribution of Gould’s Petrel (Pterodroma leucoptera): linking shipboard and onshore observations with remote-tracking data

David Priddel; Nicholas Carlile; Dean Portelli; Yuna Kim; Lisa O'Neill; Vincent Bretagnolle; Lisa T. Ballance; Richard A. Phillips; Robert L. Pitman; Matt J. Rayner

Abstract This study describes and compares the pelagic distribution and migratory patterns of the two subspecies of Goulds Petrel (Pterodroma leucoptera), and contrasts data obtained from tracking birds at sea using geolocators with observational data (shipboard sightings, by-catch records and beachcast specimens). While breeding, tracked individuals of both subspecies (P. l. leucoptera and P. l. caledonica) foraged within the Tasman Sea and south of the Australian continent, with forays west into the Indian Ocean before laying. After breeding, both subspecies migrated to distinct non-breeding ranges within the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. Observational data identified the general pattern of migration and foraging areas of the species, whereas data from geolocators provided details of routes and timing of migration, core foraging ranges, and marked spatial and temporal segregation between the two subspecies. However, by attaching geolocators only to established breeders, as is typical of studies of small and medium-sized seabirds, these devices failed to identify that non-breeding birds (pre-breeders and adults that are deferring breeding) may not follow the same migratory schedules or have the same at-sea distribution. We conclude that integrating data from electronic tracking with observational data substantially improves our understanding of the pelagic distribution of seabird populations.


Bird Conservation International | 2008

A review of records and recovery actions for the 'Critically Endangered' Fiji Petrel Pseudobulweria macgillivrayi

David Priddel; Nicholas Carlile; Kolinio Moce; Dick Watling

Summary The ‘Critically Endangered’ Fiji Petrel Pseudobulweria macgillivrayi is believed to breed only on the island of Gau, Fiji, but its nesting grounds have yet to be located. Until a bird was captured in 1984, the species was known from only a single museum specimen (collected in 1855), one sighting on land (in 1965) and four unverified sightings at sea (1964–65). Local knowledge of the Fiji Petrel is restricted to a few lines of a traditional lullaby. In this paper we collate and review all records of the species, and examine all known attempts to locate nesting sites. Since 1985 there have been 15 reports of sightings on land and six at sea. Two additional specimens, both pre-breeding adults, have been obtained. Although our knowledge of this elusive species is slowly increasing, the timing of the breeding cycle remains uncertain, making the search for nesting sites particularly challenging. Known potential threats on Gau include predation by introduced cats, rats and pigs. We detail recent conservation efforts and prescribe some new initiatives, including the use of sniffer dogs. Locating the nesting grounds of the Fiji Petrel remains the prime conservation priority for this species.

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David Priddel

Office of Environment and Heritage

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Dean Portelli

Office of Environment and Heritage

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Adam Bester

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Peter Fullagar

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Yuna Kim

Macquarie University

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Jeremy L. Madeiros

Japanese Ministry of the Environment

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