De-extinction: Conservation or curiosity?

Helen Taylor
Wildlife in Australia 54 ( 3) 40

2017
When genetic and phenotypic data do not agree: the conservation implications of ignoring inconvenient taxonomic evidence

Nicholas Dussex , , Helen Taylor , Martin Irestedt
New Zealand Journal of Ecology 42 ( 2) 1 -7

11
2018
The tuatara genome reveals ancient features of amniote evolution

Neil J. Gemmell , , Kim Rutherford , Stefan Prost
Nature 584 ( 7821) 403 -409

90
2020
The tuatara genome: insights into vertebrate evolution from the sole survivor of an ancient reptilian order

Neil J. Gemmell , Kim Rutherford , Stefan Prost , Marc Tollis
bioRxiv 867069

2
2019
12
2022
Bridging the conservation genetics gap by identifying barriers to implementation for conservation practitioners

Helen R. Taylor , Nicolas Dussex , Yolanda van Heezik
Global Ecology and Conservation 10 ( 2) 231 -242

129
2017
The conservation management implications of isolation by distance and high genetic diversity in Great Spotted Kiwi (Apteryx haastii)

Hugh Robertson , Kristina M. Ramstad , Kristina M. Ramstad , Helen R. Taylor
Emu - Austral Ornithology 1 -13

2021
Emerging Technologies to Conserve Biodiversity: Further Opportunities via Genomics. Response to Pimm et al.

Helen R. Taylor , Neil J. Gemmell
Trends in Ecology and Evolution 31 ( 3) 171 -172

20
2016
Breaking out of the echo chamber: missed opportunities for genetics at conservation conferences

Helen R. Taylor , Kylie Soanes
Biodiversity and Conservation 25 ( 10) 1987 -1993

3
2016
Beyond Biodiversity: Can Environmental DNA (eDNA) Cut It as a Population Genetics Tool?

Clare I.M. Adams , Michael Knapp , Neil J. Gemmell , Gert-Jan Jeunen
Genes 10 ( 3) 192

131
2019
Genetic sex assignment in wild populations using genotyping-by-sequencing data: A statistical threshold approach.

William R. Stovall , Helen R. Taylor , Michael Black , Stefanie Grosser
Molecular Ecology Resources 18 ( 2) 179 -190

19
2018
Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding reveals strong discrimination among diverse marine habitats connected by water movement

Gert‐Jan Jeunen , Michael Knapp , Hamish G. Spencer , Miles D. Lamare
Molecular Ecology Resources 19 ( 2) 426 -438

138
2019
Coprophagy in Dunnocks (Prunella modularis): A Frequent Behavior in Females, Infrequent in Males, and Very Unusual in Nestlings

Simon D. Lamb , Helen R. Taylor , Benedikt Holtmann , Eduardo S. A. Santos
The Wilson Journal of Ornithology 129 ( 3) 615 -620

2017
Genomics advances the study of inbreeding depression in the wild.

Marty Kardos , Helen R Taylor , Hans Ellegren , Gordon Luikart
Evolutionary Applications 9 ( 10) 1205 -1218

119
2016
De-extinction needs consultation

Helen R. Taylor , Nicolas Dussex , Yolanda van Heezik
Nature Ecology and Evolution 1 ( 1) 198

6
2017
Cryptic inbreeding depression in a growing population of a long‐lived species

Helen R. Taylor , Rogan M. Colbourne , Hugh A. Robertson , Nicola J. Nelson
Molecular Ecology 26 ( 3) 799 -813

18
2017
Dunnock social status correlates with sperm speed, but fast sperm does not always equal high fitness

Carlos E. Lara , Helen R. Taylor , Benedikt Holtmann , Sheri L. Johnson
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 33 ( 8) 1139 -1148

2
2020
Valid estimates of individual inbreeding coefficients from marker-based pedigrees are not feasible in wild populations with low allelic diversity

Helen R. Taylor , Marty D. Kardos , Kristina M. Ramstad , Fred W. Allendorf
Conservation Genetics 16 ( 4) 901 -913

17
2015
Response to Britt et al. 2018 “The importance of non-academic co-authors in bridging the conservation genetics gap” Biological Conservation 218, 118–123

Carolyn J. Hogg , Helen R. Taylor , Samantha Fox , Catherine E. Grueber
Biological Conservation 222 287 -288

3
2018