![]() The majority of published studies surveyed focussed on the conservation impacts of exotic mammals and their management, while very few articles used exotic mammals to address broader ecological questions. ![]() For comparison, we selected six ‘taxa’ of exotic mammals ( Capra, Cervidae, Felis, Lagomorpha, Muridae and Sus), and excluded agricultural (Animal Production) and laboratory-based studies. ![]() We searched the Web of Science database to examine the focus of scientific articles on exotic mammal ecology in New Zealand and Australia between 19, and investigated the degree to which Australasian ecologists have met this challenge. Several New Zealand and Australian ecologists have championed the role that research on exotic mammals in their countries (which are often more abundant and of lower conservation value than native mammals) could play in this process, and highlighted their potential as model systems within which to evaluate and advance contemporary ecological theory. ![]() Ecology is often criticised as a soft science that suffers from a lack of theoretical underpinning, predictive ability and empirical validation, where the synthesis of these components is a key imperative for the science. ![]()
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