Memoirs of the Queensland Museum - Nature 63
Open for publishing
The Memoirs of the Queensland Museum - Nature is published online first, to enable availability to the most recent scientific research conducted on Queensland's unique natural environments and adjacent bioregions.
Volume 63 is currently open and the list of articles will be updated as articles are published. Please direct any enquiries to the Managing Editor, and for further information on publishing with the Memoirs of the Queensland Museum - Nature please see our Guide for Authors (248 KB)
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Authors
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Title and link
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Huynh, C. & Veenstra, A. A.
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A new spcies of Unixenus Jones, 1944 (Diplopoda, Polyxenidae) found in far north Queensland, Australia
Published online: 5 May 2021
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Wilkinson, J.E., Spring, K.A., Dunn, T. L. Price G. J., & Louys, J.
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The vertebrate fossil collection record from the Chinchilla Sand, South–East Queensland, 1844-2021
Published online: 21 May 2021
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Torkkola, J.
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Male Combat in the Yellow-Faced Whipsnake (Demansia
psammophis)
Published online: 29 December 2021
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Dwyer, P.D. & Minnegal, M.
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The provenance of diagnostic specimens of the ‘New Guinea
Singing Dog’
Published online: 20 January 2022
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Healy, J.M.
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A return to Hayman Island: revisiting Australia’s only recorded cone snail fatality
after 85 years
Published online: 20 January 2022
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Kaposi, K., Courtney, R.L. & Seymour, J.E.
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Tentacle autotomy: an additional mode of asexual
reproduction in Ricordea yuma (Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Corallimorpharia)
Published online: 31 May 2022
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Joseph-Ouni, M., White, A., Smales, I., Sadlier, R., Cann, J., McCord, W.P., Couper, P., Amey,
A. & Freeman, A.
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Further evidence in support of the recognition of the Freshwater Turtle Elseya
oneiros (Testudines: Chelidae) from the Nicholson and Gregory Rivers of Northern Queensland
Published onine: 30 June 2022
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Printed versions of these articles will be periodically published and issued as separate printed volumes. ISSN 2204-1478 (online) ISSN 0079-8835 (print).
Each published article is allocated a unique and persistent Digital Object Identifier (DOI) to ensure clarity about intellectual property in the digital environment, to provide certainty about citation and linking to correct research data, and to ensure that author's research is made available as soon as possible following final acceptance of their manuscripts.
To meet the requirements for online publishing of scientific data, in compliance with the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, all published articles are also registered with Zoobank, including new species, which provides an authoritative online, open-access, community-generated registry for zoological nomenclature, as a service to taxonomists, biologists, and the global biodiversity informatics community. All published articles are archived and DOIs are listed in references, if available at the time of publishing.