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Academic Journals
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- 1From:Marine Biology (Vol. 165, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedThe persistence of coral reef frameworks requires that calcium carbonate (CaCO.sub.3) production by corals and other calcifiers outpaces CaCO.sub.3 loss via physical, chemical, and biological erosion. Coral bleaching...
- 2From:Marine Biology (Vol. 165, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Haruko Kurihara 1 , Asami Takahashi 1 , Alejandro Reyes-Bermudez 1 2 , Michio Hidaka 1 Author Affiliations: (1) Department of Chemistry, Biology, and Marine Science, Faculty of Science, University of...
- 3From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 15, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedAlong the Florida reef tract, stony-coral-tissue-loss disease (SCTLD) has caused extensive mortality of more than 20 scleractinian coral species. The pathogen is unknown, but its epizoology indicates that the disease,...
- 4From:BMC Ecology (Vol. 13, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Linda Tonk1,2 , Pim Bongaerts2,3 , Eugenia M Sampayo1,2 and Ove Hoegh-Guldberg2,3 Background Symbiotic unicellular dinoflagellates of the genus Symbiodinium are best known for their association with...
- 5From:BMC Genomics (Vol. 13, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Coral reefs belong to the most ecologically and economically important ecosystems on our planet. Yet, they are under steady decline worldwide due to rising sea surface temperatures, disease, and pollution....
- 6From:Science (Vol. 295, Issue 5553) Peer-ReviewedAn outcrop within the last interglacial terrace on Barbados contains corals that grew during the penultimate deglaciation, or Termination II. We used combined [sup.230]Th and [sup.231]Pa dating to determine that they...
- 7From:Science (Vol. 250, Issue 4978) Peer-ReviewedThroughout the Caribbean, the corals are bleaching again, turning a ghostly white - a sign of severe stress. Though it is still early, it looks as if this current episode may rival or even surpass the one in 1987, which...
- 8From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 7, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Satoe Aratake 1 , Tomohiko Tomura 1 , Seikoh Saitoh 2 , Ryouma Yokokura 3 , Yuichi Kawanishi 2 , Ryuichi Shinjo 4 , James Davis Reimer 5 , Junichi Tanaka 3 , Hideaki Maekawa 2 , * Introduction Soft...
- 9From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 9, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Chuya Shinzato 1,*, Mayuri Inoue 2, Makoto Kusakabe 2 Introduction Coral reefs are estimated to harbor roughly one-third of all described marine species, and their productivity supports approximately...
- 10From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 8, Issue 9) Peer-ReviewedIntroduction Coral disease, caused by different microbes, is a progressing threat to the reefs in all three major oceans around the world [1,2]. The most serious diseases, tissue loss disease termed white syndromes...
- 11From:Hydrobiologia (Vol. 811, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedDeep-sea benthic environments can be home to diverse communities of corals and sponges which are important habitat for marine fishes and invertebrates. From 2010 to 2014, underwater camera surveys in the Aleutian...
- 12From:Pacific Science (Vol. 62, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAbstract: The nine Hawaiian species of Narella are revised, including the description of six new species. All species but one (N. ornata) are described and illustrated using SEM; all species are keyed and included in a...
- 13From:Pacific Science (Vol. 62, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAbstract: Dispersal distance of planktonic larvae of coral reef organisms is influenced by their ecological characteristics and environmental factors such as current flow and physical structure of reefs. This study...
- 14From:Nature Methods (Vol. 13, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedA miniature platform for studying corals at microscale resolution sheds new light on their biology. Coral polyps live in symbiosis with photosynthetic, unicellular algae that provide energy in return for nutrients...
- 15From:Acta Palaeontologica Polonica (Vol. 61, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAn uppermost Famennian (Strunian) coral assemblage has been recovered in the middle part of the Yilanli Formation of the Istanbul Zone (Zonguldak and Bartin areas, NW Turkey). In the Bartin area, the studied...
- 16From:Estonian Journal of Earth Sciences (Vol. 65, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe Paardu hardground from the Telychian (Rumba Formation) of western Estonia is sparsely encrusted (0.4% of the studied surface) by possible tabulate corals, sheet-like bryozoans and discoidal echinoderm holdfasts....
- 17From:Marine Biology (Vol. 161, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedRising dissolved pC[O.sub.2] is a mounting threat to coral reef ecosystems. While the biological and physiological impacts of increased pC[O.sub.2] are well documented for many hermatypic corals, the potential effects...
- 18From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 9, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe capacity of reef-building corals to associate with environmentally-appropriate types of endosymbionts from the dinoflagellate genus Symbiodinium contributes significantly to their success at local scales....
- 19From:Journal of Marine BiologyPeer-ReviewedWe sought to determine whether the Indo-Pacific reef-building coral Seriatopora hystrix performs in a similar manner in the laboratory as it does in situ by measuring Symbiodinium density, chlorophyll a (chl-a)...
- 20From:Biodiversity Data Journal (Issue 5) Peer-Reviewed