journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34728054/the-future-ocean-we-want
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ferdinando Boero
Backcasting involves the design of a desirable future that is not simply predicted with forecasts being, instead, proactively aimed at with effective action. So far, all initiatives towards sustainability failed, probably due to lack of investments in the acquisition of knowledge on the structure and the function of natural systems (i.e. biodiversity and ecosystem functioning), and to the reliance on models and estimates based on incomplete data.
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34728053/current-and-future-considerations-for-shark-conservation-in-the-northeast-and-eastern-central-pacific-ocean
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shawn Larson, Dayv Lowry, Nicholas K Dulvy, Jim Wharton, Felipe Galván-Magaña, Abraham B Sianipar, Christopher G Lowe, Erin Meyer
Sharks are iconic and ecologically important predators found in every ocean. Because of their ecological role as predators, some considered apex predators, and concern over the stability of their populations due to direct and indirect overfishing, there has been an increasing amount of work focussed on shark conservation, and other elasmobranchs such as skates and rays, around the world. Here we discuss many aspects of current shark science and conservation and the path to the future of shark conservation in the Northeastern and Eastern Central Pacific...
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34583817/preface
#23
EDITORIAL
Charles Sheppard
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34583816/from-an-economic-crisis-to-a-pandemic-crisis-the-need-for-accurate-marine-monitoring-data-to-take-informed-management-decisions
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angel Borja, Michael Elliott
It is axomatic that a system cannot be managed unless it is measured and that the measurements occur in a rigorous, defendable manner covering relevant spatial and temporal scales. Furthermore, it is not possible to predict the future direction of a system unless any predictive approach or model is supported by empirical evidence from monitoring. The marine system is no different from any other system in these regards. This review indicates the nature and topics of marine monitoring, its constraints in times of economic austerity, the sequence of topics subject to monitoring and the amount of monitoring of various topics carried out as indicated by the number of publications and researchers...
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34583815/human-impacts-on-deep-sea-sponge-grounds-applying-environmental-omics-to-monitoring
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Johanne Vad, Kelsey Archer Barnhill, Georgios Kazanidis, J Murray Roberts
Sponges (Phylum Porifera) are the oldest extant Metazoans. In the deep sea, sponges can occur at high densities forming habitats known as sponge grounds. Sponge grounds can extend over large areas of up to hundreds of km2 and are biodiversity hotspots. However, as human activities, including deep-water hydrocarbon extraction, continue to expand into areas harbouring sponge grounds, understanding how anthropogenic impacts affect sponges and the ecosystem services they provide at multiple biological scales (community, individual and (sub)cellular levels) is key for achieving sustainable management...
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34583814/mediterranean-rocky-reefs-in-the-anthropocene-present-status-and-future-concerns
#26
REVIEW
Stanislao Bevilacqua, Laura Airoldi, Enric Ballesteros, Lisandro Benedetti-Cecchi, Ferdinando Boero, Fabio Bulleri, Emma Cebrian, Carlo Cerrano, Joachim Claudet, Francesco Colloca, Martina Coppari, Antonio Di Franco, Simonetta Fraschetti, Joaquim Garrabou, Giuseppe Guarnieri, Cristiana Guerranti, Paolo Guidetti, Benjamin S Halpern, Stelios Katsanevakis, Maria Cristina Mangano, Fiorenza Micheli, Marco Milazzo, Antonio Pusceddu, Monia Renzi, Gil Rilov, Gianluca Sarà, Antonio Terlizzi
Global change is striking harder and faster in the Mediterranean Sea than elsewhere, where high levels of human pressure and proneness to climate change interact in modifying the structure and disrupting regulative mechanisms of marine ecosystems. Rocky reefs are particularly exposed to such environmental changes with ongoing trends of degradation being impressive. Due to the variety of habitat types and associated marine biodiversity, rocky reefs are critical for the functioning of marine ecosystems, and their decline could profoundly affect the provision of essential goods and services which human populations in coastal areas rely upon...
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34119047/effects-of-climate-change-factors-on-marine-macroalgae-a-review
#27
REVIEW
Yan Ji, Kunshan Gao
Marine macroalgae, the main primary producers in coastal waters, play important roles in the fishery industry and global carbon cycles. With progressive ocean global changes, however, they are increasingly exposed to enhanced levels of multiple environmental drivers, such as ocean acidification, warming, heatwaves, UV radiation and deoxygenation. While most macroalgae have developed physiological strategies against variations of these drivers, their eco-physiological responses to each or combinations of the drivers differ spatiotemporally and species-specifically...
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34119046/a-review-of-the-fisheries-life-history-and-stock-structure-of-tropical-tuna-skipjack-katsuwonus-pelamis-yellowfin-thunnus-albacares-and-bigeye-thunnus-obesus-in-the-indian-ocean
#28
REVIEW
Iraide Artetxe-Arrate, Igaratza Fraile, Francis Marsac, Jessica H Farley, Naiara Rodriguez-Ezpeleta, Campbell R Davies, Naomi P Clear, Peter Grewe, Hilario Murua
Skipjack (Katsuwonus pelamis), yellowfin (Thunnus albacares) and bigeye (Thunnus obesus) tuna are the target species of tropical tuna fisheries in the Indian Ocean, with high commercial value in the international market. High fishing pressure over the past three decades has raised concerns about their sustainability. Understanding life history strategies and stock structure is essential to determine species resilience and how they might respond to exploitation. Here we provide a comprehensive review of available knowledge on the biology, ecology, and stock structure of tropical tuna species in the Indian Ocean...
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34119045/potential-loss-of-biodiversity-and-the-critical-importance-of-taxonomy-an-australian-perspective
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pat Hutchings
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34119044/mission-possible-holistic-approaches-can-heal-marine-wounds
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ferdinando Boero
Ocean sciences comprise a vast array of disciplines ranging from physics to socio-economics. The various approaches compete with each other for visibility, rather than cooperate and join forces. Communication beyond the science journals tends to focus on charismatic species and habitats (the ohhh tactics, aimed at provoking wonder) that does not result in the full perception (the ahhh strategy) of the role of ocean sciences for our well-being. Furthermore, natural sciences fail to establish the logical primacy of natural laws over social and economic laws, even though society and the economy cannot exist without the rest of the environment...
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34119043/the-origins-relationships-evolution-and-conservation-of-the-weirdest-marine-bivalves-the-watering-pot-shells-a-review
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brian Morton, Fabrizio Marcondes Machado
The fossil record shows that the two clavagelloid or watering pot families evolved at different times, the Clavagellidae first in the late Mesozoic (100-66mya), the Penicillidae later in the Cenozoic (33-23mya)-the former originally with, thus, a near-global Tethyan distribution, the latter restricted to the Indo-West Pacific. Representatives of the two clavagelloid families, moreover, have wholly different adventitious tube/crypt structures and, thus, methods of formation suggesting that evolutionary experiments have been undertaken to achieve such radical architectural novelties...
2021: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33293023/the-population-dynamics-of-the-coral-reef-crisis-prologue
#32
Bernhard M Riegl
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2020: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33293021/spatial-and-temporal-differences-in-acropora-cervicornis-colony-size-and-health
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth A Goergen, Kathleen Semon Lunz, David S Gilliam
Little to no recovery in Acropora cervicornis populations has been documented since the 1970s and 1980s widespread disease events, and disease and predation appear to remain significant drivers of mortality. However, to date, demographic studies of A. cervicornis lack data temporally or spatially sufficient to quantify factors limiting recovery. Acropora cervicornis populations in three regions [Broward County (BWD), Middle Keys (MDK), and Dry Tortugas (DRTO)] of the Florida Reef Tract were surveyed up to three times per year from 2011 to 2015...
2020: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33293020/population-dynamics-of-diseased-corals-effects-of-a-shut-down-reaction-outbreak-in-puerto-rican-acropora-cervicornis
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alex E Mercado-Molina, Alberto M Sabat, Edwin A Hernández-Delgado
Chronic coral reef degradation has been characterized by a significant decline in the population abundance and live tissue cover of scleractinian corals across the wider Caribbean. Acropora cervicornis is among the species whose populations have suffered an unprecedented collapse throughout the region. This species, which once dominated the shallow-water reef communities, is susceptible to a wide range of stressors, resulting in a general lack of recovery following disturbances. A. cervicornis is a critical contributor to the structure, function, and resilience of Caribbean coral reefs...
2020: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33293019/a-tropical-eastern-pacific-invasive-brittle-star-species-echinodermata-ophiuroidea-reaches-southeastern-florida
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter W Glynn, Renata Alitto, Joshua Dominguez, Ana B Christensen, Phillip Gillette, Nicolas Martinez, Bernhard M Riegl, Kyle Dettloff
The invasive brittle star Ophiothela mirabilis (family Ophiotrichidae), a tropical Indo-Pacific endemic species, first reported in Atlantic waters off southern Brazil in 2000, has extended its range northward to the Caribbean Sea, to the Lesser Antilles in 2011, and was first reported in south Florida in January 2019. Its occurrence in southeast Florida extends along nearly 70km of coastline, from near the Port of Miami, Miami-Dade County, northward to Deerfield Beach, Broward County. It occurs abundantly as an epizoite on octocorals, attaining population densities of 25 individuals and more per 10-cm long octocoral stem...
2020: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33293018/octocoral-populations-and-connectivity-in-continental-ecuador-and-gal%C3%A3-pagos-eastern-pacific
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sascha C C Steiner, Priscilla Martínez, Fernando Rivera, Matthew Johnston, Bernhard M Riegl
Octocorals are important zoobenthic organisms, contributing to structural heterogeneity and species diversity on hardgrounds. Their persistence amidst global coral reef degradation and ocean acidification, has prompted renewed interest in this taxon. Octocoral assemblages at 52 sites in continental Ecuador and Galápagos (23 species, 3742 colonies) were examined for composition, size distributions within and among populations, and connectivity patterns based on ocean current models. Species richness varied from 1 to 14 species per site, with the richest sites on the continent...
2020: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33293017/the-rise-of-octocoral-forests-on-caribbean-reefs
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Howard R Lasker, Lorenzo Bramanti, Georgios Tsounis, Peter J Edmunds
Coral reefs throughout the tropics have experienced large declines in the abundance of scleractinian corals over the last few decades, and some reefs are becoming functionally dominated by animal taxa other than scleractinians. This phenomenon is striking on many shallow reefs in the tropical western Atlantic, where arborescent octocorals now are numerically and functionally dominant. Octocorals are one of several taxa that have been overlooked for decades in analyses of coral reef community dynamics, and our understanding of why octocorals are favoured (whereas scleractinians are not) on some modern reefs, and how they will affect the function of future reef communities, is not commensurate with the task of scientifically responding to the coral reef crisis...
2020: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33293016/the-timing-and-causality-of-ecological-shifts-on-caribbean-reefs
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
William F Precht, Richard B Aronson, Toby A Gardner, Jennifer A Gill, Julie P Hawkins, Edwin A Hernández-Delgado, Walter C Jaap, Tim R McClanahan, Melanie D McField, Thaddeus J T Murdoch, Maggy M Nugues, Callum M Roberts, Christiane K Schelten, Andrew R Watkinson, Isabelle M Côté
Caribbean reefs have experienced unprecedented changes in the past four decades. Of great concern is the perceived widespread shift from coral to macroalgal dominance and the question of whether it represents a new, stable equilibrium for coral-reef communities. The primary causes of the shift-grazing pressure (top-down), nutrient loading (bottom-up) or direct coral mortality (side-in)-still remain somewhat controversial in the coral-reef literature. We have attempted to tease out the relative importance of each of these causes...
2020: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33293015/projected-shifts-in-coral-size-structure-in-the-anthropocene
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chiara Pisapia, Peter J Edmunds, Holly V Moeller, Bernhard M Riegl, Mike McWilliam, Christopher D Wells, Morgan S Pratchett
Changes in the size structure of coral populations have major consequences for population dynamics and community function, yet many coral reef monitoring projects do not record this critical feature. Consequently, our understanding of current and future trajectories in coral size structure, and the demographic processes underlying these changes, is still emerging. Here, we provide a conceptual summary of the benefits to be gained from more comprehensive attention to the size of coral colonies in reef monitoring projects, and we support our argument through the use of case-history examples and a simplified ecological model...
2020: Advances in Marine Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33293014/coral-community-life-histories-and-population-dynamics-driven-by-seascape-bathymetry-and-temperature-variability
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tim R McClanahan
Temperature variability, habitat, coral communities, and fishing intensity are important factors influencing coral responses to climate change. Consequently, chronic and acute sea-surface temperatures (SSTs) and their interactions with habitat and fishing were studied along the East African coast (~400km) by evaluating changes over a ~25-year period in two major reef habitats-island and fringing reefs. These habitats had similar mean and standard deviation temperature measurements but differed in that islands had lower ocean heights and flatter and less right-skewed temperature distributions than fringing reefs...
2020: Advances in Marine Biology
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