All Stories

  1. A new 30 meter resolution global shoreline vector and associated global islands database
  2. Stratifying ocean sampling globally and with depth to account for environmental variability
  3. Assessment of the ecotoxicity of urban estuarine sediment using benthic and pelagic copepod bioassays
  4. Mapping marine biomes of the world
  5. Mapping marine biomes of the world
  6. Mapping marine species richness and endemicity at global scales
  7. Mapping marine species richness and endemicity at global scales
  8. Marine biogeographic realms and species endemicity
  9. Abundance and local-scale processes contribute to multi-phyla gradients in global marine diversity
  10. Marine reserves: Sustainable fisheries need reserves
  11. Cleaner fishes and shrimp diversity and a re-evaluation of cleaning symbioses
  12. Field work ethics in biological research
  13. Ecological criteria to identify areas for biodiversity conservation
  14. Parasite Rates of Discovery, Global Species Richness and Host Specificity
  15. Biological and ecological traits of marine species
  16. Factors influencing when species are first named and estimating global species richness
  17. Correction to Surface Area and the Seabed Area, Volume, Depth, Slope, and Topographic Variation for the World’s Seas, Oceans, and Countries
  18. Biodiversity: The Known, Unknown, and Rates of Extinction
  19. Conservation of biodiversity through taxonomy, data publication, and collaborative infrastructures
  20. Organizing, supporting and linking the world marine biodiversity research community
  21. You should publish your article in Biological Conservation
  22. Factors relevant to pre-veliger nutrition of Tridacnidae giant clams
  23. Efficacy of deltamethrin in the control of Caligus rogercresseyi (Boxshall and Bravo) using bath treatment
  24. Long live Marine Reserves: A review of experiences and benefits
  25. Diversity and Distribution of Deep-Sea Shrimps in the Ross Sea Region of Antarctica
  26. Advancing online databases and information systems for biodiversity conservation
  27. Best practice for biodiversity data management and publication
  28. Strategies for the sustainability of online open-access biodiversity databases
  29. Further evidence of more taxonomists discovering new species, and that most species have been named: response to Bebberet al. (2014)
  30. As in other taxa, relatively fewer beetles are being described by an increasing number of authors: response to Löbl and Leschen
  31. Book review
  32. Marine biofouling on recreational boats on swing moorings and berths
  33. Vegetation and sediment characteristics in an expanding mangrove forest in New Zealand
  34. Tolerance of the invasive tunicateStyela clavato air exposure
  35. Biodiversity data should be published, cited, and peer reviewed
  36. Response to Comments on "Can We Name Earth's Species Before They Go Extinct?"
  37. First Report of Anterior Pallial Tentacles in Solen dactylus (Bivalvia: Solenidae) from the Northern Persian Gulf, Iran
  38. More Taxonomists Describing Significantly Fewer Species per Unit Effort May Indicate That Most Species Have Been Discovered
  39. A methodology for recruiting a giant clam, Tridacna maxima, directly to natural substrata: A first step in reversing functional extinctions?
  40. Can We Name Earth's Species Before They Go Extinct?
  41. Global Coordination and Standardisation in Marine Biodiversity through the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS) and Related Databases
  42. The Magnitude of Global Marine Species Diversity
  43. Mapping habitats in a marine reserve showed how a 30-year trophic cascade altered ecosystem structure
  44. A Census of Fishes and Everything They Eat: How the Census of Marine Life Advanced Fisheries Science
  45. Who eats sea meat? Expanding human consumption of marine mammals
  46. Predicting Total Global Species Richness Using Rates of Species Description and Estimates of Taxonomic Effort
  47. Re-Structuring of Marine Communities Exposed to Environmental Change: A Global Study on the Interactive Effects of Species and Functional Richness
  48. Surface Area and the Seabed Area, Volume, Depth, Slope, and Topographic Variation for the World’s Seas, Oceans, and Countries
  49. Predicting the number of known and unknown species in European seas using rates of description
  50. A Census of Marine Biodiversity Knowledge, Resources, and Future Challenges
  51. Climate change and long-term data are the hot topics at Auckland conference on ‘Climate and Oceans’
  52. Distinguishing marine habitat classification concepts for ecological data management
  53. How sea lice from salmon farms may cause wild salmonid declines in Europe and North America and be a threat to fishes elsewhere
  54. Motivating Online Publication of Data
  55. Biological geography of the European seas: results from the MacroBen database
  56. MacroBen integrated database on benthic invertebrates of European continental shelves: a tool for large-scale analysis across Europe
  57. Development of an in vitro culture method for cells and tissues from the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha)
  58. The global economic cost of sea lice to the salmonid farming industry
  59. Earth observations for marine and coastal biodiversity and ecosystems
  60. Temporal variance of disturbance did not affect diversity and structure of a marine fouling community in north-eastern New Zealand
  61. Temporal variability and intensity of grazing: a mesocosm experiment
  62. Ecology of sea lice parasitic on farmed and wild fish
  63. MedOBIS: biogeographic information system for the eastern Mediterranean and Black Sea
  64. ‘Ocean biodiversity informatics’: a new era in marine biology research and management
  65. European marine biodiversity inventory and taxonomic resources: state of the art and gaps in knowledge
  66. ECOLOGY: Enhanced: Coral Reefs and the Global Network of Marine Protected Areas
  67. Evaluation of the lethal and sub-lethal toxicity and potential endocrine disrupting effect of nonylphenol on the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha)
  68. Predicting future discoveries of European marine species by using a non-homogeneous renewal process
  69. Role of cold-water Lophelia pertusa coral reefs as fish habitat in the NE Atlantic
  70. Sea Lice 2003 - Proceedings of the sixth international conference on sea lice biology and control
  71. The endocrine disrupting effect of municipal effluent on the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha)
  72. Long-Term Environmental Monitoring Shows No Impact from Salmon Cage Farming in Lough Allen, an Irish Freshwater Lake
  73. Local and external components of the summertime plankton community in Lough Hyne, Ireland a stratified marine inlet
  74. Introduction
  75. Editorial
  76. Developing Species Information Systems: The European Register of Marine Species (ERMS)
  77. KELLY, KATHERINE S., COSTELLO, MARK J., BAXTER, PETER W., and PICTON, BERNARD E. An indexed bibliography of Irish marine literature from 1839–1997. Environmental Sciences Unit, Trinity College, Dublin: 1997. Pp 243. No price given. ISBN 0-9526-735-2-5.
  78. The Relative Lengths of Seashore Substrata Around the Coastline of Ireland as Determined by Digital Methods in a Geographical Information System
  79. Editorial
  80. Estuaries and coastal waters: research and management — Introduction
  81. Turnover of transient species as a contributor to the richness of a stable amphipod (Crustacea) fauna in a sea inlet
  82. Long Term Trends in the Discovery Of Marine Species New to Science Which Occur in Britain and Ireland
  83. The impact of sewage sludge exposure on the reproduction of the sand goby, Pomatoschistus minutus
  84. The nutrient economy of a marine inlet: Lough Hyne, South West Ireland
  85. Imminent extinction of the Nore freshwater pearl mussel Margaritifera durrovensisPhillips: A species unique to Ireland
  86. Toxicity of sewage sludge to marine organisms: A review
  87. Effects of sewage sludge exposure on growth, feeding and protein synthesis of dab (Limanda limanda (L.))
  88. Toxicity of sewage sludge toCrangon crangonandArtemia salina,with reference to other marine Crustacea
  89. Biogeography of Alien Amphipods Occurring in Ireland, and Interactions With Native Species
  90. Effects of sewage sludge on immune responses in the dab, Limanda limanda (L.)
  91. Abundance and spatial overlap of gobies (Gobiidae) in Lough Hyne, Ireland
  92. Effects of sewage sludge on marine fish embryos and larvae
  93. Immunocompetence as a measure of the biological effects of sewage sludge pollution in fish
  94. The diet of the two-spot goby, Gobiusculus flavescens (Pisces)
  95. Estuarine ecotoxicology
  96. Diet ofDinocras cephalotesandperla bipunctata(Plecoptera, Perlidae) in a South‐West Irish stream
  97. Breeding periodicity and sex ratios in epifaunal marine amphipoda in Lough Hyne, Ireland
  98. Observations on the parasitism ofAora gracilis(Bate) (Amphipoda) bySphaeronella leuckartiiSalensky (Copepoda), with a review of amphipod-Sphaeronellaassociations
  99. Global biodiversity and biogeography of razor clams (Solenidae: Bivalvia)
  100. Topographic statistics for the surface and seabed area, volume, depths, and slopes for the world's seas, oceans and countries
  101. New database of all marine species biological and traits