All Stories

  1. They are here to stay: the biology and ecology of lionfish ( Pterois miles ) in the Mediterranean Sea
  2. How experimental physiology and ecological niche modelling can inform the management of marine bioinvasions?
  3. Diatoms Dominate and Alter Marine Food-Webs When CO2 Rises
  4. Genetic Data Suggest Multiple Introductions of the Lionfish (Pterois miles) into the Mediterranean Sea
  5. Genetic analysis of a recently established Undaria pinnatifida (Laminariales: Alariaceae) population in the northern Wadden Sea reveals close proximity between drifting thalli and the attached population
  6. Efficient coralline algal psbA mini barcoding and High Resolution Melt (HRM) analysis using a simple custom DNA preparation
  7. Ocean acidification drives community shifts towards simplified non-calcified habitats in a subtropical−temperate transition zone
  8. Ten years of Brazilian ballast water management
  9. Tropical CO2 seeps reveal the impact of ocean acidification on coral reef invertebrate recruitment
  10. Photoprotective responses in a brown macroalgae Cystoseira tamariscifolia to increases in CO2 and temperature
  11. Linking the biological impacts of ocean acidification on oysters to changes in ecosystem services: A review
  12. Strandings of NE Atlantic gorgonians
  13. Assessing larval connectivity for marine spatial planning in the Adriatic
  14. Ecophysiological responses to elevated CO2 and temperature in Cystoseira tamariscifolia (Phaeophyceae)
  15. Invasive species in the Northeastern and Southwestern Atlantic Ocean: A review
  16. Ocean acidification can mediate biodiversity shifts by changing biogenic habitat
  17. Ocean acidification reduces demersal zooplankton that reside in tropical coral reefs
  18. Impacts of ocean acidification in a warming Mediterranean Sea: An overview
  19. Seasonal biochemical and photophysiological responses in the intertidal macroalga Cystoseira tamariscifolia (Ochrophyta)
  20. Individual and population-level responses to ocean acidification
  21. Marine Microphytobenthic Assemblage Shift along a Natural Shallow-Water CO2 Gradient Subjected to Multiple Environmental Stressors
  22. Warming and acidification benefits invasive marine organisms
  23. The global importance of regional studies in marine science: Trans-boundary pollutants matter
  24. Impact of Ocean Acidification on Marine Organisms—Unifying Principles and New Paradigms
  25. Ocean acidification bends the mermaid's wineglass
  26. Herbivore diversity improves benthic community resilience to ocean acidification
  27. Macroalgal responses to ocean acidification depend on nutrient and light levels
  28. Physiological advantages of dwarfing in surviving extinctions in high-CO2 oceans
  29. Seaweed fails to prevent ocean acidification impact on foraminifera along a shallow-water CO2gradient
  30. Calcification is not the Achilles’ heel of cold-water corals in an acidifying ocean
  31. The need for regional studies in marine science
  32. Metagenomics Reveals Planktonic Bacterial Community Shifts across a Natural CO 2 Gradient in the Mediterranean Sea
  33. Ocean acidification through the lens of ecological theory
  34. Four critical issues for good environmental status in NEA
  35. Limpets counteract ocean acidification induced shell corrosion by thickening of aragonitic shell layers
  36. Phylogenetic analysis of rhodolith formation in the Corallinales (Rhodophyta)
  37. Response of multi-metric indices to anthropogenic pressures in distinct marine habitats: The need for recalibration to allow wider applicability
  38. Seasonality Affects Macroalgal Community Response to Increases in pCO2
  39. Limpets counteract ocean acidification induced shell corrosion by thickening of aragonitic shell layers
  40. Overfishing and the Replacement of Demersal Finfish by Shellfish: An Example from the English Channel
  41. Intertidal epilithic bacteria diversity changes along a naturally occurring carbon dioxide and pH gradient
  42. The future of the northeast Atlantic benthic flora in a high CO2world
  43. Seaweed chemical diversity: an additional and efficient tool for coastal evaluation
  44. Future-proofing marine protected area networks for cold water coral reefs
  45. Exposure of Mediterranean Countries to Ocean Acidification
  46. Sea urchin response to rising pCO2 shows ocean acidification may fundamentally alter the chemistry of marine skeletons
  47. The diversity of seaweeds on maerl in the NE Atlantic
  48. Mapping fisheries for marine spatial planning: Gear-specific vessel monitoring system (VMS), marine conservation and offshore renewable energy
  49. Ocean acidification impairs vermetid reef recruitment
  50. Shallow Water Marine Sediment Bacterial Community Shifts Along a Natural CO2 Gradient in the Mediterranean Sea Off Vulcano, Italy
  51. Assessing the extent of establishment of Undaria pinnatifida in Plymouth Sound Special Area of Conservation, UK
  52. Seasonal and depth-driven changes in rhodolith bed structure and associated macroalgae off Arvoredo island (southeastern Brazil)
  53. Coastal urbanization leads to remarkable seaweed species loss and community shifts along the SW Atlantic
  54. Effects of ocean acidification on sponge communities
  55. Future seagrass beds: Can increased productivity lead to increased carbon storage?
  56. Benthic foraminifera show some resilience to ocean acidification in the northern Gulf of California, Mexico
  57. Distribution of sea urchins living near shallow water CO2 vents is dependent upon species acid–base and ion-regulatory abilities
  58. Geochemical survey of Levante Bay, Vulcano Island (Italy), a natural laboratory for the study of ocean acidification
  59. Long-Term Trends in Calcifying Plankton and pH in the North Sea
  60. Global environmental changes: setting priorities for Latin American coastal habitats
  61. Towards improved socio-economic assessments of ocean acidification’s impacts
  62. Sea anemones may thrive in a high CO 2 world
  63. Marine bivalve shell geochemistry and ultrastructure from modern low pH environments: environmental effect versus experimental bias
  64. Temperate and tropical brown macroalgae thrive, despite decalcification, along natural CO2gradients
  65. Community-level response of coastal microbial biofilms to ocean acidification in a natural carbon dioxide vent ecosystem
  66. Ocean Acidification and the Loss of Phenolic Substances in Marine Plants
  67. <sup>210</sup>Pb-<sup>226</sup>Ra chronology reveals rapid growth rate of <i>Madrepora oculata</i> and <i>Lophelia pertusa</i> on world's largest cold-water coral reef
  68. Global habitat suitability of cold‐water octocorals
  69. Responses of marine benthic microalgae to elevated CO2
  70. Predicting ecosystem shifts requires new approaches that integrate the effects of climate change across entire systems
  71. Coral and mollusc resistance to ocean acidification adversely affected by warming
  72. Assessment of pH variability at a coastal CO2 vent for ocean acidification studies
  73. In situ observations of fish associated with coral reefs off Ireland
  74. The Role of Retinoic Acid in Tolerance and Immunity
  75. No reason for complacency
  76. Effects of ocean acidification on macroalgal communities
  77. Seamounts as refugia from ocean acidification for cold-water stony corals
  78. Modern seawater acidification: the response of foraminifera to high-CO2 conditions in the Mediterranean Sea
  79. Effects of ocean acidification on invertebrate settlement at volcanic CO2 vents
  80. Association between the squat lobster Gastroptychus formosus and cold-water corals in the North Atlantic
  81. Effects of ocean acidification and high temperatures on the bryozoanMyriapora truncataat natural CO2vents
  82. The Ecology of Seamounts: Structure, Function, and Human Impacts
  83. Design of Marine Protected Areas on high seas and territorial waters of Rockall Bank
  84. Predicting global habitat suitability for stony corals on seamounts
  85. Subtle but significant effects of CO2 acidified seawater on embryos of the intertidal snail, Littorina obtusata
  86. Mesmeric Experiences
  87. Effects of naturally acidified seawater on seagrass calcareous epibionts
  88. Volcanic carbon dioxide vents show ecosystem effects of ocean acidification
  89. Preserving deep-sea natural heritage: Emerging issues in offshore conservation and management
  90. Effects of anthropogenic seawater acidification on acid–base balance in the sea urchin Psammechinus miliaris
  91. Impact of fish farms on maerl beds in strongly tidal areas
  92. Marine Ecology. Process, Systems, and Impacts
  93. Maerl grounds provide both refuge and high growth potential for juvenile queen scallops (Aequipecten opercularis L.)
  94. A new species of amphipod crustacean, Pleusymtes comitari sp. nov., associated with gorgonians on deep-water coral reefs off Ireland
  95. Attachment of the juvenile queen scallop (Aequipecten opercularis (L.)) to maerl in mesocosm conditions; juvenile habitat selection
  96. Small-scale distribution of juvenile gadoids in shallow inshore waters; what role does maerl play?
  97. Substratum heterogeneity of dredged vs un-dredged maerl grounds
  98. An experimental study of the ecological impacts of hydraulic bivalve dredging on maerl
  99. Bivalve fishing and maerl-bed conservation in France and the UK?retrospect and prospect
  100. Conservation and management of northeast Atlantic and Mediterranean maerl beds
  101. Problems facing maerl conservation in Brittany
  102. Trawling damage to Northeast Atlantic ancient coral reefs
  103. Scallop dredging has profound, long-term impacts on maerl habitats
  104. Limaria hians (Mollusca: Limacea): a neglected reef-forming keystone species
  105. Upogebia deltaura (Crustacea: Thalassinidea) in Clyde Sea maerl beds, Scotland
  106. Observations and possible function of the striking anterior coloration pattern of Galathea intermedia (Crustacea: Decapoda: Anomura)
  107. The impact of Rapido trawling for scallops,Pecten jacobaeus(L.), on the benthos of the Gulf of Venice
  108. Pipeline leak into Mersey
  109. Jason Hall Spencer Interview Part 1
  110. Jason Hall Spencer Interview Part 2
  111. Jason Hall Spencer Interview Part 3
  112. Jason Hall Spencer Interview Part 4
  113. Jason Hall Spencer Interview Part 5
  114. Jason Hall Spencer Interview Part 7
  115. Jason Hall Spencer Interview Part 8
  116. Jason Hall Spencer Interview: Introduction
  117. Jason Hall Spencer Interview: Complete Video
  118. Jason Hall Spencer Interview Part 5
  119. Corals on Seamounts
  120. Climate records from the Faroe-Shetland Channel using Lophelia pertusa (Linnaeus, 1758)
  121. Distribution and habitats of Acesta excavata (Bivalvia: Limidae) with new data on its shell ultrastructure
  122. CHAPTER I
  123. CHAPTER II