All Stories

  1. Hurricane Effects on Seagrass and Associated Nekton Communities in the Northern Gulf of Mexico
  2. Common fear molecules induce defensive responses in marine prey across trophic levels
  3. Induced defenses as a management tool: Shaping individuals to their environment
  4. Predator signaling of multiple prey on different trophic levels structures trophic cascades
  5. Barnacles as biological flow indicators
  6. Intraspecific Potency of Predation Risk Cues
  7. Drift macroalgae positively influence seagrass-associated nekton communities of the northern Gulf of Mexico
  8. Drift macroalgal distribution in northern Gulf of Mexico seagrass meadows
  9. Regional variation in seagrass complexity drives blue crab Callinectes sapidus mortality and growth across the northern Gulf of Mexico
  10. Use of predator cues to bolster oyster resilience for aquaculture and reef restoration
  11. Environmental Drivers of Seagrass-Associated Nekton Abundance Across the Northern Gulf of Mexico
  12. Timing of Predation Risk During Early Development Influences Oyster Shell Morphology
  13. Storms promote ecosystem resilience by alleviating fishing
  14. Which mechanisms are responsible for population patterns across different quality habitats? A new approach
  15. Nursery Exposure of Oyster Spat to Different Predators Strengthens Oyster Shells
  16. Comparison of Nursery Methods to Strengthen Oysters for Aquaculture
  17. Personality interacts with habitat quality to govern individual mortality and dispersal patterns
  18. Habitat quality mediates personality through differences in social context
  19. Individual personality associated with interactions between physiological condition and the environment
  20. Predator–prey interactions mediated by prey personality and predator hunting mode
  21. Rethinking our approach to multiple stressor studies in marine environments
  22. The Influence of Diet Composition on Fitness of the Blue Crab, Callinectes sapidus
  23. Rhizocephalan infection modifies host food consumption by reducing host activity levels
  24. Effects of predation and parasitism on climbing behavior of the marine snail, Cerithidea scalariformis