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Adaptation of cyanobacteria to the sulfide-rich microenvironment of black band disease of coral [PDF]
Laurie L Richardson, Richardson Laurie L
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Nutrient enrichment enhances black band disease progression in corals
Coral Reefs, 2006Infectious diseases are recognized as significant contributors to the dramatic loss of corals observed worldwide. However, the causes of increased coral disease prevalence and severity are not well understood. One potential factor is elevated nutrient concentration related to localized anthropogenic activities such as inadequate waste water treatment ...
Joshua D. Voss, Laurie L. Richardson
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Extent and effect of Black Band Disease on a Caribbean reef
Coral Reefs, 1991The effect of Black Band Disease (BBD) among colonies ofMontastrea annularis, M. cavernosa, Diploria strigosa, D. labryinthiformis, S. siderea andColpophyllia natans was determined at 7 shallow locations in the Virgin Islands. Between September 1988 and November 1988, 0.2% of 9204 colonies of these species were infected with BBD in 6908 m2 of reef at ...
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Abundance and distribution of black band disease on coral reefs in the northern Florida Keys
Coral Reefs, 1996The abundance and distribution of black band disease on the reef building coralsMontastraea annularis, M. cavernosa, Colpophyllia natans, Diploria clivosa, D. labyrinthiformis andD. strigosa were determined at Algae Reef, Grecian Rocks and Key Largo Dry Rocks in the Key Largo National Marine Sanctuary, Florida, USA. During July and November of 1992 and
K. G. Kuta, L. L. Richardson
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Black Band disease-related (BBD) cyanobacterium from Okinawan corals
Journal of Applied Phycology, 2018The number of reports of coral disease is increasing worldwide. Among coral diseases, BBD was discovered first, along Caribbean coastlines in 1973. The main symptom of BBD is a black mat on the surface of the infected coral tissue. This black mat is a microbial consortium in which a dominant filamentous cyanobacterium proliferates.
Philipus Uli Basa Hutabarat +2 more
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Coral disease succession in Tobago: from yellow band to black band disease
Coral Reefs, 2008J. Mallela, R. Parkinson
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Recruitment of scleractinians onto the skeletons of corals killed by black band disease
Coral Reefs, 2000To determine what happens to scleractinian corals that have been killed by black band disease (BBD), massive corals with BBD were monitored for 11 years on a shallow reef (
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Cancer statistics for African American/Black People 2022
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022Angela N Giaquinto +2 more
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Black Banded Disease of Mango: A Review
BIOINFOLET - A Quarterly Journal of Life SciencesAnjali R. Patil, Shivranjani P. Sutar
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