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Genetic Assessment of the Spinner Dolphin ( Stenella longirostris ) in the Largest Offshore Sedimentary Basin in Brazil

open access: yesMarine Mammal Science, Volume 41, Issue 4, October 2025.
ABSTRACT Assessing the genetic diversity of a population is critical to evaluate its resilience in the face of anthropogenic impacts. This study aimed to assess the genetic diversity and structure of the spinner dolphins ( Stenella longirostris ) that inhabit the Santos Basin (SB), south and southeast Brazil.
Thaís Leal   +8 more
wiley   +1 more source
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Knowledge Gaps in the Biology, Ecology, and Management of the Pacific Crown-of-Thorns Sea Star Acanthaster sp. on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef

The Biological Bulletin, 2021
Crown-of-thorns sea stars (Acanthaster sp.) are among the most studied coral reef organisms, owing to their propensity to undergo major population irruptions, which contribute to significant coral loss and reef degradation throughout the Indo-Pacific ...
M. Pratchett   +39 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Spatial resilience of the Great Barrier Reef under cumulative disturbance impacts

Global Change Biology, 2019
In the face of increasing cumulative effects from human and natural disturbances, sustaining coral reefs will require a deeper understanding of the drivers of coral resilience in space and time. Here we develop a high‐resolution, spatially explicit model
C. Mellin   +11 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Great Barrier Reef and the Great Barrier Reef Expedition 1973

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1978
The Great Barrier Reef, the world’s longest barrier reef, extends for 2000 km along the northeast coast of Australia. It is a complex feature, with outer ribbon reefs and inner platform and patch reefs of widely differing forms. Most previous work has concentrated in the extreme south (at Heron and One Tree Islands) or in the central sector (at Low ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Foundations of the Great Barrier Reef

2007
Introduction For much of its length even the innermost reefs of the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) are beyond sight of the mainland. The main reef tract occupies the outer 30% to 50% of the shallow ( et al ., 1983), and as Lloyd (1977) noted, the geology of the shelf is closely related to the onshore geology of Queensland. For a large part of their history
Scott G. Smithers   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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