Publications by authors named "B I Van Tussenbroek"

Article Synopsis
  • * Recent analysis of sediment cores revealed that higher sedimentation rates were recorded during peak years of sargassum influx, leading to increased carbon burial rates.
  • * This study is the first to investigate the relationship between sargassum influx, mass accumulation rates, and carbon burial in seagrass sediments, suggesting the need for ongoing monitoring in the future.
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Article Synopsis
  • Many tropical coastal ecosystems are affected by human activities related to tourism and land/sea use.
  • We created a method to engage stakeholders early in ecological research to map the Social-Ecological System (SES) in Lac Bay, Bonaire, especially addressing the new challenge of massive sargassum landings.
  • Our Group Model Building methodology helped us uncover key drivers and feedbacks, prioritize urgent research questions, and develop management strategies for the conservation of seagrass beds and mangrove forests in the area.
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Climate change is altering the functioning of foundational ecosystems. While the direct effects of warming are expected to influence individual species, the indirect effects of warming on species interactions remain poorly understood. In marine systems, as tropical herbivores undergo poleward range expansion, they may change food web structure and alter the functioning of key habitats.

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Plant species usually have either annual or perennial life cycles, but facultative annual species have annual or perennial populations depending on their environment. In terrestrial angiosperms, facultative annual species are rare, with wild rice being one of the few examples. Our review shows that in marine angiosperms (seagrasses) facultative annual species are more common: six (of 63) seagrass species are facultative annual.

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The holopelagic brown macroalgae Sargassum natans and Sargassum fluitans form essential habitats for attached and mobile fauna which contributes to a unique biodiversity in the Atlantic Ocean. However, holopelagic Sargassum natans (genotype I & VIII) and Sargassum fluitans (genotype III) have begun forming large accumulations with subsequent strandings on the western coast of Africa, the Caribbean and northern Brazil, threatening local biodiversity of coastal ecosystems and triggering economic losses. Moreover, stranded masses of holopelagic Sargassum may introduce or facilitate growth of bacteria that are not normally abundant in coastal regions where Sargassum is washing ashore.

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