5 results match your criteria: "School of the Environment The University of Queensland[Affiliation]"

Subtropical reefs host a dynamic mix of tropical, subtropical, and temperate species that is changing due to shifts in the abundance and distribution of species in response to ocean warming. In these transitional communities, biogeographic affinity is expected to predict changes in species composition, with projected increases of tropical species and declines in cool-affinity temperate species. Understanding population dynamics of species along biogeographic transition zones is critical, especially for habitat engineers such as sea urchins that can facilitate ecosystem shifts through grazing.

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Article Synopsis
  • Managing coastal wetlands is an effective way to lower greenhouse gas levels and support the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
  • Blue carbon projects focus on ecosystems like mangroves, saltmarshes, and seagrass to enhance carbon storage and reduce emissions, but tidal freshwater and other similar wetlands also hold significant potential.
  • The article argues for considering all tidal-influenced wetlands as blue carbon ecosystems, promoting their protection and restoration to combat emissions while boosting biodiversity and providing additional benefits.
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Damselfishes (Pomacentridae) are one of the most behaviourally diverse, colourful and species-rich reef fish families. One remarkable characteristic of damselfishes is their communication in ultraviolet (UV) light. Not only are they sensitive to UV, they are also prone to have UV-reflective colours and patterns enabling social signalling.

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Climate change projections for coral reefs are founded exclusively on sea surface temperatures (SST). While SST projections are relevant for the shallowest reefs, neglecting ocean stratification overlooks the striking differences in temperature experienced by deeper reefs for all or part of the year. Density stratification creates a buoyancy barrier partitioning the upper and lower parts of the water column.

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Understanding how biodiversity originates and is maintained are fundamental challenge in evolutionary biology. Speciation is a continuous process and progression along this continuum depends on the interplay between evolutionary forces driving divergence and forces promoting genetic homogenisation. Coral reefs are broadly connected yet highly heterogeneous ecosystems, and divergence with gene flow at small spatial scales might therefore be common.

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