Pages that link to "Item:Q54256"
From geokb
The following pages link to Caroline Rogers, Ph.D. (Q54256):
Displayed 50 items.
- Coral Diseases Following Massive Bleaching in 2005 Cause 60 Percent Decline in Coral Cover and Mortality of the Threatened Species, Acropora Palmata, on Reefs in the U.S. Virgin Islands (Q65694) (← links)
- Management implications of fish trap effectiveness in adjacent coral reef and gorgonian habitats (Q144891) (← links)
- Bleaching, disease and recovery in the threatened scleractinian coral Acropora palmata in St. John, US Virgin Islands: 2003-2010 (Q147369) (← links)
- A new protocol for surveying elkhorn and staghorn coral (Q148364) (← links)
- Immediate effects of hurricanes on a diverse coral/mangrove ecosystem in the U.S. Virgin Islands and the potential for recovery (Q149265) (← links)
- What nutrient sources support anomalous growth and the recent sargassum mass stranding on Caribbean beaches? A review (Q149318) (← links)
- A synthesis of coral reef research at Buck Island Reef National Monument and Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Preserve, St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands: 1961 to 2022 (Q150737) (← links)
- Measuring, interpreting, and responding to changes in coral reefs: A challenge for biologists, geologist, and managers (Q151354) (← links)
- Disease prevalence and snail predation associated with swell-generated damage on the threatened coral, <i>Acropora palmata</i> (Lamarck) (Q151722) (← links)
- Distribution and abundance of elkhorn coral, Acropora palmata, and prevalence of white-band disease at Buck Island Reef National Monument, St. Croix, US Virgin Islands (Q152170) (← links)
- Permanent 'phase shifts' or reversible declines in coral cover? Lack of recovery of two coral reefs in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands (Q152304) (← links)
- New geographic records of Hamlets, Hypoplectrus spp. (Serranidae), in the Caribbean Sea (Q152376) (← links)
- The applicability of terrestrial visitor impact management strategies to the protection of coral reefs (Q152526) (← links)
- Confounding factors in coral reef recovery (Q153378) (← links)
- Hurricanes, coral reefs and rainforests: resistance, ruin and recovery in the Caribbean (Q153416) (← links)
- Local variability but landscape stability in coral reef communities following repeated hurricane impacts (Q153421) (← links)
- The productivity of San Cristobal Reef, Puerto Rico (Q155631) (← links)
- Disturbances drive changes in coral community assemblages and coral calcification capacity (Q157225) (← links)
- Coral Bleaching and Disease: Effects on Threatened Corals and Reefs (Q229970) (← links)
- Life on the Edge: Can Corals in Mangroves Provide Insights into Climate Change and Recovery following Severe Hurricane Damage? (Q230031) (← links)
- Dead Porites patch reefs, St. John, US Virgin Islands (Q230666) (← links)
- Early signs of recovery of Acropora palmata in St. John, US Virgin Islands (Q236329) (← links)
- Diverse coral communities in mangrove habitats suggest a novel refuge from climate change (Q236814) (← links)
- Octocoral diseases in a changing ocean (Q239113) (← links)
- A unique coral community in the mangroves of Hurricane Hole, St. John, US Virgin Islands (Q239458) (← links)
- Causes of coral reef degradation (Q240931) (← links)
- Coral reef resilience through biodiversity (Q242686) (← links)
- Coral diseases cause reef decline (Q243620) (← links)
- Coral reef diseases in the Atlantic-Caribbean (Q247974) (← links)
- The habitats exploited and the species trapped in a Caribbean island trap fishery (Q248697) (← links)
- Has white pox disease been affecting Acropora palmata for over 30 years? (Q249768) (← links)
- Bleaching increases likelihood of disease on Acropora palmata (Lamarck) in Hawksnest Bay, St John, US Virgin Islands (Q252736) (← links)
- Ecology of coral reefs in the US Virgin Islands (Q253024) (← links)
- Bleaching increases likelihood of disease on Acropora palmatao (Lamarck) in Hawksnest Bay, St John, US Virgin Islands (Q253043) (← links)
- Structural impacts, carbon losses, and regeneration in mangrove wetlands after two hurricanes on St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands (Q253298) (← links)
- The Sargassum Frogfish (Histrio histrio Linnaeus) observed in mangroves in St. John, US Virgin Islands (Q255635) (← links)
- Assessing effects of sediment delivery to coral reefs: A Caribbean watershed perspective (Q259375) (← links)
- Extensive coral mortality in the US Virgin Islands in 2005/2006: A review of the evidence for synergy among thermal stress, coral bleaching and disease (Q263370) (← links)
- Ten years after the crime: Lasting effects of damage from a cruise ship anchor on a coral reef in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands (Q264207) (← links)
- Words matter: Recommendations for clarifying coral disease nomenclature and terminology (Q269865) (← links)
- A framework for identifying and characterising coral reef “oases” against a backdrop of degradation (Q269887) (← links)
- Similarities and differences between two deadly Caribbean coral diseases: White plague and stony coral tissue loss disease (Q271366) (← links)
- Coral bleaching, hurricane damage, and benthic cover on coral reefs in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands: A comparison of surveys with the chain transect method and videography (Q272050) (← links)
- A biological condition gradient for coral reefs in the US Caribbean Territories: Part I. Coral narrative rules (Q279979) (← links)
- Is Acropora palmata (elkhorn coral) making a comeback in the Virgin Islands? (Q283612) (← links)
- Of reef fishes, overfishing and in situ observations of fish traps in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands (Q289094) (← links)
- High diversity and abundance of scleractinian corals growing on and near mangrove prop roots, St. John, US Virgin Islands (Q290703) (← links)
- Rapidly spreading seagrass invades the Caribbean with unknown ecological consequences (Q292271) (← links)
- Coral reef monitoring manual for the Caribbean and Western Atlantic (Q292666) (← links)
- A biological condition gradient for Caribbean coral reefs: Part II. Numeric rules using sessile benthic organisms (Q293740) (← links)