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66 results on '"Thorrold SR"'

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1. Convergence of marine megafauna movement patterns in coastal and open oceans.

3. Evidence of self-recruitment in demersal marine populations

17. Linking vertical movements of large pelagic predators with distribution patterns of biomass in the open ocean.

18. Building use-inspired species distribution models: Using multiple data types to examine and improve model performance.

19. Like a rolling stone: Colonization and migration dynamics of the gray reef shark ( Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos ).

21. Diving into the vertical dimension of elasmobranch movement ecology.

22. Global collision-risk hotspots of marine traffic and the world's largest fish, the whale shark.

23. Pieces in a global puzzle: Population genetics at two whale shark aggregations in the western Indian Ocean.

24. Reply to: Caution over the use of ecological big data for conservation.

25. Reply to: Shark mortality cannot be assessed by fishery overlap alone.

26. Strong habitat and weak genetic effects shape the lifetime reproductive success in a wild clownfish population.

27. Contrasting global, regional and local patterns of genetic structure in gray reef shark populations from the Indo-Pacific region.

28. Multi-method assessment of whale shark (Rhincodon typus) residency, distribution, and dispersal behavior at an aggregation site in the Red Sea.

29. Mesoscale eddies release pelagic sharks from thermal constraints to foraging in the ocean twilight zone.

30. Global spatial risk assessment of sharks under the footprint of fisheries.

31. Evidence and patterns of tuna spawning inside a large no-take Marine Protected Area.

32. Mesoscale eddies influence the movements of mature female white sharks in the Gulf Stream and Sargasso Sea.

33. Stable isotope analyses of feather amino acids identify penguin migration strategies at ocean basin scales.

34. Marine Dispersal Scales Are Congruent over Evolutionary and Ecological Time.

35. First genealogy for a wild marine fish population reveals multigenerational philopatry.

36. Seascape and life-history traits do not predict self-recruitment in a coral reef fish.

37. Coral reef fish populations can persist without immigration.

38. Carbon and nitrogen isotope fractionation of amino acids in an avian marine predator, the gentoo penguin (Pygoscelis papua).

39. Movement patterns of juvenile whale sharks tagged at an aggregation site in the Red Sea.

40. Extreme diving behaviour in devil rays links surface waters and the deep ocean.

41. Diving behavior of the reef manta ray links coral reefs with adjacent deep pelagic habitats.

42. Vertebral bomb radiocarbon suggests extreme longevity in white sharks.

43. Dispersal of grouper larvae drives local resource sharing in a coral reef fishery.

44. Linking habitat mosaics and connectivity in a coral reef seascape.

45. Larval export from marine reserves and the recruitment benefit for fish and fisheries.

46. Probability of successful larval dispersal declines fivefold over 1 km in a coral reef fish.

47. Persistence of self-recruitment and patterns of larval connectivity in a marine protected area network.

48. Terrestrial chemical cues help coral reef fish larvae locate settlement habitat surrounding islands.

49. Connectivity dominates larval replenishment in a coastal reef fish metapopulation.

50. High connectivity among locally adapted populations of a marine fish (Menidia menidia).

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