331 results on '"Warner, Mark E."'
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2. The roles of heating rate, intensity, and duration on the response of corals and their endosymbiotic algae to thermal stress
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3. Similarities in biomass and energy reserves among coral colonies from contrasting reef environments
4. Unlocking the black-box of inorganic carbon-uptake and utilization strategies among coral endosymbionts (Symbiodiniaceae)
5. Robert Kent Trench (1940–2021): a life devoted to symbiotic mutualisms and seeking nature’s truth
6. Influence of reef habitat on coral microbial associations.
7. Functional trait thermal acclimation differs across three species of mid-Atlantic harmful algae
8. Effects of a bacteria-produced algicide on non-target marine invertebrate species
9. Long-term recovery of Caribbean corals from bleaching
10. Quantitative interpretation of vertical profiles of calcium and pH in the coral coelenteron
11. Moderate nutrient concentrations are not detrimental to corals under future ocean conditions
12. The Ecological Distribution and Comparative Photobiology of Symbiotic Dinoflagellates from Reef Corals in Belize: Potential Implications for Coral Bleaching
13. A Connection between Colony Biomass and Death in Caribbean Reef-Building Corals
14. Symbiotic Dinoflagellate Functional Diversity Mediates Coral Survival under Ecological Crisis
15. Correction to: High-temperature acclimation strategies within the thermally tolerant endosymbiont Symbiodiniumtrenchii and its coral host, Turbinariareniformis, differ with changing pCO2 and nutrients
16. Short-term and long-term exposure to combined elevated temperature and CO2 leads to differential growth, toxicity, and fatty acid profiles in the harmful dinoflagellate Karlodinium veneficum.
17. Damage to Photosystem II in Symbiotic Dinoflagellates. A Determinant of Coral Bleaching
18. Effects of the bacterial algicide IRI-160AA on cellular morphology of harmful dinoflagellates
19. The Photobiology of Symbiodinium spp.: Linking Physiological Diversity to the Implications of Stress and Resilience
20. Thermotolerant coral–algal mutualisms maintain high rates of nutrient transfer while exposed to heat stress
21. High physiological function for corals with thermally tolerant, host-adapted symbionts
22. Correction to: Coral microbiome composition along the northern Red Sea suggests high plasticity of bacterial and specificity of endosymbiotic dinoflagellate communities
23. Correction to: Lipid class composition of annually bleached Caribbean corals
24. Coral microbiome composition along the northern Red Sea suggests high plasticity of bacterial and specificity of endosymbiotic dinoflagellate communities
25. Lipid class composition of annually bleached Caribbean corals
26. Host–symbiont combinations dictate the photo-physiological response of reef-building corals to thermal stress
27. Building consensus around the assessment and interpretation of Symbiodiniaceae diversity
28. The Coral Bleaching Automated Stress System (CBASS): A low‐cost, portable system for standardized empirical assessments of coral thermal limits
29. Building consensus around the assessment and interpretation of Symbiodiniaceae diversity
30. Formal recognition of host‐generalist species of dinoflagellate ( Cladocopium , Symbiodiniaceae) mutualistic with Indo‐Pacific reef corals
31. Annual coral bleaching and the long-term recovery capacity of coral
32. Understanding Ocean Acidification Impacts on Organismal to Ecological Scales
33. Comparing the diel vertical migration of Karlodinium veneficum (dinophyceae) and Chattonella subsalsa (Raphidophyceae): PSII photochemistry, circadian control, and carbon assimilation
34. Calyx dimensions and distances do not differ between different host-symbiont combinations. from High physiological function for corals with thermally tolerant, host-adapted symbionts
35. Kinetic and metabolic isotope effects in coral skeletal carbon isotopes: A re-evaluation using experimental coral bleaching as a case study
36. Effects of a bacterial algicide, IRI-160AA, on dinoflagellates and the microbial community in microcosm experiments
37. Chlorophyll Fluorescence in Reef Building Corals
38. Organic carbon fluxes mediated by corals at elevated p CO₂ and temperature
39. Differential carbon utilization and asexual reproduction under elevated p CO₂ conditions in the model anemone, Exaiptasia pallida , hosting different symbionts
40. A molecular physiology basis for functional diversity of hydrogen peroxide production amongst Symbiodinium spp. (Dinophyceae)
41. Coral calcification under environmental change: a direct comparison of the alkalinity anomaly and buoyant weight techniques
42. Can heterotrophic uptake of dissolved organic carbon and zooplankton mitigate carbon budget deficits in annually bleached corals?
43. Contrasting physiological plasticity in response to environmental stress within different cnidarians and their respective symbionts
44. Symbiodinium spp. in colonies of eastern Pacific Pocillopora spp. are highly stable despite the prevalence of low-abundance background populations
45. Investigation of the algicidal exudate produced by Shewanella sp. IRI-160 and its effect on dinoflagellates
46. Erratum : Differential effects of ocean acidification on growth and photosynthesis among phylotypes of Symbiodinium (Dinophyceae)
47. Differential effects of ocean acidification on growth and photosynthesis among phylotypes of Symbiodinium (Dinophyceae)
48. Host–symbiont recombination versus natural selection in the response of coral–dinoflagellate symbioses to environmental disturbance
49. The Relative Significance of Host-Habitat, Depth, and Geography on the Ecology, Endemism, and Speciation of Coral Endosymbionts in the Genus Symbiodinium
50. PSII photoinhibition and photorepair in Symbiodinium (Pyrrhophyta) differs between thermally tolerant and sensitive phylotypes
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