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      Bottlenecks to coral recovery in the Seychelles

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      Coral Reefs
      Springer Nature America, Inc

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          Rising to the challenge of sustaining coral reef resilience.

          Phase-shifts from one persistent assemblage of species to another have become increasingly commonplace on coral reefs and in many other ecosystems due to escalating human impacts. Coral reef science, monitoring and global assessments have focused mainly on producing detailed descriptions of reef decline, and continue to pay insufficient attention to the underlying processes causing degradation. A more productive way forward is to harness new theoretical insights and empirical information on why some reefs degrade and others do not. Learning how to avoid undesirable phase-shifts, and how to reverse them when they occur, requires an urgent reform of scientific approaches, policies, governance structures and coral reef management. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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            RECRUITMENT AND THE LOCAL DYNAMICS OF OPEN MARINE POPULATIONS

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              Recruitment dynamics in complex life cycles.

              Organisms living in the marine rocky intertidal zone compete for space. This, together with predation, physical disruption, and differing species tolerances to physiological stress, explains the structure of the ecological communities at some sites. At other sites the supply of larvae is limiting, and events in the offshore waters, such as wind-driven upwelling, explain the composition of intertidal communities. Whether the community ecology at a site is governed by adult-adult interactions within the site, or by limitations to the supply of larvae reaching the site, is determined by the regional pattern of circulation in the coastal waters. Models combining larval circulation with adult interactions can potentially forecast population fluctuations. These findings illustrate how processes in different ecological habitats are coupled.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Coral Reefs
                Coral Reefs
                Springer Nature America, Inc
                0722-4028
                1432-0975
                June 2014
                March 18 2014
                June 2014
                : 33
                : 2
                : 449-461
                Article
                10.1007/s00338-014-1137-2
                975d9dd1-5758-4ace-807d-37256c668529
                © 2014
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