#2 Sandin et al (2008) Baselines and Degradation of Coral Reefs in the Northern Line Islands. PLoS ONE https://t.co/QDfp20bvA8
RT @BrackenLab: Shifting baselines. Reminds me of this great paper and my own perceptions of what a healthy reef looks like: https://t.co/j…
RT @BrackenLab: Shifting baselines. Reminds me of this great paper and my own perceptions of what a healthy reef looks like: https://t.co/j…
RT @BrackenLab: Shifting baselines. Reminds me of this great paper and my own perceptions of what a healthy reef looks like: https://t.co/j…
Shifting baselines. Reminds me of this great paper and my own perceptions of what a healthy reef looks like: https://t.co/jEv4bZszXM @StuartSandin @Enric_Sala https://t.co/X91ueofgIF
#365papers Baselines and Degradation of Coral Reefs in the Northern Line Islands https://t.co/BG4aSWD4Et
RT @realscientists: The Line Islands in particular have been targeted for this approach. https://t.co/rEc85DbYPX
The Line Islands in particular have been targeted for this approach. https://t.co/rEc85DbYPX
Some background reading http://t.co/BG4aSWD4Et and http://t.co/pY44I7E0SC with http://t.co/RkK529FTrn for context cc @baumlab @nickdulvy
So, reef-associated sharks are associated with better coral cover. Which drives which? http://t.co/iYmqI6bngb vs. http://t.co/TyZWbEURE4
More #sharks and other apex predators than herbivores on Palmyra atoll http://t.co/okZfrcp32D