Status and progress in coral reef disease research.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] B. Willis,et al. Distribution, host range and large-scale spatial variability in black band disease prevalence on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[2] A. Bruckner,et al. Consequences of yellow band disease (YBD) on Montastraea annularis (species complex) populations on remote reefs off Mona Island, Puerto Rico. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[3] S. Viehman,et al. Culture and identification of Desulfovibrio spp. from corals infected by black band disease on Dominican and Florida Keys reefs. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[4] M. Slattery,et al. Colony versus population variation in susceptibility and resistance to dark spot syndrome in the Caribbean coral Siderastrea siderea. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[5] L. Kaczmarsky. Coral disease dynamics in the central Philippines. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[6] C. Harvell,et al. Longitudinal study of aspergillosis in sea fan corals. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[7] J. Bruno,et al. Coral diversity and disease in Mexico. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[8] B. Willis,et al. A single cyanobacterial ribotype is associated with both red and black bands on diseased corals from Palau. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[9] O. Pantos,et al. Bacterial community structure associated with white band disease in the elkhorn coral Acropora palmata determined using culture-independent 16S rRNA techniques. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[10] D. Lipscomb,et al. Folliculinid ciliates: a new threat to Caribbean corals? , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[11] K. Kim,et al. Changes in the microbial communities associated with Gorgonia ventalina during aspergillosis infection. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[12] O. Hoegh‐Guldberg,et al. Viruses: agents of coral disease? , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[13] L. Richardson,et al. Coral diseases near Lee Stocking Island, Bahamas: patterns and potential drivers. , 2006, Diseases of aquatic organisms.
[14] E. Weil,et al. Coralline white band syndrome, a coralline algal affliction in the tropical Atlantic , 2005, Coral Reefs.
[15] Shawn W. Polson,et al. Relationship of Vibrio Species Infection and Elevated Temperatures to Yellow Blotch/Band Disease in Caribbean Corals , 2004, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[16] S. Ellner,et al. The rising tide of ocean diseases: unsolved problems and research priorities , 2004 .
[17] R. Aronson,et al. White-band disease and the changing face of Caribbean coral reefs , 2001, Hydrobiologia.
[18] T. Mitchell,et al. How are climate and marine biological outbreaks functionally linked? , 2001, Hydrobiologia.
[19] M. Littler,et al. A pathogen of reef-building coralline algae discovered in the South Pacific , 1994, Coral Reefs.
[20] E. Weil. Coral Reef Diseases in the Wider Caribbean , 2004 .
[21] Y. Loya,et al. Coral Health and Disease , 2004, Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
[22] E. Weil,et al. Aspergillosis of Gorgonians , 2004 .
[23] A. Grant,et al. Long-Term Region-Wide Declines in Caribbean Corals , 2003, Science.
[24] R. Grosberg,et al. Climate Change, Human Impacts, and the Resilience of Coral Reefs , 2003, Science.
[25] Shawn W. Polson,et al. Aurantimonas coralicida gen. nov., sp. nov., the causative agent of white plague type II on Caribbean scleractinian corals. , 2003, International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology.
[26] R. Ostfeld,et al. Climate Warming and Disease Risks for Terrestrial and Marine Biota , 2002, Science.
[27] Shawn W. Polson,et al. The etiology of white pox, a lethal disease of the Caribbean elkhorn coral, Acropora palmata , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[28] R. J. Bruckner,et al. Endangered acroporid corals of the Caribbean , 2002, Coral Reefs.
[29] K. Bjorndal,et al. Historical Overfishing and the Recent Collapse of Coastal Ecosystems , 2001, Science.
[30] E. Green,et al. The significance of coral disease epizootiology for coral reef conservation , 2000 .
[31] Clive Wilkinson,et al. Status of Coral Reefs of the World: 2020 , 2000 .
[32] C. D. Harvell,et al. Fungal disease resistance of Caribbean sea fan corals (Gorgonia spp.) , 2000 .
[33] C. Wilkinson. Status of coral reefs of the world , 2000 .
[34] E. Weil,et al. Geographic variability in the incidence of coral and octocoral diseases in the wider Caribbean , 2000 .
[35] J. Burkholder,et al. Emerging marine diseases--climate links and anthropogenic factors. , 1999, Science.
[36] R. Aronson,et al. Extrinsic control of species replacement on a Holocene reef in Belize: the role of coral disease , 1998, Coral Reefs.
[37] M. Littler,et al. An undescribed fungal pathogen of reef-forming crustose corraline algae discovered in American Samoa , 1998, Coral Reefs.
[38] I. Nagelkerken,et al. Widespread disease in Caribbean sea fans: II. Patterns of infection and tissue loss , 1997 .
[39] I. Nagelkerken,et al. Caribbean sea-fan mortalities , 1996, Nature.
[40] Y. Loya,et al. Bacterial infection and coral bleaching , 1996, Nature.
[41] M. Littler,et al. Impact of CLOD Pathogen on Pacific Coral Reefs , 1995, Science.
[42] T. Hughes. Catastrophes, Phase Shifts, and Large-Scale Degradation of a Caribbean Coral Reef , 1994, Science.
[43] R. Carpenter. Mass mortality ofDiadema antillarum , 1990 .
[44] R. Carpenter. Mass mortality of Diadema antillarum. I : Long-term effects on sea urchin population-dynamics and coral reef algal communities , 1990 .
[45] D. R. Robertson,et al. Spread of Diadema Mass Mortality Through the Caribbean , 1984, Science.