Estuaries and other coastal habitats are considered essential for the survival of early life stages of commercial, recreational, and other ecologically important species. While early designations simply referred to habitats with higher densities of juveniles as nurseries, the definition was improved by arguing that contribution per unit area to the production of individuals that recruit to adult populations is greater, on average, in nursery habitats. However, this and related approaches typically consider critical habitats as individual, homogeneous entities that are static in nature and do not specifically incorporate important dynamics that determine nursery function. The latter include environmental variability, estuarine hydrodynamics,...
Coastal marine and estuarine ecosystems are highly productive and serve a nursery function for impor...
Intertidal creeks are of particular importance to the nekton community as they represent a critical ...
The recent paper by Dahlgren et al. (2006), which builds on the earlier paper of Beck et al. (2001)...
Presents a study which asserts that a better understanding of habitats which serve as nurseries for ...
Conservation of aquatic resources requires management of both fishing effort and the mosaic of habit...
Coastal ecosystems, such as estuaries, salt marshes, mangroves and seagrass meadows, comprise some o...
Coastal ecosystems, such as estuaries, salt marshes, mangroves and seagrass meadows, comprise some o...
Man‐made infrastructures have become ubiquitous components of coastal landscapes, leading to habitat...
Contains fulltext : 35694.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Much recent atte...
Nearshore‐structured habitats—including underwater grasses, mangroves, coral, and other biogenic ree...
Because estuarine nekton are \u27integrators of the environment\u27 abiotic and biotic factors can i...
© 2018 Estuaries have long been recognized as nursery habitats for various marine fish species. As s...
Much recent attention has been focused on juvenile fish and invertebrate habitat use, particularly d...
Similar to nearshore systems in temperate latitudes, the nursery paradigm for tropical back-reef sys...
Michael W. Beck, Kenneth L. Heck, Jr., Kenneth W. Able, Daniel L. Childers, David B. Eggleston, Bron...
Coastal marine and estuarine ecosystems are highly productive and serve a nursery function for impor...
Intertidal creeks are of particular importance to the nekton community as they represent a critical ...
The recent paper by Dahlgren et al. (2006), which builds on the earlier paper of Beck et al. (2001)...
Presents a study which asserts that a better understanding of habitats which serve as nurseries for ...
Conservation of aquatic resources requires management of both fishing effort and the mosaic of habit...
Coastal ecosystems, such as estuaries, salt marshes, mangroves and seagrass meadows, comprise some o...
Coastal ecosystems, such as estuaries, salt marshes, mangroves and seagrass meadows, comprise some o...
Man‐made infrastructures have become ubiquitous components of coastal landscapes, leading to habitat...
Contains fulltext : 35694.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Much recent atte...
Nearshore‐structured habitats—including underwater grasses, mangroves, coral, and other biogenic ree...
Because estuarine nekton are \u27integrators of the environment\u27 abiotic and biotic factors can i...
© 2018 Estuaries have long been recognized as nursery habitats for various marine fish species. As s...
Much recent attention has been focused on juvenile fish and invertebrate habitat use, particularly d...
Similar to nearshore systems in temperate latitudes, the nursery paradigm for tropical back-reef sys...
Michael W. Beck, Kenneth L. Heck, Jr., Kenneth W. Able, Daniel L. Childers, David B. Eggleston, Bron...
Coastal marine and estuarine ecosystems are highly productive and serve a nursery function for impor...
Intertidal creeks are of particular importance to the nekton community as they represent a critical ...
The recent paper by Dahlgren et al. (2006), which builds on the earlier paper of Beck et al. (2001)...