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681por Velázquez-Hernández, Jocelyn Maira, Ruíz-Corral, José Ariel, Durán-Puga, Noé, Macías, Miguel Ángel, González-Eguiarte, Diego Raymundo, Santacruz-Ruvalcaba, Fernando, García-Romero, Giovanni Emmanuel, Gallegos-Rodríguez, Agustín“…Favorable regions for D. remotiflora coincide with its current presence sites, while other suitable areas, such as the Yucatán Peninsula, northeast region, and Gulf of Mexico, offer potential expansion opportunities for the species distribution. …”
Publicado 2023
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682“…This study is a meta-analysis based on previous sponge host-guest literature obtained in 65 scientific publications, yielding a total of 745 host-guest interactions between sponges and their associated fauna across the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. We analyzed the sponge species contribution to network organization in the Northwest Tropical Atlantic coral reefs by using the combination of seven complementary species-level descriptors and related this importance with three main traits, sponge-accumulated geographic area, functional sponge morphology, and sponges’ taxonomy bias. …”
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683por Cheng, Yung Sung, Zhou, Yue, Irvin, Clinton M., Pierce, Richard H., Naar, Jerome, Backer, Lorraine C., Fleming, Lora E., Kirkpatrick, Barbara, Baden, Dan G.“…Red tides in the Gulf of Mexico are commonly formed by the fish-killing dinoflagellate Karenia brevis, which produces nine potent polyether brevetoxins (PbTxs). …”
Publicado 2005
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684por Seagrave, JeanClare, McDonald, Jacob D., Bedrick, Edward, Edgerton, Eric S., Gigliotti, Andrew P., Jansen, John J., Ke, Lin, Naeher, Luke P., Seilkop, Steven K., Zheng, Mei, Mauderly, Joe L.“…These sites represent four areas with differing sources of PM(2.5), including local urban versus regional sources, urban areas with different contributions of transportation and industrial sources, and a site influenced by Gulf of Mexico weather patterns. METHODS: We collected samples from each site during the winter and summer of 2004 for toxicity testing and for chemical analysis and chemical mass balance–based source apportionment. …”
Publicado 2006
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685por McDaniel, Lauren, Breitbart, Mya, Mobberley, Jennifer, Long, Amy, Haynes, Matthew, Rohwer, Forest, Paul, John H.“…There were two similar genes in the library from British Columbia and one similar gene was detected in both the Gulf of Mexico and Sargasso Sea libraries. In contrast, in the Arctic library eleven similar genes were observed. …”
Publicado 2008
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686por Beazley, Melanie J., Martinez, Robert J., Rajan, Suja, Powell, Jessica, Piceno, Yvette M., Tom, Lauren M., Andersen, Gary L., Hazen, Terry C., Van Nostrand, Joy D., Zhou, Jizhong, Mortazavi, Behzad, Sobecky, Patricia A.“…In this study, we examined the microbial communities of a Gulf of Mexico coastal salt marsh during and after the influx of petroleum hydrocarbons following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. …”
Publicado 2012
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687por Roland Pitcher, C., Lawton, Peter, Ellis, Nick, Smith, Stephen J., Incze, Lewis S., Wei, Chih‐Lin, Greenlaw, Michelle E., Wolff, Nicholas H., Sameoto, Jessica A., Snelgrove, Paul V. R.“…To investigate the role of the environment in driving patterns of biodiversity composition in large marine regions, we collated multiple biological survey and environmental data sets from tropical NE Australia, the deep Gulf of Mexico and the temperate Gulf of Maine. We then quantified the shape and magnitude of multispecies responses along >30 environmental gradients and the extent to which these variables predicted regional distributions. …”
Publicado 2012
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688Toxicity of Deepwater Horizon Source Oil and the Chemical Dispersant, Corexit® 9500, to Coral Larvaepor Goodbody-Gringley, Gretchen, Wetzel, Dana L., Gillon, Daniel, Pulster, Erin, Miller, Allison, Ritchie, Kim B.“…In April 2010 the BP-operated Deepwater Horizon (DWH) offshore oil rig exploded, releasing an estimated 760 million liters of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico. This study examines the potential effects of oil spill exposure on coral larvae of the Florida Keys. …”
Publicado 2013
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689por Newton, Ryan J., Huse, Susan M., Morrison, Hilary G., Peake, Colin S., Sogin, Mitchell L., McLellan, Sandra L.“…The blowout of the Macondo Prospect reservoir on April 20, 2010, which released oil hydrocarbons into the Gulf of Mexico, presented an opportunity to examine whether microbial community composition might provide a sensitive measure of ecosystem disturbance. …”
Publicado 2013
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690por Ghabooli, Sara, Shiganova, Tamara A., Briski, Elizabeta, Piraino, Stefano, Fuentes, Veronica, Thibault-Botha, Delphine, Angel, Dror L., Cristescu, Melania E., MacIsaac, Hugh J.“…However, some haplotypes and alleles from the Mediterranean Sea were not detected from the well-sampled Black Sea, although they were found in Gulf of Mexico populations that were also genetically similar to those in the Mediterranean Sea (pairwise F (ST) = 0.010–0.032), raising the possibility of multiple invasion sources. …”
Publicado 2013
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691“…Unique oil:sand aggregates, termed surface residue balls (SRBs), were formed on coastal headland beaches along the northern Gulf of Mexico as emulsified MC252 crude oil mixed with sand following the Deepwater Horizon spill event. …”
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692por Paxton, Kristina L., Cohen, Emily B., Paxton, Eben H., Németh, Zoltán, Moore, Frank R.“…During El Niño years migrants were also more likely to stopover immediately along the northern Gulf coast of the southeastern U.S. after crossing the Gulf of Mexico in small suboptimal forest patches where food resources are lower and migrant density often greater than larger more contiguous forests further inland. …”
Publicado 2014
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693“…During the Deepwater Horizon (DWH) oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico a deep-sea hydrocarbon plume developed resulting in a rapid succession of bacteria. …”
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694“…Prior to the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the diversity and function of supratidal beach sediment microbial communities along Gulf of Mexico coastlines were not well understood. As such, it was unclear if microbial community compositional changes would occur following exposure to beached oil, if indigenous communities could biodegrade oil, or how cleanup efforts, such as sand washing and sediment redistribution, would impact microbial ecosystem resiliency. …”
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695por Roberts, Jenny R, Anderson, Stacey E, Kan, Hong, Krajnak, Kristine, Thompson, Janet A, Kenyon, Allison, Goldsmith, William T, McKinney, Walter, Frazer, David G, Jackson, Mark, Fedan, Jeffrey S“…In response to the Deepwater Horizon Macondo well oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, a record volume of the oil dispersant, COREXIT EC9500A, was delivered via aerial applications, raising concern regarding potential health effects that may result from pulmonary exposure to the dispersant. …”
Publicado 2015
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696“…The only previous study based on mtDNA control-region sequence found limited divergence between those subspecies and isolation by distance among 15 locations from Florida (Atlantic Ocean) to Texas (Gulf of Mexico). In the same study, using six sparid microsatellite markers, Bayesian analysis showed that the Gulf and Atlantic sheepshead form a single population. …”
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697“…Lawrence River and northeast Atlantic Ocean Seaboard drainage basins, (3) the Mississippi River System drainage basin, and (4) the Gulf of Mexico Seaboard and southeast Atlantic Ocean Seaboard drainage basins. …”
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698“…Mean dentine δ (18) O(SC) (range +21.2 to +25.5‰ VSMOW) and δ (18) O(P) (+16.7 to +20.3‰) values were strongly correlated with marine surface water δ (18)O values, with lower dentine δ (18) O(SC) and δ (18) O(P) values in high‐latitude regions (Arctic and Eastern North Pacific) and higher values in the Gulf of California, Gulf of Mexico, and Mediterranean Sea. Correlations between dentine δ (18) O(SC) and δ (18) O(P) values with marine surface water δ (18)O values indicate that sequential δ (18)O measurements along dentine, which grows incrementally and archives intra‐ and interannual isotopic composition over the lifetime of the animal, would be useful for characterizing residency within and movements among water bodies with strong δ (18)O gradients, particularly between polar and lower latitudes, or between oceans and marginal basins.…”
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699“…The aim of this study was to survey the microbiota of apparently healthy, wild-caught Red Snapper from the Gulf of Mexico. Sampled Red Snapper showed no physical signs of disease. …”
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700“…A major oil spill in this region may mirror the aftermath that ensued following the Deepwater Horizon (DWH) blowout in the Gulf of Mexico, where the massive influx of Macondo crude oil triggered the formation of copious quantities of rapidly sinking MOS and successional blooms of opportunistic oil-degrading bacteria. …”
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