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Andrew J. Gooday
Researcher at National Oceanography Centre
Publications - 233
Citations - 16367
Andrew J. Gooday is an academic researcher from National Oceanography Centre. The author has contributed to research in topics: Foraminifera & Benthic zone. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 221 publications receiving 14737 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew J. Gooday include National Oceanography Centre, Southampton & University of Geneva.
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Associations between living benthic foraminifera and dead tests of Syringammina fragilissima (Xenophyophorea) in the Darwin Mounds region (NE Atlantic)
J. Alan Hughes,Andrew J. Gooday +1 more
TL;DR: Foraminifera associated with the xenophyophore tests were generally more abundant than those inhabiting the surrounding sediments, although species richness and diversity were not significantly different as discussed by the authors.
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The foraminiferan macrofauna from three North Carolina (USA) slope sites with contrasting carbon flux: a comparison with the metazoan macrofauna
TL;DR: Differences suggest that foraminiferans, considered as a group, are more opportunistic than metazoans, tolerate oxygen depletion better, and have population dynamics that are more closely coupled to organic matter inputs than those of meetazoans.
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Temporal changes (1989-1999) in deep-sea metazoan meiofaunal assemblages on the Porcupine Abyssal Plain, NE Atlantic
V. Kalogeropoulou,Brian J. Bett,Andrew J. Gooday,Nikolaos Lampadariou,P. Martinez Arbizu,Ann Vanreusel +5 more
TL;DR: The potential link between temporal variations in organic matter flux to the seafloor and meiofaunal populations is discussed, considering both qualitative and quantitative changes in fluxes and how they may be linked to climate variations.
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Soft-walled, monothalamous benthic foraminiferans in the Pacific, Indian and Atlantic Oceans: aspects of biodiversity and biogeography
Andrew J. Gooday,Saori Hori,Yuko Todo,Takuji Okamoto,Hiroshi Kitazato,Hiroshi Kitazato,Anna Sabbatini +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined quantitative multicorer samples from abyssal (4263-5570m) water depths in the North and western Equatorial Pacific and a qualitative sample from a hadal site (7800-m water depth) in the Atacama Trench, SE Pacific.
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Large, deep-sea agglutinated Foraminifera; two differing kinds of organization and their possible ecological significance
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider two groups of large deep-sea agglutinated foraminifera: robust, tubular astrorhizaceans (Bathysiphon, Rhabdammina) and hippocrepinaceans, which reach several centimeters or more in length and contain a substantial protoplasmic mass (sarcode).