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Annelise Fleddum

Researcher at City University of Hong Kong

Publications -  9
Citations -  274

Annelise Fleddum is an academic researcher from City University of Hong Kong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Benthic zone & Trawling. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications receiving 229 citations. Previous affiliations of Annelise Fleddum include University of Oslo.

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Biological traits analyses in the study of pollution gradients and ecological functioning of marine soft bottom species assemblages in a fjord ecosystem

TL;DR: The study showed that BTA detected and depicted specific features that correlated with gradients in pollution and may be important for sediment reworking and nutrient cycling.
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Assessment of ecosystem function following marine aggregate dredging

TL;DR: A number of indices designed to assess ecosystem function were applied to an existing benthic macrofaunal dataset collected following recent marine aggregate extraction activity at the Hastings Shingle Bank, indicating that the disturbed area of seabed was capable of full recovery given enough time.
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The Potential for Upscaling Kelp(Saccharina latissima) Cultivation in Salmon-Driven Integrated Multi-Trophic Aquaculture (IMTA)

TL;DR: The aim of this study was to investigate the growth and composition of the kelp Saccharina latissima in salmon-driven IMTA, and to assess the spatial extent of the influence of salmon derived nitrogen in order to evaluate the upscaling potential for IMTA.
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Distribution and feeding of the carnivorous copepod Paraeuchaeta norvegica in habitats of shallow prey assemblages and midnight sun

TL;DR: Food limitation during summer, when food is concentrated in upper waters, and short and light nights limit nocturnal access to the shallow food resources, is suggested.
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Impact of hypoxia on the structure and function of benthic epifauna in Tolo Harbour, Hong Kong

TL;DR: In Tolo Harbour, Hong Kong, a large amount of benthic epifauna was found to be absent in the summer but become abundant again in the winter, which may indicate that some species are sensitive in detecting low dissolved oxygen levels and are able to escape from the harbour to more oxygenated, open waters when conditions deteriorate and return when DO levels are improved.