B
B. Manikandan
Researcher at National Institute of Oceanography, India
Publications - 21
Citations - 222
B. Manikandan is an academic researcher from National Institute of Oceanography, India. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coral & Aquaculture of coral. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 18 publications receiving 154 citations.
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Synthesis of stable nanosilver particles (AgNPs) by the proteins of seagrass Syringodium isoetifolium and its biomedicinal properties.
Natarajan Kumari Ahila,V. Sri Ramkumar,S. Prakash,S. Prakash,B. Manikandan,J. Ravindran,P.K. Dhanalakshmi,E. Kannapiran +7 more
TL;DR: The optical property, crystal structure, size, shape, stability, bactericidal activity, cytotoxicity, and biocompatibility apparently proved that the biologically synthesized AgNPs have typical properties of nanomaterials.
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UV-absorbing bacteria in coral mucus and their response to simulated temperature elevations
J. Ravindran,E. Kannapiran,B. Manikandan,K X Francis,Shruti Arora,E. Karunya,Amit Kumar,Suryajita Kumar Singh,Jiya Jose +8 more
TL;DR: Deciphering the complex relationship between corals and their associated bacteria will help to understand their adaptive strategies to various stresses.
Bleaching and secondary threats on the corals of Palk Bay: A survey and Proactive conservation needs
TL;DR: A survey on bleaching and secondary threats on bleached corals in the selected sites of Palk-Bay was conducted during May and June 2010 as discussed by the authors, where massive corals represented by the genera Porites, Goniopora, Favia were bleached extensively.
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Fish composition and assemblage structure in tropical monsoonal estuaries: Estuarine use and feeding guild approach
TL;DR: In this paper, the structure of fish guilds was analyzed in four tropical monsoonal estuaries, namely Zuari, Mandovi, Terekhol and Kali along India's western coast.
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Community structure and coral status across reef fishing intensity gradients in Palk Bay reef, southeast coast of India
TL;DR: The results of this study suggest that the impact of reef fish exploitation was not solely restricted to the intensively fished reefs, but also to the nearby reefs which play a critical role in the resilience of degraded reef ecosystems.