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Claire B. Paris

Researcher at University of Miami

Publications -  154
Citations -  10682

Claire B. Paris is an academic researcher from University of Miami. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Biological dispersal. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 143 publications receiving 9492 citations. Previous affiliations of Claire B. Paris include State University of New York System & Florida International University.

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Vertical distribution and ontogenetic ''migration'' in coral reef fish larvae

TL;DR: The spread suggests that, throughout ontogeny, individuals move within a wider range of depths rather than migrate downward synchronously, which might still favor exceptional cases of retention, which can be important given the very low recruitment rate of coral reef fishes.
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Hurricane-driven patterns of clonality in an ecosystem engineer: The Caribbean coral Montastraea annularis.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that large-scale disturbances combine with local habitat characteristics to shape the balance between sexual and asexual reproduction in populations of M. annularis, with its contribution increasing in areas with greater hurricane frequency.
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Simulating the effects of droplet size, high-pressure biodegradation, and variable flow rate on the subsea evolution of deep plumes from the Macondo blowout

TL;DR: In this article, a multihop fraction module was adapted to oil dissolution and run sensitivity analyses under various parameterization scenarios, finding that the inclusion of oil droplet atomization, variable flow rates, high pressure biodegradation (HPB), and vertical currents velocities (VV) affects significantly the subsea oil mass distribution in the water column as well as the evolution of deep plumes.
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Multivariate objective analysis of the coastal circulation of Barbados, West Indies: implication for larval transport

TL;DR: A multivariate spatial objective analysis (MVOA) assimilating high spatio-temporal resolution of hydrographic (CTD) and acoustic (ADCP) observations near Barbados provided a comprehensive view of the local surface circulation (0-100 m) during early spring of two consecutive years (1996 and 1997) as mentioned in this paper.
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Biophysical processes leading to the ingress of temperate fish larvae into estuarine nursery areas: A review

TL;DR: This new hypothesis, the Sense Acuity And Behavioral (SAAB) hypothesis, recognizes that recruitment is unlikely if the larvae drift passively with the water currents, and that successful recruitment requires the sense acuity of temperate fish larvae and their behavioral response to the estuarine cues present in coastal areas.