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Ezequiel M. Marzinelli

Researcher at Nanyang Technological University

Publications -  91
Citations -  3409

Ezequiel M. Marzinelli is an academic researcher from Nanyang Technological University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Kelp & Biology. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 75 publications receiving 2342 citations. Previous affiliations of Ezequiel M. Marzinelli include University of New South Wales & University of Tasmania.

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Long-term empirical evidence of ocean warming leading to tropicalization of fish communities, increased herbivory, and loss of kelp

TL;DR: An increase in the proportion of warmwater species (“tropicalization”) as oceans warm is increasing fish herbivory in kelp forests, contributing to their decline and subsequent persistence in alternate “kelp-free” states, and posing a significant threat to kelp-dominated ecosystems in Australia and globally.
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Continental-scale variation in seaweed host-associated bacterial communities is a function of host condition, not geography.

TL;DR: Using 16S-rRNA gene sequencing, 260 seaweed-associated bacterial and archaeal communities on the kelp Ecklonia radiata were characterized and it was found that host traits emerge as critical determinants of associated microbial community structure of these holobionts, even at a continental scale.
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Towards Restoration of Missing Underwater Forests

TL;DR: Experimental transplants of adult Phyllospora into two rocky reefs in the Sydney metropolitan region are experimentally transplanted to examine the model that Sydney is now suitable for the survival and recruitment of Phyllspora and thus assess the possibility of restoring PhyllOSpora back onto reefs where it was once abundant.
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27 years of benthic and coral community dynamics on turbid, highly urbanised reefs off Singapore.

TL;DR: Responses to acute bleaching disturbances on turbid reefs off Singapore are investigated, finding the persistence of coral dominance at chronically disturbed shallow sites is likely due to an abundance of coral taxa which are tolerant to environmental stress.