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Gary A. Kendrick

Researcher at University of Western Australia

Publications -  288
Citations -  23269

Gary A. Kendrick is an academic researcher from University of Western Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Seagrass & Posidonia australis. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 271 publications receiving 19771 citations. Previous affiliations of Gary A. Kendrick include Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation & University of Western Ontario.

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Impacts of climate change in a global hotspot for temperate marine biodiversity and ocean warming

TL;DR: Climate change is likely to, both by itself and in synergy with other stressors, impose change to southern Australian coastal species, including important habitat-forming algae and the associated ecological functioning of temperate coasts, which provides an attractive tool for building resilience in temperate systems.
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Trophic Transfers from Seagrass Meadows Subsidize Diverse Marine and Terrestrial Consumers

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the literature on the extent and importance of exchanges of biomass between seagrass meadows and other habitats, both in the form of exported seagrase biomass as well as transfers of animal biomass via migration.
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A comparison of temperate reef fish assemblages recorded by three underwater stereo-video techniques

TL;DR: Three underwater stereo-video techniques were used to sample the relative densities and species richness of temperate reef fish assemblages at three reef locations and two habitats (high- and low-relief reef) within Hamelin Bay, south-western Australia.
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Bait attraction affects the performance of remote underwater video stations in assessment of demersal fish community structure

TL;DR: Analysis of the key trophic groups indicated that bait attracted greater numbers of predatory and scavenging species without decreasing the abundances of herbiv- orous or omnivorous fishes, implying that the use of bait will provide better statistical power to detect changes in the structure of fish assemblages and the relative abundance of indi- vidual species within them.