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Greta S. Aeby
Researcher at Qatar University
Publications - 88
Citations - 3964
Greta S. Aeby is an academic researcher from Qatar University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coral & Coral reef. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 82 publications receiving 3501 citations. Previous affiliations of Greta S. Aeby include University of Hawaii at Manoa & University of Hawaii.
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Journal ArticleDOI
One-third of reef-building corals face elevated extinction risk from climate change and local impacts
Kent E. Carpenter,Muhammad Abrar,Greta S. Aeby,Richard B. Aronson,Stuart Banks,Andrew W. Bruckner,Angel Chiriboga,Jorge Cortés,J. Charles Delbeek,Lyndon DeVantier,Graham J. Edgar,Alasdair J. Edwards,Douglas Fenner,Hector M. Guzman,Bert W. Hoeksema,Gregor Hodgson,Ofri Johan,Wilfredo Y. Licuanan,Suzanne R. Livingstone,Edward R. Lovell,Jennifer Moore,David Obura,Domingo Ochavillo,Beth Polidoro,William F. Precht,Miledel Christine C. Quibilan,Clarissa Reboton,Zoe T. Richards,Alex Rogers,Jonnell C. Sanciangco,Anne Sheppard,Charles Sheppard,Jennifer E. Smith,Simon N. Stuart,Emre Turak,J. E. N. Veron,Carden C. Wallace,Ernesto Weil,Elizabeth Wood +38 more
TL;DR: The Caribbean has the largest proportion of corals in high extinction risk categories, whereas the Coral Triangle has the highest proportion of species in all categories of elevated extinction risk.
Journal ArticleDOI
Systematically describing gross lesions in corals.
Thierry M. Work,Greta S. Aeby +1 more
TL;DR: This work provides a framework to systematically describe and name diseases in corals involving 4 steps: naming the disease, describing the lesion, formulating a morphologic diagnosis and (4) formulating an etiologic diagnosis.
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Factors Affecting Susceptibility of the Coral Montastraea faveolata to Black-Band Disease.
Greta S. Aeby,Deborah L. Santavy +1 more
TL;DR: Both corals that were protected from and those that were exposed to fish predation contracted the disease, and either direct oral transmission of the pathogen from colony to colony and/or indirect fecal transmission could be occurring.
Journal ArticleDOI
Vibrio owensii Induces the Tissue Loss Disease Montipora White Syndrome in the Hawaiian Reef Coral Montipora capitata
TL;DR: This investigation of Montipora white syndrome recognizes V. owensii OCN002 as the first bacterial coral pathogen identified from Hawaii’s reefs and expands the range of bacteria known to cause disease in corals.
Journal ArticleDOI
Vibrio coralliilyticus Strain OCN008 Is an Etiological Agent of Acute Montipora White Syndrome
Blake Ushijima,Patrick Videau,Andrew Burger,Amanda Shore-Maggio,Christina M. Runyon,Mareike Sudek,Greta S. Aeby,Sean M. Callahan +7 more
TL;DR: Vibrio coralliilyticus strain OCN008 is described, which induces acute Montipora white syndrome (aMWS), a tissue loss disease responsible for substantial mortality of the coralmontipora capitata in Kāne‘ohe Bay, Hawai‘i.