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Hannah E. Fogarty

Researcher at University of Tasmania

Publications -  8
Citations -  170

Hannah E. Fogarty is an academic researcher from University of Tasmania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Fisheries management. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 8 publications receiving 91 citations. Previous affiliations of Hannah E. Fogarty include Hobart Corporation & Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation.

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Are fish outside their usual ranges early indicators of climate-driven range shifts?

TL;DR: First sightings of marine species outside their normal ranges are found to occur in climate sink and 'divergent' regions (areas where many rapid and diverging climate trajectories pass through) indicating a role of temperature in driving changes in marine species distributions.
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Autonomous adaptation to climate-driven change in marine biodiversity in a global marine hotspot.

TL;DR: This work aims to support effective adaptation by identifying the suite of changes that marine users are making largely without government or management intervention, i.e. autonomous adaptations, to better understand these and their potential interactions with formal adaptation strategies.
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A cross-scale framework to support a mechanistic understanding and modelling of marine climate-driven species redistribution, from individuals to communities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a framework for synthesizing approaches to more robustly understand and predict marine species redistributions, and synthesize the laboratory, field and modelling approaches used to study redistribution related processes at individual, population and community levels.
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Prepared for change? An assessment of the current state of knowledge to support climate adaptation for Australian fisheries

TL;DR: It is found that two-thirds of species had no peer-reviewed climate-related literature available, and that research effort among Australian fisheries species is most closely related to the number of commercial fish stocks per species, and commercial catch weight.