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Ian Miller

Researcher at Australian Institute of Marine Science

Publications -  47
Citations -  1774

Ian Miller is an academic researcher from Australian Institute of Marine Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coral reef & Reef. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 43 publications receiving 1627 citations.

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Habitat utilization by coral reef fish: implications for specialists vs. generalists in a changing environment

TL;DR: The especially high coral association and narrower niche breadth of juveniles suggest that the presence of live coral is crucial for many species during early life history, and that disturbance-induced coral loss may have serious flow-on effects on adult abundance.

Long-term monitoring of the Great Barrier Reef

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a list of the top 10 most influential people in the world: A.H. Sweatman, S. Burgess, A. Cheal, G. Coleman, S., Delean, M. Emslie, I. Miller, K. Osborne and A. Thompson.
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Rapid increase in fish numbers follows creation of world's largest marine reserve network.

TL;DR: Evidence is reported that the densities of the major target species of the GBR reef line fisheries were significantly higher in the new NTMRs, compared with fished sites, in just two years, and that the positive differences were consistent for multiple marine reserves over an unprecedented spatial scale.
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Mapping coral reef benthic substrates using hyperspectral space-borne images and spectral libraries

TL;DR: The suitability of Hyperion, the first civilian hyperspectral sensor in space, for mapping coral reef benthic substrates has been investigated in this article, where an image of Cairns Reef was acquired during Hyperion calibration and validation activities.
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Spatial variation in the functional characteristics of herbivorous fish communities and the resilience of coral reefs

TL;DR: This work infers the relative vulnerability of different subregions of the Great Barrier Reef to phase shifts based on functional characteristics of the local herbivorous fish communities and suggests that management of water quality is of generic importance to ensure the ecosystem services of this important group of herbivores.