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James P. Barry

Researcher at Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute

Publications -  165
Citations -  11762

James P. Barry is an academic researcher from Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ocean acidification & Cold seep. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 162 publications receiving 10687 citations. Previous affiliations of James P. Barry include Moss Landing Marine Laboratories & Scripps Institution of Oceanography.

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The response of nematodes to deep-sea CO2 sequestration: A quantile regression approach

TL;DR: It is proposed that nematode body length and diameter increases were induced by lethal exposure to CO 2 -rich water and that Nematodes experienced a high rate of mortality in both experiments suggesting that CO 2 sequestration effects are taxon specific.
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Temporal variation in gametogenic cycles of vesicomyid clams

TL;DR: Sulfide-rich cold seeps in Monterey Canyon support dense communities of vesicomyid clams, which harbor chemosynthetic bacterial endosymbionts, and these animals rely upon non-photosynthetic food sources, their life histories may be decoupled from seasonal phytoplankton productivity.
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Deep-sea faunal communities associated with a lost intermodal shipping container in the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, CA.

TL;DR: The container surface provides hard substratum for colonization by taxa typically found in rocky habitats, however, some key taxa that dominate rocky areas were absent or rare on the container, perhaps related to its potential toxicity or limited time for colonization and growth.
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Nitrate and oxygen flux across the sediment‐water interface observed by eddy correlation measurements on the open continental shelf

TL;DR: A modified ISUS (In Situ Ultraviolet Spectrophotometer) optical nitrate sensor was used to measure dissolved nitrate at a frequency of 1.8 Hz, which was combined with vertical velocity measurements to calculate nitrate fluxes as mentioned in this paper.
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Ocean acidification may alter predator-prey relationships and weaken nonlethal interactions between gastropods and crabs

TL;DR: The results suggest that climate-related changes in ocean chemistry may diminish non-lethal effects of predators on prey responses including behavioral avoidance, and that the impacts of invasive species like green crabs could be modulated by the ability of native and invasive prey to withstand ocean acidification conditions.