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Jonathan H. Grabowski

Researcher at Northeastern University

Publications -  129
Citations -  7107

Jonathan H. Grabowski is an academic researcher from Northeastern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oyster & Reef. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 120 publications receiving 5874 citations. Previous affiliations of Jonathan H. Grabowski include National Ocean Service & Gulf of Maine Research Institute.

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Intertidal benthic resources of the Copper River Delta, Alaska, USA

TL;DR: The first description of the benthic community of the intertidal flats of the Copper River Delta is given in this article, where three samplings were conducted between April and September 2000, in which they quantified benthics inhabiting silt-clay sediments, the dominant substrate in the system.
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Inclusion of Biodiversity in Habitat Restoration Policy to Facilitate Ecosystem Recovery

TL;DR: This article conducted a review of the published literature on habitat restoration to evaluate the potential science-practice gap and recommend policies that account for biodiversity to bridge this gap and maximize ecosystem function and restoration success.
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Regional environmental variation and local species interactions influence biogeographic structure on oyster reefs.

TL;DR: Collectively, these results show how environmental gradients interact with trophic cascades to structure food webs associated with foundation species across biogeographic regions.
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Genetic by environmental variation but no local adaptation in oysters (Crassostrea virginica).

TL;DR: Oyster populations in the southeastern Atlantic Bight differ in juvenile survival, growth, and condition, yet offspring from local broodstock do not have higher survival or growth than those from farther away, suggesting that oyster restoration and aquaculture may benefit from incorporating multiple populations into their practices.
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Predators, environment and host characteristics influence the probability of infection by an invasive castrating parasite

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that in addition to host characteristics, biotic and abiotic community-level variables both serve as large-scale indicators of parasite dynamics, including predator abundance and the depth of water inundation over reefs at high tide.