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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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Effects of Temperature and Ocean Acidification on the Extrapallial Fluid pH, Calcification Rate, and Condition Factor of the King Scallop Pecten maximus

TL;DR: The results of a 74-day controlled laboratory experiment suggest that king scallops are relatively resilient to CO2-induced ocean acidification, but that their allocation of resources between tissue and shell production in response to this stressor varies seasonally.
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Assessing Fishers' Support of Striped Bass Management Strategies

TL;DR: It is suggested that both recreational and commercial fishers are generally supportive of additional management strategies aimed at sustaining healthy striped bass populations and agree on a variety of strategies, however, both stakeholder groups were less supportive of harvest reductions, which is the most direct measure of reducing mortality available to fisheries managers.

Intertidal benthic resources of the Copper River Delta

TL;DR: The first description of the benthic community of intertidal flats of the Copper River Delta was reported in this paper, where three samplings were conducted in two areas on the delta: near the outflows of the Eyak River and Pete Dahl Slough.
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Influence of predator identity on the strength of predator avoidance responses in lobsters

TL;DR: Differences in lobster sheltering behavior corresponded with differences in predator foraging behavior, which can result in less foraging activity, which may translate into reduced lobster growth and reproduction.
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Shifting perceptions of rapid temperature changes’ effects on marine fisheries, 1945–2017

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that global climate change has direct effects on marine fishes and in‐ vertebrates, including changes to migration patterns, distribution, and phenology, which consequently impacts their fisheries.