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Kevin Gross

Researcher at North Carolina State University

Publications -  72
Citations -  4893

Kevin Gross is an academic researcher from North Carolina State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Species richness. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 71 publications receiving 4311 citations. Previous affiliations of Kevin Gross include University of Wisconsin-Madison & Duke University.

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Integrating the Effects of Ocean Acidification across Functional Scales on Tropical Coral Reefs

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the effects of ocean acidification on coral reefs at the levels of cells, organisms, populations, communities, and ecosystem. But, although studies of these phenomena have advanced quickly, efforts have focused on pieces of the puzzle rather than integrating them to evaluate ecosystem-level effects.
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Periodic mortality events in predator–prey systems

TL;DR: The addition of random environmental variability to the model demonstrates that periodic mortality can be a strong driver of population variability, with the vestiges of deterministic cycles taking the form of eruptive patterns in the long-term dynamics of the predator–prey system.
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Predicting Pre-planting Risk of Stagonospora nodorum blotch in Winter Wheat Using Machine Learning Models

TL;DR: A strong relationship was observed between late-season severity of SNB and specific pre-planting factors in which latitude, longitude, wheat residue, and cultivar resistance were the most important predictors.
Book ChapterDOI

Morphological analysis of some cryptic species in the Acanthocyclops vernalis species complex from North America

TL;DR: Patterns of morphological variation and reproductive isolation were examined for several North American populations of copepods in the Acanthocyclops vernalis Fischer A., 1853 (Copepoda, Cyclopinae) species complex, and copepod expressed morphological stasis — persistence of Morphological uniformity despite reproductive isolation.
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Response diversity can increase ecological resilience to disturbance in coral reefs.

TL;DR: This work modeled coral-macroalgae interactions given either a resistant coral, a resilient coral, or both together and found that both corals benefit from the presence of each other in terms of total cover and resilience.