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Matthew J. Slater

Researcher at Staffordshire University

Publications -  122
Citations -  2430

Matthew J. Slater is an academic researcher from Staffordshire University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social identity theory & Identity (social science). The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 114 publications receiving 1813 citations. Previous affiliations of Matthew J. Slater include Newcastle University & Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research.

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Survivorship and growth of the sea cucumber Australostichopus (Stichopus) mollis (Hutton 1872) in polyculture trials with green-lipped mussel farms

TL;DR: Results clearly indicate that A. mollis is an ideal candidate for polyculture with green-lipped mussel farms and at the highest densities appeared to be constrained by food limitation.
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The use of the waste from green-lipped mussels as a food source for juvenile sea cucumber, Australostichopus mollis

TL;DR: The results show that fresh mussel waste is a suitable artificial diet for juvenile sea cucumbers if provided in sufficient quantities and indicate that rapid growth can be expected among juvenile Sea cucumbers cultured beneath mussel farms provided sea cucumber stocking rates are managed appropriately.
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Doing Social Identity Leadership: Exploring the Efficacy of an Identity Leadership Intervention on Perceived Leadership and Mobilization in Elite Disability Soccer

TL;DR: In this article, a two-year longitudinal design involved an elite male disability soccer team that prepared for a World Championship in Year 1 and then reformed for Paralympic competition in Year 2.
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Effect of sea cucumber (Australostichopus mollis) grazing on coastal sediments impacted by mussel farm deposition.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that sea cucumber grazing significantly reduces the accumulation of both organic carbon and phytopigments associated with biodeposition from mussel farms, a means of constraining or reversing the pollutive impacts of coastal bivalve aquaculture.
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Who thrives under pressure? Predicting the performance of elite academy cricketers using the cardiovascular indicators of challenge and threat states.

TL;DR: This study assessed whether cardiovascular (CV) reactivity patterns indexing challenge and threat states predicted batting performance in elite male county and national academy cricketers, and the relationships between self-report measures and CV reactivity were inconsistent.