M
Megan M. Stachura
Researcher at University of Washington
Publications - 8
Citations - 714
Megan M. Stachura is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Marine ecosystem. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications receiving 558 citations. Previous affiliations of Megan M. Stachura include Silver Spring Networks & National Marine Fisheries Service.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A Vulnerability Assessment of Fish and Invertebrates to Climate Change on the Northeast U.S. Continental Shelf.
Jonathan A. Hare,Wendy E. Morrison,Mark W. Nelson,Megan M. Stachura,Eric J. Teeters,Roger Griffis,Michael A. Alexander,James D. Scott,Larry Alade,Richard J. Bell,Antonie S. Chute,Kiersten L. Curti,Tobey H. Curtis,Daniel Kircheis,John F. Kocik,Sean M. Lucey,Camilla T. McCandless,Lisa M. Milke,David E. Richardson,Eric Robillard,Harvey J. Walsh,M. Conor McManus,Katrin E. Marancik,Carolyn A. Griswold +23 more
TL;DR: The overall climate vulnerability is high to very high for approximately half the species assessed; diadromous and benthic invertebrate species exhibit the greatest vulnerability.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ecosystem effects of the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation
Janet A. Nye,Matthew R. Baker,Richard J. Bell,Andrew Kenny,K. Halimeda Kilbourne,Kevin D. Friedland,Edward Martino,Megan M. Stachura,Kyle S. Van Houtan,Kyle S. Van Houtan,Robert Wood +10 more
TL;DR: A growing body of literature suggests that AMO-related fluctuations are associated with shifts in ecological boundaries, primary productivity, and a number of ecologically and economically important coastal and marine populations across the Atlantic basin this article.
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Reproductive resilience: a paradigm shift in understanding spawner-recruit systems in exploited marine fish
Susan K. Lowerre-Barbieri,Susan K. Lowerre-Barbieri,Greg DeCelles,Pierre Pepin,Ignacio Alberto Catalán,Barbara A. Muhling,Barbara A. Muhling,Brad Erisman,Steven X. Cadrin,Josep Alós,Josep Alós,Andrés Ospina-Álvarez,Megan M. Stachura,Michael D. Tringali,Sarah Walters Burnsed,Claire B. Paris +15 more
TL;DR: An eco-evolutionary perspective, reproductive resilience, is proposed to understand connectivity and productivity in marine fish, and practical guidelines for integrating reproductive resilience into assessments of population connectivity and stock productivity are concluded.
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Synchronous marine pelagic regime shifts in the Northern Hemisphere
Grégory Beaugrand,Alessandra Conversi,Alessandra Conversi,Sanae Chiba,M. Edwards,S. Fonda-Umani,Charles H. Greene,Nathan J. Mantua,Saskia A. Otto,Saskia A. Otto,Philip C. Reid,Megan M. Stachura,Lars Stemmann,Hiroya Sugisaki +13 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined whether regime shifts observed in 11 marine systems from two oceans and three regional seas in the Northern Hemisphere (NH) are synchronous, applying the same methodology to all.
Journal ArticleDOI
Linking Northeast Pacific recruitment synchrony to environmental variability
Megan M. Stachura,Timothy E. Essington,Nathan J. Mantua,Nathan J. Mantua,Anne B. Hollowed,Melissa A. Haltuch,Paul D. Spencer,Trevor A. Branch,Miriam J. Doyle +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the hypothesis that synchronous recruitment is due to a shared susceptibility to environmental processes using stock-recruitment residuals for 52 marine fish stocks within three Northeast Pacific large marine ecosystems: the Eastern Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands, Gulf of Alaska, and California Current.