P
Paul E. Renaud
Researcher at University Centre in Svalbard
Publications - 134
Citations - 6304
Paul E. Renaud is an academic researcher from University Centre in Svalbard. The author has contributed to research in topics: Benthic zone & Arctic. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 122 publications receiving 5477 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul E. Renaud include University of Connecticut & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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Analysis of feeding preference experiments
TL;DR: Application of this recommended test procedure to an actual data set illustrates how low replication in controls inhibits detection of an apparently large influence of previous mechanical damage (simulated grazing) in reducing the attractiveness of a brown alga to a sea urchin.
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Sources of primary production, benthic-pelagic coupling, and trophic relationships within the Northeast Water Polynya:insights from delta13C and delta15N analysis
TL;DR: Stable-isotope analysis may be well suited to establ~shing the importance of polynyas as sites of high primary productivity and tight benthic-pelagic coupling relative to regions of more permanent ice cover and compared with other Arctic and temperate marine food webs.
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Climate-driven regime shifts in Arctic marine benthos.
Susanne Kortsch,Raul Primicerio,Frank Beuchel,Paul E. Renaud,Joao Rodrigues,Ole Jørgen Lønne,Bjørn Gulliksen,Bjørn Gulliksen +7 more
TL;DR: The abrupt, substantial, and persistent nature of the changes observed is indicative of a climate-driven ecological regime shift, and the ecological processes thought to drive the observed regime shifts are likely to promote the borealization of these Arctic marine communities in the coming years.
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Trophic relationships and pelagic-benthic coupling during summer in the Barents Sea Marginal Ice Zone, revealed by stable carbon and nitrogen isotope measurements
Tobias Tamelander,Paul E. Renaud,Haakon Hop,Michael L. Carroll,William G. Ambrose,Keith A. Hobson +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the food web structure and pathways from primary production were studied in pelagic, sympagic and benthic communities during summer in a seasonally ice covered region of the northern Barents Sea.
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Distributions of TOP, TON and TOC in the North Pacific subtropical gyre : Implications for nutrient supply in the surface ocean and remineralization in the upper thermocline
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report measurements of total organic phosphorus, nitrogen, and carbon (TOP, TON, and TOC) along a meridional transect in the eastern subtropical North Pacific.