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Stephen S. Ban

Researcher at James Cook University

Publications -  11
Citations -  628

Stephen S. Ban is an academic researcher from James Cook University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coral bleaching & Coral reef. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 10 publications receiving 553 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen S. Ban include University of Victoria & University of British Columbia.

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Evidence for multiple stressor interactions and effects on coral reefs

TL;DR: Overall, although in aggregate a large body of literature examines stressor effects on coral reefs and coral organisms, considerable gaps remain for numerous stressor interactions and effects, and insufficient quantitative evidence exists to suggest that the prevailing type of stressor interaction is synergistic.
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Designing, implementing and managing marine protected areas: emerging trends and opportunities for coral reef nations

TL;DR: Three emerging trends in MPA design and management are reviewed, including the increasing recognition that social and ecological systems are tightly coupled is leading to planning and management of MPAs that better incorporate the human dimensions of reef systems and their linkages with reef ecology.
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Assessing interactions of multiple stressors when data are limited: A Bayesian belief network applied to coral reefs

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a formal expert-elicitation process to obtain estimates of outcomes associated with a variety of scenarios that combined stressors both within and outside the control of local managers.
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Recasting shortfalls of marine protected areas as opportunities through adaptive management

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented a critical need for realistic presentation of the scope and capacity of MPAs to counteract biodiversity loss, both in isolation and as part of marine spatial planning or other approaches to complementary management.
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Relationships between temperature, bleaching and white syndrome on the Great Barrier Reef

TL;DR: The hypothesized relationship between bleaching and disease events may be weaker than previously thought, and more likely to be driven by common responses to environmental stressors, rather than directly facilitating one another.