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Vicki J. Hendrick

Researcher at Scottish Association for Marine Science

Publications -  9
Citations -  129

Vicki J. Hendrick is an academic researcher from Scottish Association for Marine Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sabellaria spinulosa & Turbidite. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications receiving 113 citations.

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Ephemeral Bio-engineers or Reef-building Polychaetes: How Stable are Aggregations of the Tube Worm Lanice conchilega (Pallas, 1766)?

TL;DR: The results showed that populations of L. conchilega were prone to considerable fluctuation and the stability of aggregations depended on environmental factors and on recruitment, but the tube-worms proved to be susceptible to disturbance by cultivation of Manila clams but demonstrated the potential to recover from that impact.
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Buried Alive: The Behavioural Response of the Mussels, Modiolus modiolus and Mytilus edulis to Sudden Burial by Sediment

TL;DR: The results suggest that even marginal burial would result in mortality and be more pronounced in warm summer periods, and in the event of burial, adult M. modiolus would not be able to emerge from burial unless local hydrodynamics assist, whereas a small proportion of M. edulis may regain contact with the sediment water interface.
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Sediment Burial Intolerance of Marine Macroinvertebrates

TL;DR: Although survival was consistently highly dependent on duration and depth of burial as expected, emergence behaviour was not as easily predictable thereby confounding predictions, it is concluded that responses to burial are highly species specific and therefore tolerance generalisations are likely to be oversimplifications.
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Maintaining turbidity and current flow in laboratory aquarium studies, a case study using Sabellaria spinulosa

TL;DR: Under sediment starved conditions, there was net erosion of colonies whereas under intermediate and high sediment rates there was consistent cumulative growth throughout a 15 d experiment, highlighting the importance of suspended sediment for S. spinulosa and also the suitability of the V o RT system for maintaining organisms with suspended matter requirements.