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Yuri Niella

Researcher at Macquarie University

Publications -  28
Citations -  212

Yuri Niella is an academic researcher from Macquarie University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carcharhinus & Biology. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 21 publications receiving 89 citations. Previous affiliations of Yuri Niella include Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco & Federal University of Pernambuco.

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Predicting changes in distribution of a large coastal shark in the face of the strengthening East Australian Current

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used 10 years of data from commercial fisheries and a bather protection program along the coast of New South Wales (NSW), southeastern Australia, to investigate the spatial and temporal patterns of occurrence in bull sharks and environmental factors affecting bull shark occurrence along the Coast of NSW.
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Inferring trends and linkages between shark abundance and shark bites on humans for shark-hazard mitigation

TL;DR: Generalised additive models showed that the frequency of shark bites was directly proportional to and followed the same seasonal trends as PDS abundance, meeting the hypothesis that higher shark abundance may result in an increased chance of a shark bite.
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Bioecology and movements of bull sharks, Carcharhinus leucas , caught in a long-term longline survey off northeastern Brazil

TL;DR: A robust understanding of habitat usage by coastal shark species, and how it overlaps with human presence in denselypopulated regions is needed to inform the development of efficient conservation strategies for these important top predators.
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Negative metal bioaccumulation impacts on systemic shark health and homeostatic balance.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated metal concentrations in the gills, muscle, liver and rectal gland of coastal sharks opportunistically sampled from Brazilian waters and tested for potential relationships between metal bioaccumulation and general shark health and homeostatic balance metrics.
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Neonatal nutritional strategy of a viviparous elasmobranch with extremely low reproductive output

TL;DR: Investigation of the effect of maternal investment on the nutritional quality of pups during the early life history of an extremely viviparous elasmobranch found that pups were initially born in a positive nutritional state, enriched in physiologically important essential fatty acids and nitrogen and carbon stable isotope values.