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Larval settlement of soft-sediment invertebrates: the spatial scales of pattern explained by active habitat selection and the emerging rôle of hydrodynamical processes

C. A. Butman
- 01 Jan 1987 - 
- Vol. 25, pp 113-165
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This article is published in Oceanography and Marine Biology.The article was published on 1987-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 693 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Settlement (structural).

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Citations
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Patterns of Connectivity and Isolation in Marine Populations

TL;DR: Eight novel microsatellite loci were isolated and characterised for the New Zealand endemic brown periwinkle Austrolittorina cincta and three loci had high levels of homozygosity and significant departure from HardyWeinberg equilibrium.
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High diversity, but low abundance of cryptobenthic fishes on soft sediment habitats in Southeast Asia

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the abundance and diversity of cryptobenthic fishes on soft sediment habitats in the centre of tropical marine biodiversity, using Underwater Visual Surveys (UVC) and roving diver surveys.
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A classic hydrodynamic analysis of larval settlement.

TL;DR: D. J. Crisp's 1955 publication on the behaviour of barnacle cyprids in relation to water movement over a surface and its consequences is described.

Distribution of Macro Fouling Community in the Coastal Region of Pondicherry, India

TL;DR: The rapid growth of macro fouling community in the coastal area giving an alarming signal of its capacity to cause potential biodiversity losses and ecosystem damages means an urgent attention must be taken to control the foulingcommunity in coastal area of Pondicherry.
Dissertation

Growth, reproduction and recruitment of the doughboy scallop, Mimachlamys asperrimus (Lamarck) in the D'Entrecasteaux Channel, Tasmania, Australia

WF Zacharin
TL;DR: The doughboy scallop, Chlamys (Mimachlamys) asperrimus, is an abundant benthic bivalve mollusc found throughout south-eastern Australia and settlement of juveniles was only significant in two years (1988 and 1990), with the highest number of pre-recruits being observed in 1987.
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