Highly Diverse, Poorly Studied and Uniquely Threatened by Climate Change: An Assessment of Marine Biodiversity on South Georgia's Continental Shelf
Published 2011 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Highly Diverse, Poorly Studied and Uniquely Threatened by Climate Change: An Assessment of Marine Biodiversity on South Georgia's Continental Shelf
Authors
Keywords
South Georgia, Biodiversity, Antarctic Ocean, Antarctica, Species diversity, Biogeography, Islands, Marine biology
Journal
PLoS One
Volume 6, Issue 5, Pages e19795
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Online
2011-05-26
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0019795
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- South Georgia: a key location for linking physiological capacity to distributional changes in response to climate change
- (2010) S.A. Morley et al. ANTARCTIC SCIENCE
- Andean sinistral transpression and kinematic partitioning in South Georgia
- (2010) Michael L. Curtis et al. JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY
- Marine Biodiversity in South Africa: An Evaluation of Current States of Knowledge
- (2010) Charles L. Griffiths et al. PLoS One
- The Biodiversity of the Mediterranean Sea: Estimates, Patterns, and Threats
- (2010) Marta Coll et al. PLoS One
- Marine Biodiversity in Japanese Waters
- (2010) Katsunori Fujikura et al. PLoS One
- Marine Biodiversity in the Caribbean: Regional Estimates and Distribution Patterns
- (2010) Patricia Miloslavich et al. PLoS One
- Marine Biodiversity in the Australian Region
- (2010) Alan J. Butler et al. PLoS One
- Status of Biodiversity in the Baltic Sea
- (2010) Henn Ojaveer et al. PLoS One
- Marine Biodiversity of Aotearoa New Zealand
- (2010) Dennis P. Gordon et al. PLoS One
- Antarctic Marine Biodiversity – What Do We Know About the Distribution of Life in the Southern Ocean?
- (2010) Huw J. Griffiths PLoS One
- Animal temperature limits and ecological relevance: effects of size, activity and rates of change
- (2009) Lloyd S. Peck et al. FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY
- What determines a species’ geographical range? Thermal biology and latitudinal range size relationships in European diving beetles (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae)
- (2009) Piero Calosi et al. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
- Geographic range shift responses to climate change by Antarctic benthos: where we should look
- (2009) DKA Barnes et al. MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
- Vulnerability of Antarctic shelf biodiversity to predicted regional warming
- (2008) DKA Barnes et al. CLIMATE RESEARCH
- Thermal plasticity of mitochondria: A latitudinal comparison between Southern Ocean molluscs
- (2008) Simon A. Morley et al. COMPARATIVE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY A-MOLECULAR & INTEGRATIVE PHYSIOLOGY
- Rapid warming of the ocean around South Georgia, Southern Ocean, during the 20th century: Forcings, characteristics and implications for lower trophic levels
- (2008) M.J. Whitehouse et al. DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART I-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS
- Marine, intertidal, freshwater and terrestrial biodiversity of an isolated polar archipelago
- (2008) David K. A. Barnes et al. JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY
- Towards a generalized biogeography of the Southern Ocean benthos
- (2008) Huw J. Griffiths et al. JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY
- Open-ocean barriers to dispersal: a test case with the Antarctic Polar Front and the ribbon wormParborlasia corrugatus(Nemertea: Lineidae)
- (2008) DANIEL J. THORNHILL et al. MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started