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1. Construction and characterization of an infectious cDNA clone of turtle grass virus X from a naturally infected Thalassia testudinum plant

2. Reduced seagrass resilience due to environmental and anthropogenic effects may lead to future die-off events in Florida Bay

3. Common ecological indicators identify changes in seagrass condition following disturbances in the Gulf of Mexico

4. Natural recovery of a marine foundation species emerges decades after landscape-scale mortality

5. Drift macroalgae positively influence seagrass-associated nekton communities of the northern Gulf of Mexico

6. Drift macroalgal distribution in northern Gulf of Mexico seagrass meadows

7. Corrigendum: Spatial Patterns of Thalassia testudinum Immune Status and Labyrinthula spp. Load Implicate Environmental Quality and History as Modulators of Defense Strategies and Wasting Disease in Florida Bay, United States

8. Impact of Extreme Disturbances on Suspended Sediment in Western Florida Bay: Implications for Seagrass Resilience

9. Spatial Patterns of Thalassia testudinum Immune Status and Labyrinthula spp. Load Implicate Environmental Quality and History as Modulators of Defense Strategies and Wasting Disease in Florida Bay, United States

10. Discovery of a novel potexvirus in the seagrass Thalassia testudinum from Tampa Bay, Florida

12. Hemigrapsus sanguineus in Long Island salt marshes: experimental evaluation of the interactions between an invasive crab and resident ecosystem engineers

13. Widespread seagrass die-off has no legacy effect on basal resource use of seagrass food webs in Florida Bay, USA

14. Aquatic Vegetation, an Understudied Depot for PFAS

16. Environmental Drivers of Seagrass-Associated Nekton Abundance Across the Northern Gulf of Mexico

17. Seed Reserve Hot Spots for the Sub-Tropical Seagrass Halodule wrightii (Shoal Grass) in the Northern Gulf of Mexico

18. Multiple stressors result in reduced reproductive effort by Thalassia testudinum in Florida Bay, USA

19. Attempted use of an uncommon bay scallop color morph for tracking the contribution of restoration efforts to population recovery

21. Assessment of Hurricane Irma Impacts on South Florida Seagrass Communities Using Long-Term Monitoring Programs

22. Rough Around the Edges: Lessons Learned and Future Directions in Marine Edge Effects Studies

23. Propagule risk in a marine foundation species: Seascape effects on Zostera marina seed predation

25. Impact of Extreme Disturbances on Suspended Sediment in Western Florida Bay: Implications for Seagrass Resilience

26. Discovery of a novel potexvirus in the seagrass Thalassia testudinum from Tampa Bay, Florida

27. Monitoring of physically restored seagrass meadows reveals a slow rate of recovery for Thalassia testudinum

28. Braun-Blanquet data in ANOVA designs: comparisons with percent cover and transformations using simulated data

29. Molecular detection of a non-native hybrid eelgrass, Vallisneria spiralis Linnaeus (1753) × V. denseserrulata Makino (1921), in the southeastern United States

30. Eelgrass meadows, Zostera marina (L.), facilitate the ecosystem service of nitrogen removal during simulated nutrient pulses in Shinnecock Bay, New York, USA

31. Seascapes are landscapes after all; Comment on Manderson (2016): Seascapes are not landscapes: an analysis performed using Bernhard Riemann's rules. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 73:1831–1838

32. Morphological response of Zostera marina reproductive shoots to fertilized porewater

33. Long-term performance of seagrass restoration projects in Florida, USA

34. Edaphic resource foraging by Zostera marina (Linnaeus) patches

35. Recurrence of Thalassia testudinum seagrass die-off in Florida Bay, USA: initial observations

36. Seed Production Patterns in Zostera marina: Effects of Patch Size and Landscape Configuration

37. Sponge erosion under acidification and warming scenarios: differential impacts on living and dead coral

38. Aspiring to an altered stable state: rebuilding of bay scallop populations and fisheries following intensive restoration

39. Sexual recruitment in Z ostera marina : A patch to landscape-scale investigation

40. Effects of pCO2 on the interaction between an excavating sponge, Cliona varians, and a hermatypic coral, Porites furcata

41. Genetic diversity and gene flow in Zostera marina populations surrounding Long Island, New York, USA: No evidence of inbreeding, genetic degradation or population isolation

42. Abstracts Of Shellfish Technical PapersPresented at the joint meeting of theNortheast Aquaculture Conference and Exposition Milford Aquaculture Seminar and the International Conference on Shellfish Restoration Groton, Connecticut December 12–15, 2012

43. Priming the larval pump: resurgence of bay scallop recruitment following initiation of intensive restoration efforts

44. Hard clam walking: Active horizontal locomotion of adult Mercenaria mercenaria at the sediment surface and behavioral suppression after extensive sampling

45. Effects of nutrient enrichment and grazers on coral reefs: an experimental assessment

46. Sexual Recruitment in Zostera marina: Progress toward a Predictive Model

47. Balancing the edge effects budget: bay scallop settlement and loss along a seagrass edge

48. Hard clam walking: Active horizontal locomotion of adult Mercenaria mercenaria at the sediment surface and behavioral suppression after extensive sampling.

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