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Creators/Authors contains: "Campbell, Justin"

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  1. Seagrasses are long-lived, clonal plants that can integrate fluctuations in environmental conditions over a range of temporal scales, from days to years, and can act as barometers of coastal change. There are many estimated seagrass traits and ecosystem parameters that have the potential to reflect ecosystem status, linking seagrass condition to natural and anthropogenic drivers of change. We identified five seagrass indicators and seven metrics that are suitable, affordable and frequently measured by 38 monitoring programs across the Gulf of Mexico (GoM). A specific set of ratings and assessment points were formulated for each measurable metric. We determined metric ratings (Acceptable, Concerning, Alarming) and validated assessment points using long-term monitoring data from Texas and Florida, coupled with existing literature and input from a panel of seagrass biologists. We reported scores using a blue-gray-orange (Acceptable-Concerning-Alarming) scale to summarize information in a format accessible to the public, resource managers, stakeholders, and policymakers. Seagrass percent cover, shoot allometry and species composition were sensitive indicators of large-scale climatic disturbances (droughts, hurricanes). Severe drought led to reductions in total seagrass cover and leaf length in Upper Laguna Madre, Texas, and Florida Bay; however, Syringodium filiforme was disproportionally affected in Texas while Thalassia testudinum beds responded strongly to drought impacts in Florida. Hurricanes Harvey (TX) and Irma (FL) also resulted in loss of seagrass cover and diminished leaf length in the Texas Coastal Bend and Florida Keys; both storms largely impacted T. testudinum and to a lesser extent, S. filiforme. Many of the metrics within these affected bays and basins received either a “Concerning” or “Alarming” rating, driven by the impacts of these disturbances. Our proposed indicators serve as a tool to evaluate seagrass condition at the bay or basin scale. Moreover, the indicators, metrics, and assessment points are amenable to large-scale evaluations of ecosystem condition because they are economically feasible. This framework may provide the foundation for a comprehensive assessment of seagrass status and trends across the entire GoM. 
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  2. Climate change is impacting marine ecosystem community dynamics on a global scale. While many have assessed direct effects of climate change, indirect effects on marine ecosystems produced by biotic interactions remain poorly understood. For example, warming-induced range expansions and increased consumption rates of herbivores can lead to significant and unexpected changes in seagrass-dominated ecosystems. To better understand the threats tropicalization presents for the functioning of turtlegrass ( Thalassia testudinum ) meadows, we focused on the extensive turtlegrass beds of St. Joseph Bay, Florida in the northern Gulf of Mexico, a location with increasing numbers of tropically-associated green turtles. Our goals were to investigate experimentally how different grazing rates (natural and simulated),including high levels reflective of green turtle herbivory, coupled with nutrient supply, might alter turtlegrass structure and functioning in a higher latitude, subtropical turtlegrass meadow. We found that 4 months of varying levels of herbivory did not affect turtlegrass productivity, while 7 months of herbivory reduced percent cover, and 10 months reduced shoot density. Nutrient additions had few important effects. Ten months into the study, a massive recruitment of the herbivorous sea urchin ( Lytechinus variegatus ), whose densities reached 19 urchins/m 2 completely overgrazed our study area and a large portion of the lush turtlegrass meadows of St. Joseph Bay. While local turtlegrass overgrazing had been previously noted at these urchin densities, a total loss of seagrass in such a large area has rarely ever been recorded. Overgrazing of the kind we observed, likely a result of both urchin and increasing green turtle grazing, can result in the loss of many key ecosystem services. As tropicalization continues, understanding how changes in biotic interactions, such as increased herbivory, affect higher latitude seagrass meadows will be necessary for their proper management and conservation. 
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  3. In quantum geometric Langlands, the Satake equivalence plays a less prominent role than in the classical theory. Gaitsgory and Lurie proposed a conjectural substitute, later termed the fundamental local equivalence . With a few exceptions, we prove this conjecture and its extension to the affine flag variety by using what amount to Soergel module techniques. 
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  4. The organic carbon (Corg) stored in seagrass meadows is globally significant and could be relevant in strategies to mitigate increasing CO2 concentration in the atmosphere. Most of that stored Corg is in the soils that underlie the seagrasses. We explored how seagrass and soil characteristics vary among seagrass meadows across the geographic range of turtlegrass (Thalassia testudinum) with a goal of illuminating the processes controlling soil organic carbon (Corg) storage spanning 23° of latitude. Seagrass abundance (percent cover, biomass, and canopy height) varied by over an order of magnitude across sites, and we found high variability in soil characteristics, with Corg ranging from 0.08 to 12.59% dry weight. Seagrass abundance was a good predictor of the Corg stocks in surficial soils, and the relative importance of seagrass-derived soil Corg increased as abundance increased. These relationships suggest that first-order estimates of surficial soil Corg stocks can be made by measuring seagrass abundance and applying a linear transfer function. The relative availability of the nutrients N and P to support plant growth was also correlated with soil Corg stocks. Stocks were lower at N-limited sites than at P-limited ones, but the importance of seagrass-derived organic matter to soil Corg stocks was not a function of nutrient limitation status. This finding seemed at odds with our observation that labile standard substrates decomposed more slowly at N-limited than at P-limited sites, since even though decomposition rates were 55% lower at N-limited sites, less Corg was accumulating in the soils. The dependence of Corg stocks and decomposition rates on nutrient availability suggests that eutrophication is likely to exert a strong influence on carbon storage in seagrass meadows. 
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  5. null (Ed.)