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Creators/Authors contains: "Madden, Christopher"

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  1. Changes of consumers’ trophic niches, the n-dimensional biotic space that allows a species to satisfy its minimum requirements for population growth, are driven in part by shifts in the degree of individual resource use specialization within a population. Individual specialization results from complex trade-offs in inter- and intraspecific competition as organisms reduce niche overlap within a population or with heterospecifics. It is vital to build empirical knowledge on the trophic niche dynamics of consumers, given the role that niche dynamics play in food web stability, species coexistence, and population resilience, especially quantifying the trophic niche’s expansion and contraction of coastal fish populations experiencing increasing frequency of environmental disturbance and habitat transformation. In coastal ecosystems, disturbances alter the connectivity, productivity, and nutrient regimes of aquatic habitats, which could lead to significant shifts in consumers’ trophic niches. We investigated the trophic niche dynamics of two fish species Centropomus undecimalis (Common Snook) and Megalops atlanticus (Atlantic Tarpon), across two adjacent coastal lake systems of varying nutrient regimes (eutrophic vs. mesotrophic) and hydrological connectivity. In both systems, Snook had larger trophic niches than Tarpon. Also, the trophic niche size in the eutrophic system was larger than the mesotrophic system for both species. Snook and Tarpon used different prey resources, resulting in low niche overlap between species in both systems. Our results highlight how altered hydrological connectivity, and nutrient regimes can shift trophic niche dynamics of higher trophic-level consumers, likely due to changes in prey landscapes and shifts in the foraging ecology of species. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
  2. Water column nutrient concentrations and autotrophy in oligotrophic ecosystems are sensitive to eutrophication and other long-term environmental changes and disturbances. Disturbance can be defined as an event or process that changes the structure and response of an ecosystem to other environmental drivers. The role disturbance plays in regulating ecosystem functions is challenging because the effect of the disturbance can vary in magnitude, duration, and extent spatially and temporally. We measured changes in total nitrogen (TN), dissolved inorganic nutrient (DIN), total phosphorus (TP), soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP), total organic carbon (TOC), and chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) concentrations throughout the Everglades, Florida Bay, and the Florida Keys. This region has been subjected to a variety of natural and anthropogenic disturbances including tropical storms, fires, eutrophication, and rapid increases in water levels from sea-level rise and freshwater restoration. We hypothesized that the rate of change in water quality would be greatest in the coastal ecotone where disturbance frequencies and marine P concentrations are highest, and in freshwater marshes closest to hydrologic changes from restoration. We applied trend analyses on multi-decadal data (1996–2019) collected from 461 locations distributed from inland freshwater Everglades (ridge and slough) to outer marine reefs along the Florida Keys, USA. Total Organic Carbon decreased throughout the study area and was the only parameter with a systematic trend throughout the study area. All other parameters had spatially heterogeneous patterns in long-term trends. Results indicate more variability across a large spatial and temporal extent associated with changes in biogeochemical indicators and water quality conditions. Chemical and biological changes in oligotrophic ecosystems are important indicators of environmental change, and our regional ridge-to-reef assessment revealed ecosystem-specific responses to both long-term environmental changes and disturbance legacies. 
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  3. null (Ed.)
    Abstract The availability of dissolved inorganic and organic nutrients and their transformations along the fresh to marine continuum are being modified by various natural and anthropogenic activities and climate-related changes. Subtropical central and eastern Florida Bay, located at the southern end of the Florida peninsula, is classically considered to have inorganic nutrient conditions that are in higher-than-Redfield ratio proportions, and high levels of organic and chemically-reduced forms of nitrogen. However, salinity, pH and nutrients, both organic and inorganic, change with changes in freshwater flows to the bay. Here, using a time series of water quality and physico-chemical conditions from 2009 to 2019, the impacts of distinct changes in managed flow, drought, El Niño-related increases in precipitation, and intensive storms and hurricanes are explored with respect to changes in water quality and resulting ecosystem effects, with a focus on understanding why picocyanobacterial blooms formed when they did. Drought produced hyper-salinity conditions that were associated with a seagrass die-off. Years later, increases in precipitation resulting from intensive storms and a hurricane were associated with high loads of organic nutrients, and declines in pH, likely due to high organic acid input and decaying organic matter, collectively leading to physiologically favorable conditions for growth of the picocyanobacterium, Synechococcus spp. These conditions, including very high concentrations of NH 4 + , were likely inhibiting for seagrass recovery and for growth of competing phytoplankton or their grazers. Given projected future climate conditions, and anticipated cycles of drought and intensive storms, the likelihood of future seagrass die-offs and picocyanobacterial blooms is high. 
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  4. Coastal ecosystems display consistent patterns of trade-offs between resistance and resilience to tropical cyclones. 
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