Catriona Hurd

Affiliations: 
University of Tasmania, Sandy Bay, Tasmania, Australia 
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"Catriona Hurd"
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Publications

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Paine ER, Boyd PW, Strzepek RF, et al. (2023) Iron limitation of kelp growth may prevent ocean afforestation. Communications Biology. 6: 607
James RK, Hepburn CD, Pritchard D, et al. (2022) Water motion and pH jointly impact the availability of dissolved inorganic carbon to macroalgae. Scientific Reports. 12: 21947
Noisette F, Pansch C, Wall M, et al. (2022) Role of hydrodynamics in shaping chemical habitats and modulating the responses of coastal benthic systems to ocean global change. Global Change Biology
Ling SD, Cornwall CE, Tilbrook B, et al. (2020) Remnant kelp bed refugia and future phase-shifts under ocean acidification. Plos One. 15: e0239136
Bergstrom E, Ordoñez A, Ho M, et al. (2020) Inorganic carbon uptake strategies in coralline algae: Plasticity across evolutionary lineages under ocean acidification and warming. Marine Environmental Research. 161: 105107
Britton D, Schmid M, Noisette F, et al. (2020) Adjustments in fatty acid composition is a mechanism that can explain resilience to marine heatwaves and future ocean conditions in the habitat-forming seaweed Phyllospora comosa (Labillardière) C.Agardh. Global Change Biology
Ellwood MJ, Boyd PW, Cornwall CE, et al. (2020) Keith Hunter’s legacy to Marine Science in New Zealand Marine and Freshwater Research. 71: i
Cornwall CE, Hurd CL. (2020) Variability in the benefits of ocean acidification to photosynthetic rates of macroalgae without CO2-concentrating mechanisms Marine and Freshwater Research. 71: 275
van der Loos LM, Schmid M, Leal PP, et al. (2019) Responses of macroalgae to CO enrichment cannot be inferred solely from their inorganic carbon uptake strategy. Ecology and Evolution. 9: 125-140
Britton D, Mundy CN, McGraw CM, et al. (2019) Responses of seaweeds that use CO2 as their sole inorganic carbon source to ocean acidification: differential effects of fluctuating pH but little benefit of CO2 enrichment Ices Journal of Marine Science. 76: 1860-1870
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