Terrie Klinger
University of Washington
60 Papers
290 Citations
Terrie Klinger is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ocean acidification & Population. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 53 publications.
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Papers
The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Calcifying Organisms in Marine Ecosystems: An Organism to Ecosystem Perspective
Gretchen E. Hofmann,James P. Barry,Peter J. Edmunds,Ruth D. Gates,David A. Hutchins,Terrie Klinger,Mary A. Sewell +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the literature concerning the biological and ecological impacts of ocean acidification on calcification, using a cross-scale, process-oriented approach, and find that areas such as fertilization, early life-history stages, and interaction with synergistic stressors are understudied.
547
•Journal Article
Sources, Fate and Effects of Microplastics in the Marine Environment: Part 2 of a Global Assessment
Nina Bednaršek,Terrie Klinger,Chris J. Harvey,Stephen B. Weisberg,R.M. McCabe,Richard A. Feely,Jan Newton,Nick Tolimieri,Christopher R. Kelble,Mike Fogarty,Kelly S. Andrews,Paul Marchal,Lorna R. Teal,Paul J. Somerfield,Melanie C. Austen,Manuel Barange,Anne F. Sell,Icarus Allen,Myron A. Peck +18 more
370
Ocean acidification through the lens of ecological theory
Brian Gaylord,Kristy J. Kroeker,Jennifer M. Sunday,Kathryn Anderson,James P. Barry,Norah E. M. Brown,Sean D. Connell,Sam Dupont,Katharina E. Fabricius,Jason Hall Hall-Spencer,Terrie Klinger,Marco Milazzo,Philip L. Munday,Bayden D. Russell,Eric Sanford,Sebastian J. Schreiber,Vengatesen Thiyagarajan,Megan L. H. Vaughan,Steven Widdicombe,Christopher D. G. Harley +19 more
TL;DR: This work focuses on conceptual models that, when considered in the context of acidification, yield explicit predictions regarding a spectrum of population- and community-level effects, from narrowing of species ranges and shifts in patterns of demographic connectivity, to modified consumer-resource relationships, to ascendance of weedy taxa and loss of species diversity.
Ocean acidification can mediate biodiversity shifts by changing biogenic habitat
Jennifer M. Sunday,Katharina E. Fabricius,Kristy J. Kroeker,Kathryn Anderson,Norah E. M. Brown,James P. Barry,Sean D. Connell,Sam Dupont,Brian Gaylord,Jason M. Hall-Spencer,Jason M. Hall-Spencer,Terrie Klinger,Marco Milazzo,Philip L. Munday,Bayden D. Russell,Eric Sanford,Vengatesen Thiyagarajan,Megan L. H. Vaughan,Stephen Widdicombe,Christopher D. G. Harley +19 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of ocean acidification on the structure and complexity of coastal marine biogenic habitat have been broadly overlooked, and the authors explore how declining pH and carbonate saturation may affect the structural complexity of four major biogenic habitats.
A systematic review of ecological attributes that confer resilience to climate change in environmental restoration.
TL;DR: It is suggested that including resilience as an explicit planning objective could increase the success of restoration projects, and considering the ecological context and focal scale of a restoration action is essential in choosing appropriate resilience attributes.