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Critical assessment and ramifications of a purported marine trophic cascade

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Grubbs, R.D., J.K. Carlson, J.G. Romine, T.H. Curtis, W.D. McElroy, C.T. McCandless, C.F. Cotton, and J.A. Musick. 2016. Critical assessment and remifications of a purported marine trophic cascade. Scientific Reports 6, Article number: 20970.

Summary

When identifying potential trophic cascades, it is important to clearly establish the trophic linkages between predators and prey with respect to temporal abundance, demographics, distribution, and diet. In the northwest Atlantic Ocean, the depletion of large coastal sharks was thought to trigger a trophic cascade whereby predation release resulted in increased cownose ray abundance, which then caused increased predation on and subsequent collapse of commercial bivalve stocks. These claims were used to justify the development of a predator-control fishery for cownose rays, the “Save the Bay, Eat a Ray” fishery, to reduce predation on commercial bivalves. A reexamination of data suggests declines in large coastal sharks did not coincide [...]

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Harvested on Mon Feb 29 04:18:18 MST 2016 from MODS XML Service

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Type Scheme Key
local-index unknown 70168660
local-pk unknown 70168660
doi http://www.loc.gov/standards/mods/mods-outline-3-5.html#identifier doi:10.1038/srep20970
series unknown Scientific Reports

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citationTypeArticle
journalScientific Reports
languageEnglish
parts
typevolume
value6
typePublication Place
valueLondon, England

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