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Conservation Physiology Programme (2)

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SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN (2)

Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) (2)

2 datasets found Page 1 of 1
DOI: 10.15493/dea.mims.26052359
Raw sun exposed temperature data from Sea Point, South Africa, 28 September to 12 November 2020

To better understand the physiological effects of marine invertebrates to changing environmental conditions, long-term monitoring which captures the natural variability of environmental parameters is required. In this way, experimental findings can be related back to field conditions, and better predictions can be made as to how marine invertebrates, particularly in the harsh intertidal, will fair with rising temperature. In May 2020, Cape Sea Urchins, Parechinus angulosus, were collected...

DOI: 10.15493/dea.mims.26052360
Sun exposed temperature data from Sea Point, South Africa, 28 September to 12 November 2020

To better understand the physiological effects of marine invertebrates to changing environmental conditions, long-term monitoring which captures the natural variability of environmental parameters is required. In this way, experimental findings can be related back to field conditions, and better predictions can be made as to how marine invertebrates, particularly in the harsh intertidal, will fair with rising temperature. In May 2020, Cape Sea Urchins, Parechinus angulosus, were collected...

2 datasets found Page 1 of 1