2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2021.107297
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Preference, avoidance or coincidence? How fish and crustaceans use intertidal salt-marsh creeks in the German Wadden Sea

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Due to the vast numbers of nekton supported by the coastal seascape, this group of consumers appears to play a particularly important role in the active, biota‐mediated transfer of blue carbon (Irlandi & Crawford, 1997; Moss, 2017). Nektonic consumers are highly mobile across BCE borders and transfer carbon through foraging, ontogenetic migrations, trophic relays and predator avoidance (Friese et al, 2021; Hyndes et al, 2014; Mellbrand et al, 2011). Also, larval export from BCEs is an important biological carbon flux across ecosystem borders in the coastal zone (Saintilan & Mazumder, 2017).…”
Section: Part I—a Conceptual Framework Of Biotic‐interaction Effects ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Due to the vast numbers of nekton supported by the coastal seascape, this group of consumers appears to play a particularly important role in the active, biota‐mediated transfer of blue carbon (Irlandi & Crawford, 1997; Moss, 2017). Nektonic consumers are highly mobile across BCE borders and transfer carbon through foraging, ontogenetic migrations, trophic relays and predator avoidance (Friese et al, 2021; Hyndes et al, 2014; Mellbrand et al, 2011). Also, larval export from BCEs is an important biological carbon flux across ecosystem borders in the coastal zone (Saintilan & Mazumder, 2017).…”
Section: Part I—a Conceptual Framework Of Biotic‐interaction Effects ...mentioning
confidence: 99%