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Friday, November 22, 2024

University of New Orleans Biologist T. Erin Cox Studies Life Underwater

University of New Orleans  biologist T. Erin Cox’s research expertise is in coastal benthic  organisms, which are the animals and plants that live on the sea floor.  Her laboratory group is interested in how these organisms respond to  climate change and other environmental factors that can affect life on  land.

“I study organisms that live on the sea floor, things like barnacles  or crabs or sea grasses or algae,” Cox said. “We look at how they  interact with each other and the environment, and how their interactions  can cascade to affect things that humans get out of the ecosystems.”

Cox recently collaborated with the Dauphin Island Sea Lab to explore  and collect samples from artificial reefs off the coast of Alabama.

That research focuses on how human-made structures shape the ecology  of the northern Gulf of Mexico, and the effects of global environmental  change on seagrass bed and artificial reef ecosystems.  

 

Seagrass beds are an important natural resource in the northern Gulf of  Mexico, according to Cox. They indirectly support commercial fishing  landings, protect shorelines from storm surge and land loss, and capture  carbon to buffer climate change, she said.

“Things like seagrass beds help to stabilize sediment and slow wave  action, and that prevents land erosion and we have a lot of land loss,”  Cox said. “Then things on the reef are food for a lot of fishes that we  like to harvest. So, our research is really focusing on managing those  ecosystems and protecting those ecosystems and how we can do that.”

Artificial reefs are human-made structures often placed in the ocean  to increase fishing opportunities and promote sea life. In the northern  Gulf of Mexico, the seafloor is mostly composed of soft sediments.  Therefore, artificial surfaces create habitat for invertebrates, such as  barnacles, crabs, anemones and algae, that otherwise may not be there,  Cox said.

“Our research questions focus on describing primary production on and  surrounding reefs and the link to fish production,” Cox said.  “Invertebrates are important for trophic transfer of this energy to  fishes. Thus, we are also keenly interested in their physiology-ecology  under ocean warming and acidification.

“Because reefs could be stepping-stones for species range expansions  into warming waters, we also seek to describe the role of reefs in the  maintenance and spread of nuisance and vulnerable species.”

Original source can be found here.

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