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Volume 27, Issue 11, Pages R434-R438 (June 2017)
Turf and surf Florian Maderspacher Current Biology Volume 27, Issue 11, Pages R434-R438 (June 2017) DOI: /j.cub Copyright © Terms and Conditions
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Surf and turf: Land and sea interact in complex, intricate ways
Surf and turf: Land and sea interact in complex, intricate ways. Here, coral thriving in a protected bay near a coastal forest in New Caledonia. Elsewhere, corals are under threat from land-based stressors, such as pollution, nutrients or sediments. (Photo: Peter Mumby.) Current Biology , R434-R438DOI: ( /j.cub ) Copyright © Terms and Conditions
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Ocean dusting: A dust plume stretches from the Sahara out into the Atlantic. Desert dust is the most important source of iron in this part of the ocean. (Photo: NASA.) Current Biology , R434-R438DOI: ( /j.cub ) Copyright © Terms and Conditions
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Diatoms: These microscopic algae are among the most important primary producers and carbon sequesterers in the ocean. (Slide: J.D. Möller, 1892; Photo: Matthias Burba, Current Biology , R434-R438DOI: ( /j.cub ) Copyright © Terms and Conditions
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Dead in the woods: after migrating into rivers from the ocean and spawning, Pacific salmon provide important nutrition for forest ecosystems in the Pacific Northwest. (Photo: Lana Brandt.) Current Biology , R434-R438DOI: ( /j.cub ) Copyright © Terms and Conditions
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