Elvira S. Poloczanska

ORCID: 0000-0001-8470-0925
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Marine and fisheries research
  • Marine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies
  • Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
  • Ocean Acidification Effects and Responses
  • Species Distribution and Climate Change
  • Marine and coastal plant biology
  • Coastal and Marine Management
  • Marine Biology and Ecology Research
  • Marine animal studies overview
  • Climate Change Policy and Economics
  • Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
  • Climate variability and models
  • Wildlife Ecology and Conservation
  • Marine Ecology and Invasive Species
  • Physiological and biochemical adaptations
  • Land Use and Ecosystem Services
  • Avian ecology and behavior
  • Climate Change Communication and Perception
  • demographic modeling and climate adaptation
  • Pesticide and Herbicide Environmental Studies
  • Invertebrate Taxonomy and Ecology
  • Isotope Analysis in Ecology
  • Research Data Management Practices
  • Environmental Policies and Emissions
  • Environmental and Social Impact Assessments

Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und Meeresforschung
2017-2025

Plymouth Marine Laboratory
2025

Cambridge University Press
2022-2023

Miriam (Norway)
2022

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
2020

The University of Queensland
2015-2018

CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere
2008-2017

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
2008-2016

Scottish Association For Marine Science
1999-2009

Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom
2009

Climate change challenges organisms to adapt or move track changes in environments space and time. We used two measures of thermal shifts from analyses global temperatures over the past 50 years describe pace climate that species should track: velocity (geographic isotherms time) shift seasonal timing temperatures. Both are higher ocean than on land at some latitudes, despite slower warming. These indices give a complex mosaic predicted range phenology deviate simple poleward migration...

10.1126/science.1210288 article EN Science 2011-11-03

Climate change is driving changes in the physical and chemical properties of ocean that have consequences for marine ecosystems. Here, we review evidence responses life to recent climate across regions, from tropical seas polar oceans. We consider observed calcification rates, demography, abundance, distribution phenology species. draw on a database impacts species, supplemented with Fifth Assessment Report Intergovernmental Panel Change. discuss factors limit or facilitate species'...

10.3389/fmars.2016.00062 article EN cc-by Frontiers in Marine Science 2016-05-04

Coral reefs are found in a wide range of environments, where they provide food and habitat to large organisms as well other ecological goods services. Warm-water coral reefs, for example, occupy shallow sunlit, warm alkaline waters order grow calcify at the high rates necessary build maintain their calcium carbonate structures. At deeper locations (40 – 150 m), "mesophotic" (low light) accumulate much lower (if all some cases) yet remain important organisms, including those fisheries....

10.3389/fmars.2017.00158 article EN cc-by Frontiers in Marine Science 2017-05-29

The Summary for Policymakers (SPM) of the Synthesis Report (SYR) Sixth Assessment (AR6) Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), is a component SYR which provides policy-relevant but policy-neutral summary SYR. It consistent with Sections and approved line by Governments at plenary session Change.

10.59327/ipcc/ar6-9789291691647.001 article EN 2023-07-21

Kelp forests define >8000km of temperate coastline across southern Australia, where ~70% Australians live, work and recreate. Despite this, public political awareness the scale significance this marine ecosystem is low, research investment miniscule (<10%), relative to comparable ecosystems. The absence an identity for Australia’s reefs as entity has probably contributed current lack appreciation system, which at odds with its profound ecological, social economic importance. We ‘Great...

10.1071/mf15232 article EN cc-by-nc-nd Marine and Freshwater Research 2015-08-27

Current evidence of phenological responses to recent climate change is substantially biased towards northern hemisphere temperate regions. Given regional differences in change, shifts phenology will not be uniform across the globe, and conclusions drawn from systems might applicable other regions on planet. We conduct largest meta-analysis date drivers trends among southern species, assessing 1208 long-term datasets 89 studies 347 species. Data were mostly Australasia (Australia New...

10.1371/journal.pone.0075514 article EN cc-by PLoS ONE 2013-10-01

Abstract Climate change is shifting species’ distribution and phenology. Ecological traits, such as mobility or reproductive mode, explain variation in observed rates of shift for some taxa. However, estimates relationships between traits climate responses could be influenced by how are measured. We compiled a global data set 651 published marine to change, from 47 papers on shifts 32 phenology change. assessed the relative importance two classes predictors rate ecological responding taxa...

10.1111/gcb.13184 article EN Global Change Biology 2015-12-10

CR Climate Research Contact the journal Facebook Twitter RSS Mailing List Subscribe to our mailing list via Mailchimp HomeLatest VolumeAbout JournalEditorsSpecials 37:123-133 (2008) - DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/cr00768 Complex interactions in a rapidly changing world: responses of rocky shore communities recent climate change S. J. Hawkins1,2, P. Moore1,3,*, M. T. Burrows4, E. Poloczanska5, N. Mieszkowska1, R. H. Herbert6, Jenkins2, C. Thompson3, Genner1,7, A. Southward1,† 1Marine...

10.3354/cr00768 article EN Climate Research 2008-08-07

MEPS Marine Ecology Progress Series Contact the journal Facebook Twitter RSS Mailing List Subscribe to our mailing list via Mailchimp HomeLatest VolumeAbout JournalEditorsTheme Sections 396:245-259 (2009) - DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps08378 Consequences of climate-driven biodiversity changes for ecosystem functioning North European rocky shores S. J. Hawkins1,2,*, H. E. Sugden1, N. Mieszkowska2, P. Moore2,3, Poloczanska4, R. Leaper5, Herbert6,7, M. Genner2,8, Moschella2,9, C....

10.3354/meps08378 article EN Marine Ecology Progress Series 2009-10-26

Biotic interactions will modulate species' responses to climate change. Many approaches predicting the impacts of change on biodiversity so far have been based purely a envelope approach and not considered direct indirect species interactions. Using long-term observational data set (>30 years) competing intertidal barnacle species, we built hierarchy age-structured two-taxa population models (Semibalanus balanoides vs. Chthamalus montagui C. stellatus combined as one taxon) test if presence...

10.1890/07-1169.1 article EN Ecology 2008-11-01

A coherent global vision is needed to better determine the impacts of climate change on marine systems.

10.1126/science.1156129 article EN Science 2008-06-06
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