NCEAS Working Groups
Open science training enabling synthetic science within the Gulf Research Program
Project Description
Principal Investigator(s)
Matthew B. Jones
Project Dates
Start: September 15, 2016
End: September 14, 2017
completed
Participants
- Marcus W. Beck
- Southern California Coastal Water Research Project (SCCWRP)
- Brittany Blomberg
- Dauphin Island Sea Laboratory
- Julien Brun
- University of California, Santa Barbara
- Amber E. Budden
- University of New Mexico
- Andrea Dell'Apa
- Ocean Conservancy
- Kim de Mutsert
- George Mason University
- Kirsten Dorans
- Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Council
- Brad Erisman
- University of Texas
- Kaitlin Frasier
- University of California, San Diego
- Cassandra Glaspie
- Oregon State University
- Jessica Renee Henkel
- Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Council
- Alexander Ilich
- University of South Florida
- Kathryn Ireland
- Montana State University
- Matthew B. Jones
- University of California, Santa Barbara
- Alexander S. Kolker
- Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium
- Christopher J. Lortie
- York University
- Bryce Mecum
- University of California, Santa Barbara
- Paula Moreno
- University of Southern Mississippi
- Sunil Nepal
- Auburn University
- Uyen Nguyen
- Pennsylvania State University
- Courtney Page
- Alexander Sacco
- University of Central Florida
- Samendra Sherchan
- Tulane University
- Edward T. Sherwood
- Tampa Bay Estuary Program
- Tingting Tang
- University of Louisiana, Lafayette
- Tracy Teal
- Michigan State University
- Vanessa Tobias
- Louisiana State University
- Patricia Varela
- Texas A and M University
- Leah Wasser
- National Ecological Observatory Network, Inc. (NEON)
- Haorui Wu
- University of Calgary
- Mohammad Yassin
- Jackson State University
- Caitlin Young
- National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Products
-
Journal Article / 2019
Assessment of the Cumulative Effects of Restoration Activities on Water Quality in Tampa Bay, Florida
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Journal Article / 2020
A meta-analytical review of the effects of environmental and ecological drivers on the abundance of red snapper (Lutjanus campechanus) in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico