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Dive into the research topics where Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya is active.

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Featured researches published by Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya.


BioScience | 2012

The Central Role of Dispersal in the Maintenance and Persistence of Seagrass Populations

Gary A. Kendrick; Michelle Waycott; Tim J. B. Carruthers; Marion L. Cambridge; Renae Hovey; Siegfried L. Krauss; Paul S. Lavery; Donald H. Les; Ryan J. Lowe; Oriol Mascaró i Vidal; Jillian Lean Sim Ooi; Robert J. Orth; David O. Rivers; Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya; Elizabeth A. Sinclair; John Statton; Jent Kornelis van Dijk; Jennifer J. Verduin

Global seagrass losses parallel significant declines observed in corals and mangroves over the past 50 years. These combined declines have resulted in accelerated global losses to ecosystem services in coastal waters. Seagrass meadows can be extensive (hundreds of square kilometers) and long-lived (thousands of years), with the meadows persisting predominantly through vegetative (clonal) growth. They also invest a large amount of energy in sexual reproduction. In this article, we explore the role that sexual reproduction, pollen, and seed dispersal play in maintaining species distributions, genetic diversity, and connectivity among seagrass populations. We also address the relationship between long-distance dispersal, genetic connectivity, and the maintenance of genetic diversity that may enhance resilience to stresses associated with seagrass loss. Our reevaluation of seagrass dispersal and recruitment has altered our perception of the importance of long-distance dispersal and has revealed extensive dispersal at scales much larger than was previously thought possible.


McMahon, K., van Dijk, K-J, Ruiz-Montoya, L., Kendrick, G.A., Krauss, S.L., Waycott, M., Verduin, J. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Verduin, Jennifer.html>, Lowe, R., Statton, J., Brown, E. and Duarte, C. (2014) The movement ecology of seagrasses. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 281 (1795). p. 20140878. | 2014

The movement ecology of seagrasses

Kathryn McMahon; Kor-jent van Dijk; Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya; Gary A. Kendrick; Siegfried L. Krauss; Michelle Waycott; Jennifer J. Verduin; Ryan J. Lowe; John Statton; Eloise Brown; Carlos M. Duarte

A movement ecology framework is applied to enhance our understanding of the causes, mechanisms and consequences of movement in seagrasses: marine, clonal, flowering plants. Four life-history stages of seagrasses can move: pollen, sexual propagules, vegetative fragments and the spread of individuals through clonal growth. Movement occurs on the water surface, in the water column, on or in the sediment, via animal vectors and through spreading clones. A capacity for long-distance dispersal and demographic connectivity over multiple timeframes is the novel feature of the movement ecology of seagrasses with significant evolutionary and ecological consequences. The space–time movement footprint of different life-history stages varies. For example, the distance moved by reproductive propagules and vegetative expansion via clonal growth is similar, but the timescales range exponentially, from hours to months or centuries to millennia, respectively. Consequently, environmental factors and key traits that interact to influence movement also operate on vastly different spatial and temporal scales. Six key future research areas have been identified.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2015

Strategy for assessing impacts in ephemeral tropical seagrasses

Renae Hovey; John Statton; Matthew W. Fraser; Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya; Andrea Zavala‐Perez; Max Rees; James A. Stoddart; Gary A. Kendrick

We investigated the phenology and spatial patterns in Halophila decipiens by assessing biomass, reproduction and seed density in ~400 grab samples collected across nine sites (8 to 14 m water depth) between June 2011 and December 2012. Phenology correlated with light climate which is governed by the summer monsoon (wet period). During the wet period, sedimentary seed banks prevailed, varying spatially at both broad and fine scales, presenting a source of propagules for re-colonisation following the unfavourable growing conditions of the monsoon. Spatial patterns in H. decipiens biomass following monsoon conditions were highly variable within a landscape that largely comprised potential seagrass habitat. Management strategies for H. decipiens and similar transient species must recognise the high temporal and spatial variability of these populations and be underpinned by a framework that emphasises vulnerability assessments of different life stages instead of relying solely on thresholds for standing stock at fixed reference sites.


Archive | 2018

Reproductive, Dispersal and Recruitment Strategies in Australian Seagrasses

Craig D. H. Sherman; Timothy M. Smith; Paul H. York; Jessie Jarvis; Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya; Gary A. Kendrick

Seagrasses are a relatively small group of marine angiosperms that have successfully colonised the oceans and includes monecious, dioecious and hermaphroditic species. They display a range of mating systems, dispersal mechanisms and recruitment strategies that have allowed them to adapt and survive within the marine environment. This includes a general reduction in the size and complexity of floral structures, and subsurface pollination (hydrophily) in the majority of species. Fertilisation occurs through water-dispersed pollen that is typically filamentous and sticky, however, recent work has also suggested that marine invertebrates may play a role in pollen movement and fertilisation. Seed size and morphology varies widely among species, from fleshy floating fruit (e.g. Posidonia) to small negatively buoyant seeds less than 0.5 mm (e.g. Halophila). Nearly all species retain some capacity of asexual reproduction through rhizome elongation or the production of asexual fragment or propagules that can be more widely dispersed. These differences in reproductive strategies have important effects on recruitment and dispersal potential and subsequent population dynamics. Direct estimates of dispersal and recruitment are inherently difficult to assess in seagrasses, but the use of novel genetic and predictive modelling approaches are providing new insights into these important processes. This chapter highlights the main reproductive strategies and adaptations seagrass have undergone in response to reproducing in a marine environment, with an emphasis on Australian seagrass species. We highlight the current state of knowledge in Australian seagrass reproductive biology and future directions in seagrass reproductive biology research.


Limnology and Oceanography | 2012

The role of hydrodynamics on seed dispersal in seagrasses

Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya; Ryan J. Lowe; K.P. Van Niel; Gary A. Kendrick


Movement ecology | 2015

Contemporary connectivity is sustained by wind- and current-driven seed dispersal among seagrass meadows

Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya; Ryan J. Lowe; Gary A. Kendrick


Limnology and Oceanography | 2016

Feedback between sediment and light for seagrass: Where is it important?

Matthew P. Adams; Renae Hovey; Matthew R. Hipsey; Louise Bruce; Marco Ghisalberti; Ryan J. Lowe; Renee K. Gruber; Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya; Paul Maxwell; David P. Callaghan; Gary A. Kendrick; Katherine R. O'Brien


Journal of Biogeography | 2016

Genetic signatures of Bassian glacial refugia and contemporary connectivity in a marine foundation species

Elizabeth A. Sinclair; Janet M. Anthony; Dougal Greer; Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya; Suzanna M. Evans; Siegfried L. Krauss; Gary A. Kendrick


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2015

Roles of dispersal and predation in determining seedling recruitment patterns in a foundational marine angiosperm

Stephen R. Manley; Robert J. Orth; Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya


Continental Shelf Research | 2014

Summer circulation dynamics within the Perth coastal waters of southwestern Australia

Leonardo Ruiz-Montoya; Ryan J. Lowe

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Gary A. Kendrick

University of Western Australia

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Ryan J. Lowe

University of Western Australia

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John Statton

University of Western Australia

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Renae Hovey

University of Western Australia

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Siegfried L. Krauss

University of Western Australia

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Elizabeth A. Sinclair

University of Western Australia

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Robert J. Orth

Virginia Institute of Marine Science

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Andrea Zavala‐Perez

University of Western Australia

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