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Dive into the research topics where Nyssa J. Silbiger is active.

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Featured researches published by Nyssa J. Silbiger.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Patterns in temporal variability of temperature, oxygen and pH along an environmental gradient in a coral reef

Òscar Guadayol; Nyssa J. Silbiger; Megan J. Donahue; Florence I. M. Thomas

Spatial and temporal environmental variability are important drivers of ecological processes at all scales. As new tools allow the in situ exploration of individual responses to fluctuations, ecologically meaningful ways of characterizing environmental variability at organism scales are needed. We investigated the fine-scale spatial heterogeneity of high-frequency temporal variability in temperature, dissolved oxygen concentration, and pH experienced by benthic organisms in a shallow coastal coral reef. We used a spatio-temporal sampling design, consisting of 21 short-term time-series located along a reef flat-to-reef slope transect, coupled to a long-term station monitoring water column changes. Spectral analyses revealed sharp gradients in variance decomposed by frequency, as well as differences between physically-driven and biologically-reactive parameters. These results highlight the importance of environmental variance at organismal scales and present a new sampling scheme for exploring this variability in situ.


Ecology | 2017

Environmental drivers of coral reef carbonate production and bioerosion: a multi‐scale analysis

Nyssa J. Silbiger; Megan J. Donahue; Russell E. Brainard

The resilience of coral reefs depends on the balance between reef growth and reef breakdown, and their responses to changing environmental conditions. Across the 2500-km Hawaiian Archipelago, we quantified rates of carbonate production, bioerosion, and net accretion at regional, island, site, and within-site spatial scales and tested how these rates respond to environmental conditions across different spatial scales. Overall, there were four major outcomes from this study: (1) bioerosion rates were generally higher in the populated Main Hawaiian Islands (MHI) than the remote, protected Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI), while carbonate production rates did not vary significantly between the two regions; (2) variability in carbonate production, bioerosion, and net accretion rates was greatest at the smallest within-reef spatial scale; (3) carbonate production and bioerosion rates were associated with distinct sets of environmental parameters; and (4) the strongest correlates of carbonate production, bioerosion, and net accretion rates were different between the MHI region and the NWHI region: in the MHI, the dominant correlates were percent cover of macroalgae and herbivorous fish biomass for carbonate production and bioerosion, respectively, whereas in the NWHI, the top correlates were total alkalinity and benthic cover. This study highlights the need to understand accretion and erosion processes as well as local environmental conditions to predict net coral reef responses to future environmental changes.


Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2018

Nutrient pollution disrupts key ecosystem functions on coral reefs

Nyssa J. Silbiger; Craig E. Nelson; Kristina Remple; Jessica K. Sevilla; Zachary A. Quinlan; Hollie M. Putnam; Michael D. Fox; Megan J. Donahue

There is a long history of examining the impacts of nutrient pollution and pH on coral reefs. However, little is known about how these two stressors interact and influence coral reef ecosystem functioning. Using a six-week nutrient addition experiment, we measured the impact of elevated nitrate (NO−3) and phosphate (PO3−4) on net community calcification (NCC) and net community production (NCP) rates of individual taxa and combined reef communities. Our study had four major outcomes: (i) NCC rates declined in response to nutrient addition in all substrate types, (ii) the mixed community switched from net calcification to net dissolution under medium and high nutrient conditions, (iii) nutrients augmented pH variability through modified photosynthesis and respiration rates, and (iv) nutrients disrupted the relationship between NCC and aragonite saturation state documented in ambient conditions. These results indicate that the negative effect of NO−3 and PO3−4 addition on reef calcification is likely both a direct physiological response to nutrients and also an indirect response to a shifting pH environment from altered NCP rates. Here, we show that nutrient pollution could make reefs more vulnerable to global changes associated with ocean acidification and accelerate the predicted shift from net accretion to net erosion.


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2008

Carapace color change in Uca pugilator as a response to temperature

Nyssa J. Silbiger; Pablo Munguia


Supplement to: Silbiger, NJ et al. (2014): Reefs shift from net accretion to net erosion along a natural environmental gradient. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 515, 33-44, https://doi.org/10.3354/meps10999 | 2014

Reefs shift from net accretion to net erosion along a natural environmental gradient

Nyssa J. Silbiger; Òscar Guadayol; Florence I. M. Thomas; Megan J. Donahue


Marine Chemistry | 2015

Fluorescent dissolved organic matter as a multivariate biogeochemical tracer of submarine groundwater discharge in coral reef ecosystems

Craig E. Nelson; Megan J. Donahue; Henrieta Dulaiova; Stuart J. Goldberg; Florybeth F. La Valle; Katie Lubarsky; Justin Miyano; Christina Richardson; Nyssa J. Silbiger; Florence I. M. Thomas


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2013

Latitudinal differences in thermoregulatory color change in Uca pugilator

Pablo Munguia; Jeffrey S. Levinton; Nyssa J. Silbiger


Limnology and Oceanography | 2018

Effects of submarine groundwater discharge on coral accretion and bioerosion on two shallow reef flats

Katie Lubarsky; Nyssa J. Silbiger; Megan J. Donahue


Limnology and Oceanography | 2018

Fluorescent organic exudates of corals and algae in tropical reefs are compositionally distinct and increase with nutrient enrichment

Zachary A. Quinlan; Kristina Remple; Michael D. Fox; Nyssa J. Silbiger; Thomas A. Oliver; Hollie M. Putnam; Linda Wegley Kelly; Craig A. Carlson; Megan J. Donahue; Craig E. Nelson


Archive | 2015

Impacts of multiple environmental stressors on coral reef erosion and secondary accretion

Nyssa J. Silbiger; Òscar Guadayol; Florence I. M. Thomas; Megan J. Donahue

Collaboration


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Megan J. Donahue

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Florence I. M. Thomas

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Hollie M. Putnam

University of Rhode Island

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Michael D. Fox

University of California

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