USGS Coastal and Marine Hazards and Resources Program
References Cited |
References Cited:Buttner, H., 1996, Rubble mounds of sand tilefish Malacanthus Plumieri (Block, 1787) and associated fishes in Columbia: Bulletin of Marine Science, v. 58, p. 248-260. Coleman, F.C., and Williams, S.L., 2002, Overexploiting marine ecosystem engineers: potential consequences for biodiversity: Trends in Ecology and Evolution, v. 17, p. 40-44. Cross, V.A., Blackwood, D.S., Halley, R.B., and Twichell, D.C., 2004, Bottom photographs from the Pulley Ridge Deep Coral Reef: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2004-1228, DVD-ROM. Halley, R.B., Garrison, V.E., Ciembronowicz, K.T., Edwards, R., Jaap, W.C., Mead, G., Earle, S., Hine, A.C., Jarrett, B., Lockers, S., Naar, D., Donahue, B., Dennis, G.D., and Twichell, D.C., 2003, Pulley Ridge; the U.S.'s deepest coral reef? in Best, G.R., ed., Joint conference on the science and restoration of the greater Everglades and Florida Bay ecosystem; from Kissimmee to the Keys, Palm Harbor, Florida, Greater Everglades and Florida Bay Ecosystem Restoration, United States, April 13-18, 2003, p. 238-240. Jarrett , B.D., Hine, A.C., Halley, R.B., Naar, D.F., Locker, S.D., Neumann, A.C., Twichell, D., Hu, C., Donahue, B.T., Jaap, W.C., Palandro, D., and Ciembronowicz, K., 2005, Strange bedfellows - a deep-water hermatypic coral reef superimposed on a drowned barrier island; southern Pulley Ridge, SW Florida platform margin: Marine Geology, v. 214, p. 295-307. |