Adriana Humanes

Adriana Humanes
  • PhD James Cook University
  • PostDoc Position at Newcastle University

About

42
Publications
14,821
Reads
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955
Citations
Introduction
I am interested on coral reefs population ecology, hard corals reproduction and water quality impacts on marine populations using experimental and theoretical approaches.
Current institution
Newcastle University
Current position
  • PostDoc Position
Additional affiliations
January 2013 - August 2016
James Cook University
Position
  • Teacher assistant
Description
  • Life history and evolution of reef corals
January 2010 - December 2010
Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas
Position
  • Research Assistant
Description
  • Restoration of dry forests
January 2009 - August 2011
Simón Bolívar University
Position
  • Field assistant
Description
  • Ecological, ecotoxicological and environmental coral reef monitoring program at Los Roques National Park
Education
August 2012 - August 2016
James Cook University
Field of study
  • Marine Ecology
October 2007 - April 2009
Simón Bolívar University
Field of study
  • Marine Biological Sciences
October 1999 - December 2005
Central University of Venezuela
Field of study
  • Ecology

Publications

Publications (42)
Article
Full-text available
Coral reproduction is vulnerable to both declining water quality and warming temperatures, with simultaneous exposures likely compounding the negative impact of each stressor. We investigated how early life processes of the coral Acropora tenuis respond to increasing levels of suspended sediments in combination with temperature or organic nutrients...
Article
Full-text available
Inshore coral reefs are experiencing the combined pressures of excess nutrient availability associated with coastal activities and warming seawater temperatures. Both pressures are known to have detrimental effects on the early life history stages of hard corals, but studies of their combined effects on early demographic stages are lacking. We cond...
Article
Full-text available
Coral settlement and early survivorship play an important role in reef resilience. In this study we investigated the temporal and spatial variation of coral settlement and post-settlement survivorship in different reefs with high and low coral cover in Los Roques Archipelago, Venezuela. In situ estimations of settlement and post-settlement survivor...
Article
Full-text available
Suspended sediment from dredging activities and natural resuspension events represent a risk to the reproductive processes of coral, and therefore the ongoing maintenance of reefal populations. To investigate the underlying mechanisms that could reduce the fertilisation success in turbid water, we conducted several experiments exposing gametes of t...
Article
Full-text available
Thermal anomalies have become more severe, frequent and well-documented across the Caribbean for the past 30 years. This increase in temperature has caused coral bleaching resulting in reef decline. At Los Roques National Park, Venezuela, temperature has been monitored at four reef sites. In mid-September 2010, seawater temperature reached 30.85°C...
Article
Full-text available
For sessile broadcast spawning marine invertebrates, such as corals, successful sexual reproduction depends on conspecifics spawning synchronously. The precise monthly, lunar, and diel timing and the extent of synchrony, i.e., proportion of population reproducing at the same time, are likely to play a key role in coral population recovery, persiste...
Article
Marine heatwaves are intensifying under climate change, exposing populations of reef-building corals to mass mortality and intense selective pressure. It remains unknown whether adaptation can keep pace with warming and maintain reef functioning. We have developed an eco-evolutionary metapopulation model for Acropora , an ecologically important yet...
Article
Full-text available
The conservation and management of coral reef ecosystems will benefit from accurate assessments of reef-building coral species diversity. However, the true diversity of corals may be obfuscated by cryptic yet genetically distinct groups, which are likely more pervasive than currently recognised. Here, we investigate the prevalence of cryptic coral...
Article
Full-text available
Marine heatwaves are becoming more frequent, widespread and severe, causing mass coral bleaching and mortality. Natural adaptation may be insufficient to keep pace with climate warming, leading to calls for selective breeding interventions to enhance the ability of corals to survive such heatwaves, i.e., their heat tolerance. However, the heritabil...
Preprint
Full-text available
High mortality rates of juvenile corals hinder both the natural recovery of populations and the successful implementation of restoration efforts. Grazing is a significant cause of juvenile coral mortality, and grazer exclusion devices have been shown to increase juvenile coral survivorship. However, most experiments have used cages that typically a...
Article
Full-text available
Marine heatwaves and mass bleaching have devastated coral populations globally, yet bleaching severity often varies among reefs. To what extent a reef’s past exposure to heat stress influences coral bleaching and mortality remains uncertain. Here we identify persistent local-scale hotspots and thermal refugia among the reefs of Palau, Micronesia, b...
Preprint
Full-text available
Conservation and management of coral reef ecosystems will depend on accurate assessments of reef-building coral species diversity. However, the true diversity of corals may be obfuscated by the presence of cryptic species, which are likely much more pervasive than is currently recognised. Additionally, cryptic species may sometimes hybridize, resul...
Technical Report
Full-text available
Over recent years the number of studies on the assisted evolution of corals has increased dramatically, with most able to demonstrate enhanced tolerance of the coral holobiont (that is, the cnidarian host, the photosynthetic symbionts and other microbes), (Drury et al., 2022 and more). Yet significant knowledge gaps exist in our fundamental underst...
Article
Full-text available
Recurrent mass bleaching events threaten the future of coral reefs. To persist under climate change, corals will need to endure progressively more intense and frequent marine heatwaves, yet it remains unknown whether their thermal tolerance can keep pace with warming. Here, we reveal an emergent increase in the thermal tolerance of coral assemblage...
Preprint
Full-text available
Marine heatwaves and mass bleaching have led to global declines in coral reefs. Corals can adapt, yet, to what extent local variations in thermal stress regimes influence heat tolerance and adaptive potential remains uncertain. Here we identify persistent local-scale thermal refugia and hotspots among the reefs of a remote Pacific archipelago, base...
Preprint
Full-text available
Marine heatwaves are becoming more frequent, widespread and severe1, leading to mass coral bleaching and mortality. Yet it remains unknown whether natural coral adaptation can keep pace with climate warming2. As a result, selective breeding has been proposed to enhance coral heat tolerance3. The viability of this management solution hinges on the e...
Article
Global environmental change is happening at unprecedented rates. Coral reefs are among the ecosystems most threatened by global change. For wild populations to persist, they must adapt. Knowledge shortfalls about corals' complex ecological and evolutionary dynamics, however, stymie predictions about potential adaptation to future conditions. Here,...
Article
Full-text available
As marine species adapt to climate change, their heat tolerance will likely be under strong selection. Yet trade-offs between heat tolerance and other life history traits could compromise natural adaptation or assisted evolution. This is particularly important for ecosystem engineers, such as reef-building corals, which support biodiversity yet are...
Preprint
Full-text available
Global environmental change is happening at unprecedented rates. Coral reefs are among the ecosystems most threatened by global change and for wild populations to persist, they must adapt. However, little is known about corals’ complex ecological and evolutionary dynamics making prediction about potential adaptation to future conditions precarious....
Article
Full-text available
Coral reefs are facing unprecedented mass bleaching and mortality events due to marine heatwaves and climate change. To avoid extirpation, corals must adapt. Individual variation in heat tolerance and its heritability underpin the potential for coral adaptation. However, the magnitude of heat tolerance variability within coral populations is largel...
Preprint
Full-text available
As marine species adapt to climate change, their heat tolerance will likely be under strong selection. Yet trade-offs between heat tolerance and other life history traits could compromise natural adaptation or restorative assisted evolution. This is particularly important for ecosystem engineers, such as reef-building corals, which support biodiver...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
The paper discusses the implications of placing artificial structures within ocean ecologies and the culture of human interventions that aid ecological networks. The role of the architect is examined in relationship to the design and development of non-human habitats and the potential for utilizing architectural skills within interdisciplinary coll...
Article
Full-text available
The global impacts of climate change are evident in every marine ecosystem. On coral reefs, mass coral bleaching and mortality have emerged as ubiquitous responses to ocean warming, yet one of the greatest challenges of this epiphenomenon is linking information across scientific disciplines and spatial and temporal scales. Here we review some of th...
Article
Ecosystem restoration has been practiced for over a century and is increasingly supported by the emergent applied science of restoration ecology. A prerequisite for successful ecosystem restoration is determining meaningful and measurable goals. This requires tools to monitor success in a standardized way. Photogrammetry uses images to reconstruct...
Article
Full-text available
Success and impact metrics in science are based on a system that perpetuates sexist and racist “rewards” by prioritizing citations and impact factors. These metrics are flawed and biased against already marginalized groups and fail to accurately capture the breadth of individuals’ meaningful scientific impacts. We advocate shifting this outdated va...
Article
Full-text available
Coral cover on tropical reefs has declined during the last three decades due to the combined effects of climate change, destructive fishing, pollution, and land use change. Drastic reductions in greenhouse gas emissions combined with effective coastal management and conservation strategies are essential to slow this decline. Innovative approaches,...
Preprint
Full-text available
Coral cover on tropical reefs has declined during the last three decades due to the combined effects of climate change, destructive fishing, pollution, and land use change. Drastic reductions in greenhouse gas emissions combined with effective coastal management and conservation strategies are essential to slow this decline. Innovative approaches,...
Article
Full-text available
Elevated suspended sediment concentrations (SSCs) often impact coral fertilisation success, but sediment composition can influence effect thresholds, which is problematic for accurately predicting risk. Here, we derived concentration-response thresholds and cause-effect pathways for SSCs comprising a range of realistic mineral and organic compositi...
Data
GLM results showing the effects of temperature (Temp) and nutrient enrichment (Nut) on i) fertilization success (Experiment 1a), embryo development (Experiment 1b), larval development (Experiment 1c) and larval settlement (Experiment 1d), and ii) juvenile growth, production of new polyps, final weigh/final size, Fv/Fm, survivorship curves (Experime...
Data
Four-month-old Acropora tenuis juveniles production of new polyps (mean ± sd) between day 4 and 59 of the experiment under different temperatures and nutrient enrichment [low (white bars), medium (grey bars), high (black bars)]. Control treatment: ‘low’ nutrient enrichment and at temperature = 27°C. (TIF)
Data
Temperatures (°C) during the incubation of the modified FSW with nutrient enrichment (Nut) and during Experiments 1 (a, b, c and d), 2 and 3 (incubation period in Experiment 3 corresponds to the exposure to nutrient enrichment during 20 days before starting the temperature stress). Values shown are means ± sd. (DOCX)
Article
Full-text available
Thermal anomalies have become more severe, frequent and well-documented across the Caribbean for the past 30 years. This increase in temperature has caused coral bleaching resulting in reef decline. At Los Roques National Park, Venezuela, temperature has been monitored at four reef sites. In mid-September 2010, seawater temperature reached 30.85°C...
Article
Full-text available
Transgressive dune fields often comprise a multiplicity of landforms where vegetation processes largely affect landform dynamics, which in turn, also affect vegetation processes. These associations have seldom been studied in detail. This paper examines four separate landform types in a complex coastal transgressive dunefield located in the central...
Article
Full-text available
Transgressive dune fi elds often comprise a multiplicity of landforms where vegetation processes largely affect land-form dynamics, which in turn, also affect vegetation processes. These associations have seldom been studied in detail. This paper examines four separate landform types in a complex coastal transgressive dunefi eld located in the cent...
Chapter
Full-text available
Resumen En los arrecifes coralinos el reclutamiento determina los patrones de abundancia y dis-tribución de las especies. La incorporación de nuevos individuos a la población tiene im-plicaciones en la estructura genética y en la diversidad de los ensamblajes locales, como sucede en el caso particular del Parque Nacional Archipiélago Los Roques (PN...

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