John R. Ford

Affiliations: 
University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia 
Area:
Rock reef fish ecology, metapopulation dynamics
Google:
"John Ford"
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Gillies CL, McLeod IM, Alleway HK, et al. (2018) Australian shellfish ecosystems: Past distribution, current status and future direction. Plos One. 13: e0190914
Barrow J, Ford J, Day R, et al. (2018) Environmental drivers of growth and predicted effects of climate change on a commercially important fish, Platycephalus laevigatus Marine Ecology Progress Series. 598: 201-212
Ward TJ, Booth DJ, Fairweather PG, et al. (2017) Australia's coastal fisheries and farmed seafood: an ecological basis for determining sustainability Australian Zoologist. 39: 3-16
Ford JR, Shima JS, Swearer SE. (2016) Interactive effects of shelter and conspecific density shape mortality, growth, and condition in juvenile reef fish. Ecology. 97: 1373-80
Treml EA, Ford JR, Black KP, et al. (2015) Identifying the key biophysical drivers, connectivity outcomes, and metapopulation consequences of larval dispersal in the sea. Movement Ecology. 3: 17
Gillies CL, Fitzsimons JA, Branigan S, et al. (2015) Scaling-up marine restoration efforts in Australia Ecological Management and Restoration. 16: 84-85
Ford JR, Swearer SE. (2013) Two's company, three's a crowd: food and shelter limitation outweigh the benefits of group living in a shoaling fish. Ecology. 94: 1069-77
Ford JR, Swearer SE. (2013) Shoaling behaviour enhances risk of predation from multiple predator guilds in a marine fish. Oecologia. 172: 387-97
Hunt TL, Ford JR, Swearer SE. (2011) Ecological determinants of recruitment to populations of a temperate reef fish, Trachinops caudimaculatus (Plesiopidae) Marine and Freshwater Research. 62: 502-509
Ford JR, Williams RJ, Fowler AM, et al. (2010) Identifying critical estuarine seagrass habitat for settlement of coastally spawned fish Marine Ecology Progress Series. 408: 181-193
See more...