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Earth Science

D-Index
42
Citations
9461
World Ranking
5142
National Ranking
1923

Overview

Andreas J. Andersson is affiliated with the University of California, San Diego in the United States. Their research primarily spans the fields of Environmental Science and Earth and Planetary Sciences, with significant contributions to subfields such as Oceanography, Ecology, Global and Planetary Change, Atmospheric Science, and Environmental Chemistry.

Their work centers on topics related to Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies, Ocean Acidification Effects and Responses, Marine and fisheries research, Marine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies, Marine and coastal ecosystems, Marine and coastal plant biology, and Marine Biology and Ecology Research.

They have authored and coauthored multiple scientific papers, including recent publications as follows:

  • Increasing hypoxia on global coral reefs under ocean warming (2023) published in Nature Climate Change
  • Crustose coralline algae can contribute more than corals to coral reef carbonate production (2023) published in Communications Earth & Environment
  • The challenges of detecting and attributing ocean acidification impacts on marine ecosystems (2020) published in ICES Journal of Marine Science
  • Disturbances drive changes in coral community assemblages and coral calcification capacity (2020) published in Ecosphere
  • Rapid assessments of Pacific Ocean net coral reef carbonate budgets and net calcification following the 2014-2017 global coral bleaching event (2022) published in Limnology and Oceanography

Frequent coauthors of Andreas J. Andersson include:

  • Travis A. Courtney
  • Tyler Cyronak
  • Samuel A. H. Kekuewa
  • Ariel K. Pezner
  • David I. Kline

Their research outputs have appeared repeatedly in a number of scientific journals, such as:

  • PLoS ONE
  • Aquatic Geochemistry
  • Frontiers in Marine Science
  • Journal of Geophysical Research Oceans
  • Coral Reefs

Best Publications

  • Anthropogenic perturbation of the carbon fluxes from land to ocean

    Pierre Regnier;Pierre Friedlingstein;Philippe Ciais;Fred T. Mackenzie

  • Decreased abundance of crustose coralline algae due to ocean acidification

    Ilsa B. Kuffner;Andreas J. Andersson;Andreas J. Andersson;Paul L. Jokiel;Ku‘ulei S. Rodgers

  • Ocean acidification and calcifying reef organisms: a mesocosm investigation

    P. L. Jokiel;K. S. Rodgers;I. B. Kuffner;A. J. Andersson

  • Life on the margin: implications of ocean acidification on Mg-calcite, high latitude and cold-water marine calcifiers

    Andreas J. Andersson;Fred T. Mackenzie;Nicholas R. Bates

  • Global declines in oceanic nitrification rates as a consequence of ocean acidification

    J. Michael Beman;Cheryl-Emiliane Chow;Andrew L. King;Yuanyuan Feng

  • Ocean Acidification and Coral Reefs: Effects on Breakdown, Dissolution, and Net Ecosystem Calcification

    Andreas J. Andersson;Dwight Gledhill

  • Initial responses of carbonate-rich shelf sediments to rising atmospheric pCO2 and “ocean acidification”: Role of high Mg-calcites

    John W. Morse;Andreas J. Andersson;Fred T. Mackenzie

  • Coral reefs will transition to net dissolving before end of century

    Bradley D. Eyre;Tyler Cyronak;Patrick Drupp;Eric Heinen De Carlo

  • Net loss of CaCO 3 from coral reef communities due to human induced seawater acidification

    A. J. Andersson;I. B. Kuffner;F. T. Mackenzie;P. L. Jokiel

  • Coastal ocean and carbonate systems in the high CO2 world of the Anthropocene

    Andreas J. Andersson;Fred T. Mackenzie;Abraham Lerman

  • Past and present of sediment and carbon biogeochemical cycling models

    F. T. Mackenzie;A. Lerman;A. J. Andersson

  • Benthic Coral Reef Calcium Carbonate Dissolution in an Acidifying Ocean

    Bradley D. Eyre;Andreas J. Andersson;Tyler Cyronak

  • The Impacts of the Oceans on Climate Change

    E. Lewis-Brown;P.C. Reid;A. Andersson;R. Arthurton

  • Solution of shallow-water carbonates: An insignificant buffer against rising atmospheric CO2

    Andreas J. Andersson;Fred T. Mackenzie;Leah May Ver

  • Dissolution of Carbonate Sediments Under Rising pCO2 and Ocean Acidification: Observations from Devil’s Hole, Bermuda

    Andreas J. Andersson;Nicholas R. Bates;Fred T. Mackenzie

  • Revisiting four scientific debates in ocean acidification research

    A. J. Andersson;F. T. Mackenzie

  • Carbonate-sensitive phytotransferrin controls high-affinity iron uptake in diatoms

    Jeffrey B. McQuaid;Adam B. Kustka;Miroslav Oborník;Aleš Horák

  • Feedbacks and responses of coral calcification on the Bermuda reef system to seasonal changes in biological processes and ocean acidification

    N. R. Bates;A. Amat;A. J. Andersson

  • Comparing Chemistry and Census-Based Estimates of Net Ecosystem Calcification on a Rim Reef in Bermuda

    Travis A. Courtney;Andreas J. Andersson;Nicholas R. Bates;Andrew R. Collins

  • Taking the Metabolic Pulse of the World's Coral Reefs

    Tyler Cyronak;Andreas J. Andersson;Chris Langdon;Rebecca Albright

  • Understanding ocean acidification impacts on organismal to ecological scales

    Andreas J. Andersson;David I. Kline;Peter J. Edmunds;Stephen D. Archer

Frequent Co-Authors

Fred T. Mackenzie
Fred T. Mackenzie University of Hawaii at Manoa
Nicholas R. Bates
Nicholas R. Bates Arizona State University
Bradley D. Eyre
Bradley D. Eyre Southern Cross University
Paul L. Jokiel
Paul L. Jokiel University of Hawaii at Manoa
David I. Kline
David I. Kline University of California, San Diego
Robert J. W. Brewin
Robert J. W. Brewin University of Exeter
Jennifer E. Smith
Jennifer E. Smith University of California, San Diego
Chris Langdon
Chris Langdon Oregon State University
Derek P. Manzello
Derek P. Manzello National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Adrienne Sutton
Adrienne Sutton Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory

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