Ben Raymond spends much of his time researching Ecology, Habitat, Oceanography, Climate change and Biodiversity. His study on Ecology is mostly dedicated to connecting different topics, such as Physical oceanography. His work carried out in the field of Habitat brings together such families of science as Antarctic krill, Krill, Leptonychotes weddellii, Marine ecosystem and Food chain.
Ben Raymond has included themes like Arctocephalus gazella, Aptenodytes, Pygoscelis, Marine habitats and Albatross in his Marine ecosystem study. In general Climate change, his work in Environmental change is often linked to Snow linking many areas of study. His Biodiversity research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Terrestrial ecosystem and Ecosystem.
Ben Raymond spends much of his time researching Ecology, Oceanography, Ecosystem, Predation and Habitat. His studies in Marine ecosystem, Foraging, Climate change, Albatross and Seabird are all subfields of Ecology research. His Climate change study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Biodiversity and Regime shift.
His studies deal with areas such as Trophic level, Benthic zone and Environmental resource management as well as Ecosystem. Ben Raymond has researched Predation in several fields, including Continental shelf, Fishery, Fishing and Environmental change. His Habitat study incorporates themes from Circumpolar star and Arctocephalus gazella.
The scientist’s investigation covers issues in Ecosystem, Climate change, Biodiversity, Environmental resource management and Predation. His Ecosystem research is multidisciplinary, relying on both Coral reef, Fishery and Tracking data. The concepts of his Climate change study are interwoven with issues in Habitat destruction, Trophic level and Wandering albatross, Seabird.
Ben Raymond combines subjects such as Critically endangered, Endangered species, Wilderness and Ecosystem management with his study of Biodiversity. The Predation study combines topics in areas such as Seasonal breeder, Foraging and Habitat. His Habitat research focuses on Life history theory and how it relates to Ecology.
Ecosystem, Environmental resource management, Fishery, Biodiversity and Continental shelf are his primary areas of study. Information system and Research groups are fields of study that overlap with his Ecosystem research. His Environmental resource management research incorporates elements of Tracking data and Biodiversity informatics.
His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Marine protected area and Sea ice. His study in Biodiversity is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Wilderness and Benthic zone. His Continental shelf study combines topics in areas such as Climate change, Predation, Ecological significance and Fishing.
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Systematic comparison of different algorithms for apnoea detection based on electrocardiogram recordings.
T. Penzel;J. McNames;P. de Chazal;B. Raymond.
Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing (2002)
Continent-wide risk assessment for the establishment of nonindigenous species in Antarctica
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2012)
Climate change drives expansion of Antarctic ice-free habitat
Jasmine R. Lee;Jasmine R. Lee;Ben Raymond;Ben Raymond;Ben Raymond;Thomas J. Bracegirdle;Iadine Chadès;Iadine Chadès.
Nature (2017)
Risk maps for Antarctic krill under projected Southern Ocean acidification
S. Kawaguchi;S. Kawaguchi;A. Ishida;A. Ishida;R. King;B. Raymond;B. Raymond.
Nature Climate Change (2013)
Community fingerprinting in a sequencing world
Josie van Dorst;Andrew Bissett;Anne S. Palmer;Mark Brown.
FEMS Microbiology Ecology (2014)
Important marine habitat off east Antarctica revealed by two decades of multi‐species predator tracking
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Ecography (2015)
Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean
Claude De Broyer;Philippe Koubbi;Huw J. Griffiths;Ben Raymond.
EPIC3Cambridge, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, 498 p., ISBN: 978-0-948277-28-3 (2014)
Light-driven tipping points in polar ecosystems.
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Global Change Biology (2013)
Applying Network Analysis to the Conservation of Habitat Trees in Urban Environments: a Case Study from Brisbane, Australia
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Conservation Biology (2006)
Tracking of marine predators to protect Southern Ocean ecosystems
Mark A. Hindell;Ryan R. Reisinger;Ryan R. Reisinger;Yan Ropert-Coudert;Luis A. Hückstädt.
Nature (2020)
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