Below is a list of my publications and reports, if you are interested in any of these but are not able to access them, please feel free to send me a message or an email and I can send you a pdf.

Spatial and temporal patterns in macroherbivore grazing on seagrass

Scott, A. L., York, P. H. and Rasheed, M. A. 2021. Spatial and temporal patterns in macroherbivore grazing in a multi-species tropical seagrass meadow of the Great Barrier Reef. Diversity. 13(1), 12.

 

green turtle grazing plot formation on the great barrier reef

Scott, A. L., York, P. H. and Rasheed, M. A. 2020. Green turtle (Chelonia mydas) grazing plot formation creates structural changes in a multi-species Great Barrier Reef seagrass meadow. Marine Environmental Research. Volume 162.

Herbivory impacts subtropical seagrass meadows

Scott, A. L., York, P. H. and Rasheed, M. A. 2020. Herbivory has a major influence on structure and condition of a Great Barrier Reef subtropical seagrass meadow. Estuaries and Coasts.

 

the value of seagrass meadows

United Nations Environment Programme (2020). Out of the Blue: The Value of Seagrasses to the Environment and to People. UNEP, Nairobi.

Chapters:

  • Seagrass ecosystem services: Assessment and scale of benefits.

  • Transforming conservation and understanding of seagrass ecosystems through the use of citizen science.

 

food webs in seagrass meadows

Jinks, K.I., C.J. Brown, M.A. Rasheed, A.L. Scott, M. Sheaves, P.H. York, and R.M. Connolly. 2019. Habitat complexity influences the structure of food webs in Great Barrier Reef seagrass meadows. Ecosphere 10.

herbivory and ecosystem services in tropical seagrasses

Scott, A. L., York, P. H., Duncan, C., Macreadie, P. I., Connolly, R. M., Ellis, M. T., Jarvis, J. C., Jinks, K. I., Marsh, H. and Rasheed, M. A. 2018. The role of herbivory in structuring tropical seagrass ecosystem service delivery. Frontiers in Plant Sciences. 9, 1–10.