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1 stoff) that elicits fear in members of their shoal.
2 it significantly decreased their tendency to shoal.
3 ny scales, from bacteria to insects, to fish shoals.
4 ransition from overdispersed groups to tight shoals.
5 -living solitary wave of depression over the shoals.
6 ur, including group decision-making, in fish shoals.
7 wimming stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) shoals.
8 ols are faster and less dense than zebrafish shoals.
9  mixing, especially if males encounter mixed shoals.
10  of time zebrafish groups spend schooling or shoaling.
11 he individual selective advantages gained by shoaling.
12 that reduced the 2-dimensional area of their shoals 15-fold compared with water-only controls.
13 core of the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) shoaled(2).
14 ymetry and upwelling resulted in mixed-layer shoaling above the depth of minimum annual irradiance do
15 ree-dimensional structure of Antarctic krill shoals acoustically.
16 e likely to benefit from the protection of a shoal and will improve their survival chances as a resul
17  most rapidly when North Atlantic Deep Water shoaled and stratification in the Southern Ocean was red
18 grove trees on backreefs provide habitat for shoaling and adult reef fishes in addition to serving as
19 ent evidence that behavioural traits such as shoaling and mate choice can promote population mixing i
20 H(+) axons, as well as permanent deficits in shoaling and reproductive behavior.
21 e motion corresponding to the definitions of shoaling and schooling.
22 ystems around the unpopulated French Frigate Shoals and along the relatively lightly populated Kona C
23 ip in large, swarm-like groups, such as fish shoals and bird flocks.
24 bserved in bird flocks and perhaps also fish shoals and highly aligned mammal aggregations, such as m
25 t zebrafish in either wild-type or knock-out shoals and tested different components of social behavio
26 tive behavior: birds flock, bees swarm, fish shoal, and ungulates herd.
27 roups in the wild, such as bird flocks, fish shoals, and locust swarms.
28  sea surface, many anchovies in the targeted shoal appeared to lose orientation and flowed passively
29          Tunas that will be most impacted by shoaling are Pacific and southern bluefin tunas-habitat
30 o an ephemeral food source do so faster when shoals are in a disordered, swarm-like state.
31 aling is adaptive, and signals that maintain shoals are likely to evolve under selection.
32 of fish can either be 'shoals' or 'schools': shoals are simply aggregations of individuals; schools a
33             Loose aggregations of fishes, or shoals, are a basal social organization of vertebrates a
34 rametrize a mathematical model in which host shoaling (as a means of anti-predator defence), increase
35 pacing and reduced polarization in a 20-fish shoal at 8 weeks post fertilization, but not at 4.
36 containing massive densely populated herring shoals at night-time and diffuse herring distributions d
37       We found severe effects on feeding and shoaling behavior as well as metabolism of the fish; hen
38 ent and maintenance of social preference and shoaling behavior in 2- to 8-week-old zebrafish.
39 gue that such effects may arise from altered shoaling behavior in fish exposed to clobazam.
40  SD]: 42.27 36.14 and 359.06 262.65 ng/L) on shoaling behavior in guppies (Poecilia reticulata) acros
41                                              Shoaling behavior of mutant adults was abnormal, and the
42 istration mirrored the effect alcohol has on shoaling behavior.
43 idually, no effect of fluoxetine was seen on shoaling behavior.
44 study, combining the effects of mate choice, shoaling behaviour and genetics.
45  a preferred visual environment affected the shoaling behaviour of zebrafish (Danio rerio) groups.
46 time and test condition, with differences in shoaling behaviour reflective of increased relaxation em
47 referred environment could elicit changes in shoaling behaviour.
48 ingly, social differentiation coincided with shoals being somewhat smaller under high-perceived risk,
49 io rerio) as a model, we observed replicated shoals both immediately and 24 hours after exposure to a
50 lagic habitat compression is the significant shoaling (by ~ 44 m) of the hypoxic boundary over the co
51                For fish, the extent to which shoaling can reduce an individual's risk of exposure to
52                      Shoaling propensity and shoal choice (choice of groups with different densities)
53                                              Shoal cohesion, as assessed via mean neighbor distance,
54 levels when under stress and do not modulate shoal cohesion, indicative of abnormal social behaviour.
55 atile short-term behavior of very large fish shoals, containing tens of millions of fish and stretchi
56 largely unaffected by the early Pliocene CAS shoaling, corroborating other evidence that indicates la
57 acute stress shoals had significantly higher shoal densities, a lower variation in nearest neighbour
58 that are highly correlated to trends in fish shoaling density and to each other over the diel cycle.
59                                 We evaluated shoal dimensions in groups of minnows exposed to O. ptyc
60  wind stress curl, the 26 degrees C isotherm shoals during El Nino over this region and the heat cont
61 the formation processes of vast oceanic fish shoals during spawning, we show that (i) a rapid transit
62                                              Shoal dynamics and temperature changes may have masked m
63 lagoon environment, open marine environment, shoal environment, and slope environment.
64                           Strong thermocline shoaling, especially in the warm season, was observed at
65 ply aggregations of individuals; schools are shoals exhibiting polarized, synchronized motion.
66                             A model based on shoaling fish suggests how a group can show decision-mak
67 compare risk of exposure in shoaling vs. non-shoaling fish, we confined groups of minnows into mesh c
68 erences in exposure between shoaling vs. non-shoaling fish.
69 fits occur, for instance, in mixed flocks or shoals formed by different species of birds or fish with
70 the coupling of ice and sediment dynamics: a shoal forms at the glacier terminus, reducing ice discha
71 ure given that these waters are predicted to shoal from depth over the coming decades.
72 um zones (OMZs) in midwater environments are shoaling globally; this can affect distributions of spec
73              Fish confined within artificial shoals had 3-fold fewer worms than single fish and minno
74 nows located within the centre of artificial shoals had significantly fewer worms than those without
75  selection, we found that under acute stress shoals had significantly higher shoal densities, a lower
76 strate that individuals discriminate between shoals having different pigment pattern phenotypes and t
77       We tested for antiparasite benefits of shoaling in fathead minnows exposed to larvae (cercariae
78 ata, reveal a long-term trend of thermocline shoaling in the equatorial Pacific since approximately 1
79                                At the Rowley Shoals in Western Australia, the prominent reef flat bec
80            Overall, we project P50 depths to shoal, indicating likely habitat compression for tuna sp
81 havioral trait observed in bird flocks, fish shoals, insect swarms, and mammal herds.
82                                        Thus, shoaling is adaptive, and signals that maintain shoals a
83          Late'iki (previously known as Metis Shoal) is a highly active volcano in the Tofua arc with
84  The total amount of sediment resuspended by shoaling ISWs was 2.7 times that of river-derived sedime
85 nt variants demonstrate that fish can select shoal mates solely on the basis of their color patterns,
86                            Consequently, OMZ shoaling may preferentially facilitate foraging opportun
87 hich effects were attributed to G. affinis's shoaling nature and habitat patchiness.
88                      The extent of isopycnal shoaling, nutricline depth, and chlorophyll concentratio
89               Ambient noise was dominated by shoaling ocean surface waves but also contained observat
90  during which the calcite compensation depth shoaled, ocean temperatures increased and carbon isotope
91          To judge the overall direction of a shoal of fish or a crowd of people, observers must integ
92 n (Experiment 1) the dyad chose which larger shoal of guppies to join and when (Experiment 2) the dya
93 rectly beneath Bud's wake revealed rapid OMZ shoaling of 29 to 50 meters, reaching depths as shallow
94 conditions in restricted basins would prompt shoaling of anaerobic ammonium oxidation, leading to low
95 ing the last 60,000 years reflect widespread shoaling of sedimentary methane gradients and increased
96 H, thereby triggering a rapid (<10,000-year) shoaling of the calcite compensation depth (CCD), follow
97                                              Shoaling of the carbonate ion saturation horizon during
98 This finding implies that the early Pliocene shoaling of the CAS had no profound impact on the evolut
99                           The early Pliocene shoaling of the Central American Seaway (CAS), ~4.7-4.2
100 reased west-to-east temperature gradient and shoaling of the ETP thermocline.
101 ification goes together with a weakening and shoaling of the interhemispheric overturning circulation
102  reductions, weakening of the halocline, and shoaling of the intermediate-depth Atlantic Water layer
103 is linked to increased heat content and to a shoaling of the mid-depth temperature maximum over the c
104 eract anthropogenic global warming through a shoaling of the mixed layer depth (MLD) and a consequent
105     This warming is associated with a severe shoaling of the ocean calcite compensation depth and a >
106   A possible explanation is that the gradual shoaling of the oceanic thermocline reached a threshold
107 the surface shelf sediments that may lead to shoaling of the SMT.
108                                   Additional shoaling of the thermocline after 5 Myr ago probably exp
109 e in ocean memory is predominantly driven by shoaling of the upper-ocean mixed layer depth in respons
110 y stratified, but the atlantification-driven shoaling of warm, salty, and nutrient-rich intermediate
111 alf of their initial biomass, owing to rapid shoaling of winter mixed layers and their associated sep
112                                              Shoals of clupeid fish (e.g., sardine, anchovy) from geo
113 motion and structure of fish within quasi-2D shoals of fish and use image analysis techniques to make
114          Here, we address these questions on shoals of Hemigrammus rhodostomus, a species of fish exh
115 gblenny's scope by allowing it to blend into shoals of small reef fish as well as to remain inconspic
116 luding sulfate-reducing bacteria) within the shoaled OMZ-indicating rapid microbial responses.
117   For example, groups of fish can either be 'shoals' or 'schools': shoals are simply aggregations of
118 acial meltwater forms morainal banks (marine shoals) or ice-contact deltas that reduce water depth, s
119 erring and krill, aggregate to form schools, shoals, or swarms (hereafter simply "schools," although
120 , female guppies did not distinguish between shoaling partners when given the choice between native a
121 n coupled with reduced availability of small shoaling pelagic fish such as sandeel (Ammodytes marinus
122  assess the impact of the early Pliocene CAS shoaling phase on deep-water circulation.
123 ges in NADW resulted from earlier and deeper shoaling phases.
124 ion of AVP or 5-HT signalling can rescue the shoaling phenotype of ednraa(-/-) providing an insight i
125 ronmental determinants in the development of shoaling preference.
126 notypes and that early experience determines shoaling preference.
127 rience plays a key role in determining these shoaling preferences.
128                                              Shoaling propensity and shoal choice (choice of groups w
129 posed fish exhibited a significantly greater shoaling propensity.
130 he character of which indicates that the CCD shoaled rapidly (<10,000 years) by more than 2 kilometer
131 h located within the centre of an artificial shoal reduced their risk of cercariae exposure compared
132                      These results show that shoaling reduces a minnows' risk of exposure to cercaria
133 grove trees serve as habitat for solitary or shoaling reef fishes.
134 nsively investigate the preference space for shoaling related to adult pigment pattern variation, pre
135             Long-range interactions, akin to shoaling, rely on vision, while mechanosensation underli
136 per direct observation, and understanding of shoaling remains incomplete.
137  demonstrate that 1) Central American Seaway shoaling reorganizes ocean currents, and 2) Arctic marin
138 posure to predation can explain the observed shoal shape.
139 ), with the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) shoaling significantly relative to the present-day (PD)
140                                              Shoal size and packing density varied greatly, but surfa
141                         Moreover, as the OML shoals, squids will have to retreat to these shallower,
142                     As the mixed layer depth shoals, stochastic forcing becomes more effective in dri
143 lability in a warming world ocean may impact shoal structure: because structure affects catchability
144                               Before 2006, a shoaling summer mixed layer was associated with sea ice
145 n classical experimental paradigms assessing shoaling tendency, fear, anxiety, and general locomotion
146 habituation, causing them to spend more time shoaling than schooling, contrary to most models' predic
147 elin receptor aa (ednraa) form less cohesive shoals than wild-types.
148         Many fishes form aggregations called shoals that reduce predation risk while enhancing foragi
149 er, decreasing carbon export efficiency, and shoaling the average depths of nutrient regeneration.
150 t of the nutricline toward its western edge, shoaling the mixed layers into the base of the euphotic
151 ading angle to their nearest neighbours when shoaling, thereby explaining how conflict over whether p
152 s caused by the surface water divergence and shoaling thermocline.
153 subtropical gyres and equatorial currents by shoaling these systems, while the differential warming b
154 umboldt squid are indirectly affected by OMZ shoaling through effects on a primary food source, mycto
155 shallow (< 2 m deep), and while projected to shoal to the land surface with SLR, marine flooding is p
156 oleucas) swimming in two-fish and three-fish shoals to map the mean effective forces as a function of
157 as one of five discrete morphs, all of which shoal together in natural populations where morph freque
158 cision-making, cohesion and activity in fish shoals, using Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata)
159               To compare risk of exposure in shoaling vs. non-shoaling fish, we confined groups of mi
160 our-mediated differences in exposure between shoaling vs. non-shoaling fish.
161 on was disrupted when even one fish within a shoal was exposed to 2% oil, and the behavior of unexpos
162  comparing data from two-fish and three-fish shoals, we challenge the standard assumption, ubiquitous
163 er region undergoing strong ocean subsurface shoaling where upper ocean heat content can drop by 20-5
164         Fish form social aggregations called shoals which often consist of fish with similar morpholo
165 pe patterning) in deciding whether to join a shoal, zebrafish female preferences do not correlate wit

 
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