Amanda Kelley
Associate Professor
Marine Biology
Marine Ecology
Environmental Studies
Marine Invertebrates
Scientific Diving
College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences
2120 Koyukuk Dr.
331 Irving II
ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø, AK 99775-7220
907-474-2474
alkelley@alaska.edu
Kapsenberg, L., Kelley, A.L., Francis, L., Raskin, S. (2015). "Exploring the complexity
of ocean acidification: an ecosystem comparison of coastal pH variability". Science Scope. 39(3):51-60.
Kapsenberg, L., Kelley, A.L., Shaw, E.C., Martz, T.R., Hofmann, G.E. (2015). "Near-shore
Antarctic pH variability has implications for the design of ocean acidification experiments".
Scientific Reports. 5:9638.
doi:
Kelley, A. L., Hanson, P.R., Kelley, S. (2015). "Demonstrating the Effects of Ocean
Acidification on Marine Organisms to Support Climate Change Understanding". The American Biology Teacher Journal. 77(4):258-263.
Kelley, A.L., de Rivera, C.E., Grosholz, E.D., Ruiz G.M., and Yamada, S., Gillespie,
G. (2015). "Thermogeographic variation in body size of Carcinus maenas, the European
green crab". Marine Biology. 162.8(2015):1625-1635.
Kelley, A. L. (2014). "Review: The role thermal physiology plays in species invasion".
Conservation Physiology. 2.1:cou045.
Kelley, A. L., de Rivera, C. E., Buckley, B. A. (2013). "Cold tolerance of the invasive
Carcinus maenas in the east Pacific: molecular mechanisms and implications for range
expansion in a changing climate". Biological Invasions. 1-11.
Kelley, A. L., de Rivera, C. E., Buckley, B. A. (2011). "Intraspecific variation in
thermotolerance and morphology of the invasive European green crab, Carcinus maenas,
on the west coast of North America". Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 409:70-78.
Kelley, A. L. (2008). "Food web Impacts of the invasive New Zealand Mudsnail in an
estuarine system". McNair Online Journals.
doi: .
- Ecological physiology
- Global change biology
- Remote sensors
- Invasive biology/ecology
- Organism–environment interactions: response of species to ocean change; e.g., ocean acidification, increased temperature
- Cellular and organismal physiology
- Transcriptomics
- Coastal ecological processes
My research focuses on organism-environment interactions in coastal marine ecosystems using time-series observational data combined with field and laboratory experiments to predict the response of species to ocean change.
- Currently, my research investigates the transcriptomic response of Antarctic sea urchin larvae to the individual and interacting conditions of future ocean change- including ocean acidification and increased temperature.
- AAUS Certification