References

publication_icon Brooke S, Schroeder WW (2007) State of Deep Coral Ecosystems in the Gulf of Mexico region: Texas to the Florida Straits. In: Lumsden SE, Hourigan TF, Bruckner AW, Dorr G (Eds). The State of Deep Coral Ecosystems of the United States. NOAA Technical Memo. CRCP-3. Silver Spring MD, pp 271-306
publication_icon Cairns SD (1978) A checklist of the ahermatypic scleractinia of the Gulf of Mexico, with a description of a new species. Gulf Research Reports 61: 9-15
publication_icon Continental Shelf Associates (2007) Characterization of Northern Gulf of Mexico deep-water hard bottom communities with emphasis on Lophelia coral. US Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, New Orleans, LA. OCS Study MMS 2007–044, 169 pp + appendices
publication_icon Cordes EE, Carney SL,Hourdez S, Carney RS, Brooks JM, Fisher CR (2007). Cold seeps of the deep Gulf of Mexico: community structure and biogeographic comparisons to Atlantic equatorial belt seep communities. Deep-Sea Research I 54: 637-653
publication_icon Moore D, Bullis H Jr. (1960) A deep-water coral reef in the Gulf of Mexico. Bulletin of Marine Science 10: 125–128
publication_icon Newton CR, Mullins H,Gardulski F, Hine A , Dix G (1987). Coral mounds on the west Florida slope: unanswered questions regarding the development of deepwater banks. Palaios 2: 359–367
publication_icon Reed JK, Weaver DC, Pomponi SA (2006) Habitat and fauna of deep-water Lophelia pertusa coral reefs off the southeastern US: Blake Plateau, Straits of Florida, and Gulf of Mexico. Bulletin of Marine Science 78: 343-375
publication_icon Schroeder WW (2002) Observations of Lophelia pertusa and the surficial geology at a deep-water site in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico. Hydrobiologia 471: 29–33
publication_icon Schroeder WW (2007) Seafloor characteristics and distribution patterns of Lophelia pertusa and other sessile megafauna at two upper-slope sites in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico. US Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, New Orleans, LA. OCS Study MMS 2007–035, 56 pp
publication_icon Schroeder WW, Brooke SD, Olson JB, Phaneuff B, McDonough JJ III, Etnoyer P (2005) Occurrence of deep-water Lophelia pertusa and Madrepora oculata in the Gulf of Mexico. In: A. Freiwald, J.M. Roberts (Eds). Cold-water Corals and Ecosystems. Springer, Berlin, pp 297–307
publication_icon Sulak KJ, Brooks RA, Luke KE, Norem AD, Randall M, Quaid AJ, Yeargin GE, Miller JM, Harden WM, Caruso JH, Ross SW (2007)  Demersal fishes associated with Lophelia pertusa coral and hard-substrate biotopes on the continental slope, northern Gulf of Mexico In: George RY, Cairns SD (eds).  Conservation and adaptive management of seamount and deep-sea coral ecosystems. University of Miami. 324 pp
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Williams B, Risk MJ, Ross SW, Sulak KJ (2006)  Deep-water antipatharians: proxies of environmental change. Geology 34: 773-776

publication_icon Williams B, Risk MJ , Ross SW, Sulak KJ (2007)  Stable isotope data from deep-water Antipatharians: 400-year records from the southeastern coast of the United States of America. Bulletin of Marine Science 81: 437-447
publication_icon Davies AJ, Duinevald GCA et al. (2010) Short-term environmental variability in cold-water coral habitat at Viosca Knoll, Gulf of Mexico. Deep Sea Research Part 1-Oceanographic Research Papers 57(2):199-212
publication_icon Cordes EE, McGinley MP et al. (2008) Coral communities of the deep Gulf of Mexico. Deep Sea Research Part 1-Oceanographic Research Papers 55(6):777-787