Ian James Grace

College of Sciences

Works (3)

Updated: January 30th, 2026 07:11

2026 article

Data from: Shell trace elemental fingerprints of the deep-sea methane seep mussel Gigantidas Childressi vary by depth, site, and growth region

Grace, I. (2026, January 12). DRYAD.

By: I. Grace n

topics (OpenAlex):
Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: January 29, 2026

2026 article

Shell trace elemental fingerprints of the deep-sea methane seep mussel Gigantidas childressi vary by depth, site, and shell growth region

Grace, I. J., Génio, L., Eggleston, D. B., Puckett, B. J., Fodrie, F. J., Smith, A. N. H., & Young, C. M. (2026, January 19). Deep Sea Research Part I Oceanographic Research Papers, Vol. 1.

By: I. Grace n, L. Génio*, D. Eggleston n, B. Puckett*, F. Fodrie, A. Smith*, C. Young*

topics (OpenAlex): Marine Biology and Ecology Research; Marine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies; Geochemistry and Elemental Analysis; Aquatic Invertebrate Ecology and Behavior
Sources: NC State University Libraries, NC State University Libraries
Added: January 21, 2026

2020 article

Methane Seeps on the US Atlantic Margin and Their Potential Importance to Populations of the Commercially Valuable Deep-Sea Red Crab, Chaceon quinquedens

Turner, P. J., Ball, B., Diana, Z., Fariñas-Bermejo, A., Grace, I., McVeigh, D., … Dover, C. L. V. (2020, February 27). Frontiers in Marine Science.

author keywords: cold seeps; Western Atlantic; ecosystem services; fishery; fisheries; Bathymodiolus; biogeography
topics (OpenAlex): Marine Biology and Ecology Research; Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies; Isotope Analysis in Ecology
TL;DR: This study highlights two ways that seeps may support fishery productivity (i.e., providing trophic support and increasing reproductive success) and encourages future research exploring the connection between deep-sea chemosynthetic ecosystems and commercially valuable species. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: March 23, 2020

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