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Full-Text Articles in Aquaculture and Fisheries

An Ecosystem-Based Approach To Management: Using Individual Behaviour To Predict The Indirect Effects Of Antarctic Krill Fisheries On Penguin Foraging, Suzanne H. Alonzo, Paul Switzer, Marc Mangel Jan 2003

An Ecosystem-Based Approach To Management: Using Individual Behaviour To Predict The Indirect Effects Of Antarctic Krill Fisheries On Penguin Foraging, Suzanne H. Alonzo, Paul Switzer, Marc Mangel

Paul V. Switzer

Summary 1. Changes in species' abundance and distributions caused by human disturbances can have indirect effects on other species in a community. Although ecosystem approaches to management are becoming increasingly prevalent, they require a fuller understand- ing of how individual behaviour determines interactions within and between species. 2. Ecological interactions involving krill are of major importance to many species within the Antarctic. Despite extensive knowledge of the ecosystem that they occupy, there is still incomplete understanding of the links between species and the effect of environmental conditions on these interactions. In this study, we extended a behavioural model used previously …


Iodinated Feed Reduces Stress In Steelhead Trout., Ahmed Mustafa Dec 2002

Iodinated Feed Reduces Stress In Steelhead Trout., Ahmed Mustafa

Ahmed Mustafa Dr.

No abstract provided.


The Impacts Of Aquacultured Oysters, Crassostrea Virginica (Gmelin, 1791) On Water Quality And Sedimentation: Results Of A Mesocosm Study, Michael A. Rice Dec 2002

The Impacts Of Aquacultured Oysters, Crassostrea Virginica (Gmelin, 1791) On Water Quality And Sedimentation: Results Of A Mesocosm Study, Michael A. Rice

Michael A Rice

To determine effects of aquacultured oysters Crassostrea virginica (Gmelin, 1791) on the overlying water column, a mesocosm study was performed at the Marine Ecosystem Research Laboratory (MERL) from June to October, 2000. The MERL facility is located adjacent to Narragansett Bay and consists of fourteen 13,000-l mesocosm tanks designed to simulate the Bay environmental conditions. Two hundred oysters (c35 mm valve height; nominally filtering about 55 l/day/individual) were placed into three mesocosms, and three mesocosms were maintained without oysters as controls. Experiments were run with varying rates of water exchange in the tanks ranging from 0% to 100% per day …