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Full-Text Articles in Aquaculture and Fisheries

Synopsis Of Freshwater Crayfish Diseases And Commensal Organisms, Brett F. Edgerton, Louis H. Evans, Frances J. Stephens, Robin M. Overstreet Mar 2002

Synopsis Of Freshwater Crayfish Diseases And Commensal Organisms, Brett F. Edgerton, Louis H. Evans, Frances J. Stephens, Robin M. Overstreet

Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications

Disease agents and pests associated with freshwater crayfish fall into six main categories—viruses, bacteria, rickettsia-like organisms (RLOs), fungi, protists, and metazoans. Data and information on specific disease agents and pests from each of these categories are presented in this synopsis. Each agent or group of agents is considered under the following headings—condition, causative agent(s), life cycle/life history, epizootiology, pathology, pathogen viability. Information for the synopsis was obtained from the published literature and from personal contact with internationally recognized experts in freshwater crayfish aquaculture, biology, and disease. Data of relevance for import risk analysis are summarized.

Import risk analysis is the …


Enhancement And Monitoring Of The Procambarus Clarkii Population In Lake Mead, Mikell Beth Hager May 1990

Enhancement And Monitoring Of The Procambarus Clarkii Population In Lake Mead, Mikell Beth Hager

Publications (WR)

Procambarus clarkii are found in extremely low numbers throughout Lake Mead, AZ-NV. The crayfish are an important dietary component for game fish. Enhancement of the crayfish population would broaden the fishery forage base. Crayfish were stocked and monitored in a study cove on Saddle Island to determine if the Procambarus clarkii population could be enhanced. A trapping survey of the area after the following reproductive season yielded low numbers of crayfish. A comparison of pre-stocking and post-stocking catch per trap day (CPTD) values revealed no significant increase in the population. Procambarus clarkii growth is limited by environmental factors in Lake …


Benthic Invertebrates And Crayfish Of Lake Mead, Susan K. Peck, William L. Pratt, James E. Pollard, Larry J. Paulson, Donald H. Baepler Sep 1987

Benthic Invertebrates And Crayfish Of Lake Mead, Susan K. Peck, William L. Pratt, James E. Pollard, Larry J. Paulson, Donald H. Baepler

Publications (WR)

The objectives of this study were to:

1. Establish baseline densities of benthic invertebrates and relative abundance of crayfish in Lake Mead.

2. Evaluate the distributions of benthic organisms and crayfish in relation to existing habitat conditions and 1imnological characteristics of Lake Mead.

3. Measure seasonal changes in abundances of benthic organisms and crayfish in Lake Mead.

4. Compare observations of Procambarus clarkii life history in Lake Mead to reports from other aquatic systems.

5. Evaluate the importance of benthic organisms and crayfish as food sources for game fish in Lake Mead.


The Amateur Marron Fishery In Western Australia, N. M. Morrissy Jan 1978

The Amateur Marron Fishery In Western Australia, N. M. Morrissy

Fisheries research bulletins

The amateur fishery in south-western Australia for marron, Cherax tenuimanus, the third largest Australian and world freshwater crayfish, is described, including the history of management regulations and the legal methods of capture of marron (scoop nets, drop nets and snares) in rivers and dams. Catch and effort data were obtained from research log books over the period 1971 to 1976. From the inception of the Inland Fisherman's License, largely intended for marron, in 1970, the number of licenses rose steeply from 6,500 to 20,000 by 1975. The calculated total annual catch by the 1974-75 and 1975-76 seasons was about 470,000 …


The Ecology Of Marron Cherax Tenuimanus (Smith) Introduced Into Some Farm Dams Near Boscabel In The Great Southern Area Of The Wheatbelt Region Of Western Australia, N. M. Morrissy Jan 1974

The Ecology Of Marron Cherax Tenuimanus (Smith) Introduced Into Some Farm Dams Near Boscabel In The Great Southern Area Of The Wheatbelt Region Of Western Australia, N. M. Morrissy

(Fisheries) research bulletins

A large scale survey was conducted in 1968 and 1969 over the inland area of the southwest of Western Australia to establish the degree of success of introductions of marron, Cherax tenuimanus (Smith), in small, private, turbid farm dams. The results of this investigation stimulated further research, described in this paper, on marron in this type of water.


The Ecology Of Marron Cherax Tenuimanus (Smith) Introduced Into Some Farm Dams Near Boscabel In The Great Southern Area Of The Wheatbelt Region Of Western Australia, Noel M. Morrissy Dr Jan 1974

The Ecology Of Marron Cherax Tenuimanus (Smith) Introduced Into Some Farm Dams Near Boscabel In The Great Southern Area Of The Wheatbelt Region Of Western Australia, Noel M. Morrissy Dr

Fisheries research bulletins

A large scale survey was conducted in 1968 and 1969 over the inland area of the southwest of Western Australia to establish the degree of success of introductions of marron, Cherax tenuimanus (Smith), in small, private, turbid farm dams. The results of this investigation stimulated further research, described in this paper, on marron in this type of water