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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Ecological Functions Of Constructed Oyster Reefs Along An Environmental Gradient In Chesapeake Bay: Final Report, Fx O'Beirn, Mark Luckenbach, Roger L. Mann, J Harding, J Nestlerode Sep 1999

Ecological Functions Of Constructed Oyster Reefs Along An Environmental Gradient In Chesapeake Bay: Final Report, Fx O'Beirn, Mark Luckenbach, Roger L. Mann, J Harding, J Nestlerode

Reports

Oyster reef habitat restoration within the Chesapeake Bay has as its objectives not only the enhancement of the commercially important oyster stocks, but also the restoration of associated assemblages of organisms and, most importantly, the restoration of ecological functions associated with natural reef communities. Despite our efforts to date, many uncertainties still exist with respect to achieving these restoration goals. These include long-term information on the temporal sequence of community development on new reef substrate, evaluating oyster recruitment patterns (a) across restored reef systems and (b) in relation to resident brood stocks.

In this study we sought to characterize the …


The Crest, Summer 1999, Virginia Institute Of Marine Science Jul 1999

The Crest, Summer 1999, Virginia Institute Of Marine Science

Reports

Table of Contents:

  • New Research Aquarium System
  • Finfish Aquaculture at VIMS
  • Virginia Creates State Research Reserve System
  • Pollution-Laden Sediments In Constant Flux
  • Survey of Mid-Atlantic Sea Scallop Closed Areas
  • Pfiesteria Update
  • New Computer Program Helps Planners Balance Growth, Protection
  • Virginia Sea Grant to Administer Commercial Fishery Resource Program
  • VIMS Stranded Sea Turtle Project Underway Coastal Sediments Offer Clues to Climate Change, Pollution
  • Seemingly Barren Habitat Proves Vital for Economically Important Virginia Fish (juvenile flounder)


Status Of The Major Oyster Diseases In Virginia 1998 A Summary Of The Annual Monitoring Program, Lisa M. Ragone Calvo, Eugene M. Burreson Mar 1999

Status Of The Major Oyster Diseases In Virginia 1998 A Summary Of The Annual Monitoring Program, Lisa M. Ragone Calvo, Eugene M. Burreson

Reports

No abstract provided.


The Crest, Winter 1999, Virginia Institute Of Marine Science Jan 1999

The Crest, Winter 1999, Virginia Institute Of Marine Science

Reports

Table of Contents:

  • Experimental Fishery on Georges Bank Holds Promise for the Scallop Industry
  • New VIMS Center Boosts Aquafarming
  • Invader Threatens Stressed Ecosystem (Rapa Whelk)
  • Microscopic Phytoplankton Live Large
  • Reality By the Numbers (Computer Modeling)
  • Tautog Research
  • Latest Returns From the Game Fish Tagging Program
  • Educational Landscape Center (VIMS Teaching Marsh)
  • Responding to the Chesapeake Executive Council Directive for Wetlands Protection and Restoration Goals
  • Dangers to Blue Crabs Accelerating


Virginia Game Fish Tagging Program Annual Report 1998, John A. Lucy, C.M. Bain, M. D. Arendt Jan 1999

Virginia Game Fish Tagging Program Annual Report 1998, John A. Lucy, C.M. Bain, M. D. Arendt

Reports

The Virginia Game Fish Tagging Program (VGFTP), a cooperative project of the Virginia Marine Resources Commission and the Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS), set records for fish tagged and fish recaptured during 1998, its fourth year of operation.


Oyster Reef Habitat Restoration : A Synopsis And Synthesis Of Approaches; Proceedings From The Symposium, Williamsburg, Virginia, April 1995, Mark Luckenbach, Roger L. Mann, James A. Wesson Jan 1999

Oyster Reef Habitat Restoration : A Synopsis And Synthesis Of Approaches; Proceedings From The Symposium, Williamsburg, Virginia, April 1995, Mark Luckenbach, Roger L. Mann, James A. Wesson

Reports

This volume has its origin in a symposium held in Williamsburg, VA in April 1995, though most of the chapters have been significantly revised in the interim. The primary purpose of the symposium was to bring together state fisheries managers involved in fisheries-directed oyster enhancement and research scientists to refine approaches for enhancing oyster populations and to better develop the rationale for restoring reef habitats. We could hardly have anticipated the degree to which this been successful. In the interim between the symposium and the publication of this volume the notion that oyster reefs are valuable habitats, both for oysters …