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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Dinoflagellate Cysts and Chattonella resting stages from recent sediments of the South Coast of Iran

Attaran-Fariman, G Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
2

Morphotaxonomy, genetic affinities and ecology of Australian and Antarctic populations of the potentially fish killing, heterotrophic dinoflagellates Cryptoperidiniopsis brodyi and Pfiesteria piscicida

Park, TG Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
3

Voluntary food intake regulation in the black tiger prawn Penaeus monodon Fabricius

Tabrett, Simon John Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
4

Analysis of genetic markers in natural and cultured populations of the tropical abalone

Selvamani, M. J. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
5

Aspects of the morphological development and feeding performance of larval striped trumpeter (Latris lineata) in culture

Cobcroft, JM Unknown Date (has links) (PDF)
Striped trumpeter (Latris lineata) is a new candidate species for aquaculture in temperate Australia. Survival of larvae prior to flexion has proven a bottleneck in the production of this species for culture. In addition, almost all juveniles cultured to date exhibit malformations of the jaw that may impede larval feeding success. Body size and morphology impose constraints upon feeding success in larvae of broadcast spawning fishes. Furthermore, larvae have an absolute reliance upon sense organs for the detection and subsequent capture of prey. In this study, aspects of morphological development and feeding performance were described in larval striped trumpeter. Chemosensory and mechanosensory organs were present and presumed functional soon after hatching, while the eye was functional coincident with first-feeding on day 7 post-hatching. The structure of the photoreceptors in different regions of the retina of the larvae suggested the area specialised for the most acute image formation corresponded to a visual field in the fronto-ventral region. Analysis of videocinematography of feeding larvae in the horizontal plane confirmed a forward-directed functional visual field. The area of the visual field increased with larval ontogeny from day 13 to day 17 post-hatching, due to the wider range of reactive angles used by older larvae. Maximum reactive distances of larvae to rotifer prey (~5.1mm) were 97% of larval standard length, while the distance at which larvae initiated a strike at the prey was much lower (~0.45mm) at 8% of larval standard length. Visual angles determined from larval feeding behaviour were higher than the minimum separable angles predicted by histology, such that the functional acuity of the larvae was not as good as that predicted by retinal structure. Jaw malformation was only evident in post-flexion larvae greater than 10 mm standard length and was characterised by an open jaw in which cartilage and bone elements appeared structurally normal but were in abnormal positions. The effects of light intensity and microalgal cell density (turbidity) on larval feeding behaviour were assessed in short-term feeding trials. None of the pre-flexion larvae used to investigate optimal light conditions for feeding exhibited jaw malformations. Larvae fed equally well in clearwater (no microalgal cells present) in a light intensity range of 1-10 umol.s-1.m-2. An ontogenetic improvement in photopic visual sensitivity of larvae was indicated by improved feeding at 0.1 umol.s-1.m-2 between day 8 and day 23 post-hatching. Algae-induced turbidity had different effects on larval feeding response dependent upon the previous visual environment of the larvae. Young larvae, day 9 post-hatching, reared in clearwater showed decreased feeding capabilities with increasing turbidity, while older clearwater reared larvae fed well at all turbidities tested. Likewise, greenwater (with microalgal cells present) reared larvae had increased feeding capabilities in the highest algal cell densities tested compared with those in low algal cell density, and clearwater to which they were naive. This study demonstrated that striped trumpeter larvae are primarily visual feeders with a small visual field relative to larval body size, that jaw malformation is unlikely to impede feeding in pre-flexion larvae, and that greenwater may provide a benefit to larval feeding although the previous visual environment of larvae affected subsequent feeding responses.
6

Management strategies for an input controlled fishery based on the capture of short-lived tropical species: the example of Australia’s Northern Prawn Fishery

Dichmont, CM January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
The NPF is one of the Australian Commonwealth’s most valuable fisheries. The species groups targeted include tiger, banana and endeavour prawns. The fishery is managed using input controls and, from 2001 until 2004 (the period which spans this study), the agreed target was for the level of fishing effort expended to lead to a 70% chance (or greater) that the spawning stock size of tiger prawns was at or above that corresponding to Maximum Sustainable Yield, SMSY. A key issue in the management of this fishery is that the efficiency of fishing effort is continually increasing so that past effort reductions have been fully offset by improved efficiencies. In fact, some past effort reductions did not actually lead to a real reduction in effective effort. As a consequence of this, there was no recovery in the size of the tiger prawn resource but rather, in some years, a decline, until a major effort reduction program was implemented in 2001.

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