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Habitatval hos yngel av öring (Salmo trutta) i en undersökning i Nedre DalälvenAndersson, Tony January 2015 (has links)
I detta examensarbete görs en praktisk undersökning av några utvalda faktorer i habitatet som antas påverka yngel av öring under deras första månader. Studien har genomförts i anslutning till en utsättning av ca 30 000 yngel i Gysingeforsarna vid Nedre Dalälven som Länsstyrelsen i Gävleborg utförde under sommaren 2014 och som sedan under hösten följdes upp med hjälp av elfiske. Fältdata har samlats in från fem lokaler under perioden 29 oktober 2014 till 9 januari 2015. Resultatet från denna kartering och litteraturstudier i ämnet visar på goda förutsättningar i habitatet vid två av lokalerna, vilka även är de två platser där flest yngel återfångades. Vid två andra lokaler återfångades inga yngel. Detta kan för det ena fallet (Sevedskvarn, södra) förklaras med för litet djup under sommarens lågvattenflöde och alltför höga vattenhastigheter vid normalflöde. Den andra platsen där yngel saknades (Granön, ovan bron) erbjuder bättre förutsättningar för predatorer (både fisk och fågel) samt har en bottenstruktur som vid en jämförelse erbjuder färre skyddade platser. En föreslagen hypotes utifrån studiens resultat är att bottensubstrat i storleksintervallet 60-200 mm har stor betydelse i öringynglens habitat vid närvaro av predatorer då där skapas skydd (hålor/springor) i lämplig storlek för öringyngel. / The purpose of this project was to examine important parameters for juvenile brown trout habitat selection in their first months after hatching. The study was carried out after approximately 30 000 fry had been released by the County Administrative Board of Gävleborg. Data on habitat selection was collected from five different localities at the river Dalälven, near Gysinge, Sweden. The method of estimating preferred habitat was to determine remaining fry after a period of seven weeks by electrofishing. This study confirms that the optimal local habitat choice for juvenile trout is where the substrate size 60- 200 mm is present and a hypothesis is proposed that this substrate is of importance for juvenile trout survival as it gives shelter in the presence of predators. Based on previous research the study gives some suggestions to which important habitat characteristics that were missing where no trout were recaptured.
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Οι ανθρώπινες επιδράσεις στα παρόχθια οικοσυστήματα του Αλφειού πόταμου : oι προοπτικές για την ολοκληρωμένη διαχείρισή τουςΚόκκορης, Ιωάννης 07 July 2009 (has links)
Oι ανθρώπινες επιδράσεις στα παρόχθια οικοσυστήματα του Αλφειού πόταμου και oι προοπτικές για την ολοκληρωμένη διαχείριση τους. / Human effect on habitats of the Αlfios River and their possibilities for sustainable development.
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Spatial variation of soil methane and nitrous oxide emissions in subarctic environments of Churchill, ManitobaChurchill, Jacqueline A. 07 June 2007 (has links)
Global warming, associated with elevated levels of greenhouse gases is expected to alter hydrologic regimes, permafrost extent and vegetation composition in the Hudson Bay Lowlands (HBL). Greenhouse gas (respiration, CH4 and N2O; GHG) emissions and soil gas concentrations were determined over the growing seasons of 2005 and 2006 from numerous habitats within three dominate ecosystems within the HBL, a polygonized-peat plateau, northern fringe boreal forest and palsa fen, near Churchill, Manitoba. Nitrous oxide emissions and soil concentrations were near zero however, a trend for very slight production of N2O was observed at dry aerobic sample positions while very slight consumption occurred at very wet sample locations. “Hot-spots” of intense CH4 emissions and soil concentrations occurred in the sedge-dominated areas of high moisture and plant productivity, whereas areas of low moisture and plant productivity resulted in slight CH4 consumption. Of all the ecosystems studied, the palsa fen had the greatest CH4 production, with carbon losses from CH4 occurring at rates of approximately 50 g C m-2 during the growing season. A peat plateau ecosystem site was also used to compare GHG emissions using a similar vegetation type (Cladina stellaris) and under differing soil conditions. Based on the results, slight gradients in soil conditions such as moisture content, peat accumulation and active layer depths altered respiration emissions but did not significantly affect CH4 and N2O fluxes. The differences in GHG emissions were not as great as those between different plant community types, which suggest plant community types could be used to predict GHG emissions in similar environments.
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Vabalų (Insecta, Coleoptera)fauna ir paplitimas Lietuvos pajūrio buveinėse / Beetle (Insecta, Coleoptera) fauna and its distribution in seashore habitats of LithuaniaFerenca, Romas 06 October 2014 (has links)
Baltijos pajūris išsiskiria savita gamta, specifinėmis, tik šiam regionui būdingomis buveinėmis, kurias sukuria švelnus jūrinis klimatas, nederlingi ir druskingi smėlio dirvožemiai, vyraujantys vakarų vėjai. Darbo tikslas – ištirti Baltijos pajūrio buveinių vabalų (Insecta, Coleoptera) fauną, pasiskirstymą buveinėse ir jų sezoninę dinamiką. Vabalai tirti 2008-2010 m. 10 skirtingų Baltijos pajūrio buveinių. Baltijos pajūrio buveinėse nustatytos 1206 vabalų rūšys, priklausančios 70 šeimų, kas sudaro 32,7 % nuo visų žinomų vabalų Lietuvoje. Atrastos 52 naujos Lietuvos faunai vabalų rūšys, priklausančios 16 šeimų. Rūšis Cryptocephalus ochroleucus Fairm. yra nauja visam Rytų Pabaltijui ir Fenoskandijai. Didžiausia vabalų įvairovė nustatyta sengirėje (174 rūšys), mažiausia – pilkosiose kopose apaugusiose samanomis ir kerpėmis (20 rūšių). Atvirose Baltijos pajūrio buveinėse dominuoja termofilinės, psamofilinės vabalų rūšys. Stenotopinės vabalų rūšys (89) ir halobiontinės (27 rūšys) yra būdingos atviroms pajūrio buveinėms, o halobiontinės rūšys – pilkosiose ir baltosiose kopose su Leymus arenarius. / The Baltic Sea coast typical habitats formed by a mild sea climate are characterized by infertile and saline sands, predominant western winds and are peculiar only to this region. The aim of the study is to investigate the beetle (Insecta, Coleoptera) fauna of seashore habitats of Lithuania, beetle distribution in different habitats. The material was collected during the study period of 2008–2010 in 10 different localities of Curonian Spit. Research territories were selected so that investigated plots covered all habitats of the Baltic Sea coast. After analyzing and generalizing the material collected in the Baltic seashore habitats a total of 1206 beetle species belonging to 70 families, or 32.7% of all known Lithuanian beetle fauna were determined; 52 beetle species of 16 families were recorded first time for Lithuania. Cryptocephalus ochroleucus Fairm. is a new species in the Eastern Baltic region and in Fennoscandia. The old-growth mixed forest distinguished by the greatest species number (174 beetle species) and grey dunes overgrow with lichens, mosses and Poaceae exibited the lowest species number (20 beetle species). The open habitats of the Baltic Sea coast were dominated by termophilic psamophilic beetle species. Stenotopic (89 species) and halobiontic (27 species) beetle species were typical only of open seashore habitats. Halobiontic species were the most abundant in the grey / white dunes with Leymus arenarius.
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Beetle (Insecta,Coleoptera) fauna and its distribution in seashore habitats of Lithuania / Vabalų (Insecta, Coleoptera) fauna ir paplitimas Lietuvos pajūrio buveinėseFerenca, Romas 06 October 2014 (has links)
Typical habitats of Baltic seashore habitats are characterized by infertile saline sands and predominant western winds. The current Baltic sea coast habitats are the result of human activities. This landscape is one of the youngest and the same time one of the most sensitive. The beetles of Baltic seashore habitats have been investigated only fragmentarly, and there is no research data about the Baltic Sea costal beetle complexes. The aim of this study is to investigate the beetle fauna and distribution in different habitats of Baltic seashore of Lithuania. / Baltijos pajūriui būdingi nederlingi ir druskingi smėlio dirvožemiai, dominuojantys vakarų vėjai.Dabartinės Baltijos pajūrio buveinės, tai aktyvios žmonių veiklos rezultatas, ir tuo pačių vienas jauniausių ir labiausiai pažeidžiamų Lietuvos kraštovaizdžių. Baltijos pajūrio vabzdžiai buvo tyrinėjami tik fragmentiškai, Iki šiol nebuvo atlikti Baltijos pakrančių buveinių vabalų kompleksų tyrimai. Šio darbo tikslas - ištirti Baltijos pajūrio buveinių vabalų fauną ir paplitimą buveinėse.
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Habits and Habitats : Crafting Through a Prism of Culture ShockButucariu, Diana January 2014 (has links)
This is a text about a work of art, “The Room”, and about the process that brought it about. The process includes experiments in clay bodies, mixing different elements with the base clay in search of a material both suitable to work with in terms of texture and color, but also rich in less tangible qualities, as I mix in elements which carry a set of values of cultural identity. The text follows the path towards development of the final piece during the two-year course of the master program at Konstfack. During these two years, external factors such as dealing with the issues of culture shock, and searching for a place to live, interfere with my way of thinking, leading to unexpected turns in the direction of my artistic process. Searching for an apartment finds me standing in strangers' apartments as they sell their homes, their ways of life and their house rules. These sometimes awkward meetings provide a good starting point in my research of people's habits and habitats. In trying to understand some elements of Swedish culture, I become aware of the fact of my own culture and start thinking about it from an outside perspective. Eventually, the central question of the essay crystallizes: Who will carry on the traditional craft techniques of my home country? Romania is the rare place in Europe where crafts are still being practiced as they have been for hundreds of years, in the villages by crafts persons leading traditional lives. As the villages are emptied of young people, moving into cities, and as Romania as a whole is drained of a large part of its young and ambitious generation, moving to other European countries for jobs and education, a trend that I am of course part of, the traditions that I have taken for granted, growing up with my grandmother in a traditional village, become threatened. The answer to the question is a simple as it is demanding: I have to be part of the future of Romanian crafts. To document them, understand them, and incorporate them in my art. For this purpose, I undertake an investigative research trip. The text presents my findings about the crafts, and about the people working to document and preserve the traditions. The research trip is also presented in the movie “Six days in Romania”, which I include as an appendix to the essay. Over the course of two years, several short-term art projects have been completed within the master program. They are presented in the form of an interview with myself. Looking back at these projects, they become explained as necessary steps in preparation for the final piece, a viewpoint very different from the utter confusion that was the dominating feeling of at least the first year of the course. The interview tries to give insight into the non-linear process that is the creative work. Finally, in a poetic description of the final piece, I let my art speak for itself in a very literal way. In giving voice to the piece, I try to access truths hidden even to myself, in an effort to be as transparent as possible about the value of my efforts.
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Ecological impacts of Highveld gerbils (Tatera Brantsii) on a rehabilitated ash disposal site / Nevil Ian WrightWright, Nevil Ian January 2006 (has links)
Tatera brantsii was numerically dominant in the small mammal community on the plateaux
of the rehabilitated ash disposal sites of ESKOM's Hendrina Power Station in 1998 and 1999
(Vermaak 2000). The species seemed well adapted to exploit this environment and, through
biopedturbation, had altered the topsoil structure and chemistry. The consequences of this and
other activities also affected the rehabilitated plant community of the PFA-dam habitat.
Burrowing appeared limited to just under the topsoil layer, and seemed more extensive than
burrows of this species in natural ecosystems. The burrow system architecture was mapped
and quantified, and localised increases in nitrates, phosphorous and organic carbon in
immediately associated substrate were noted. However, this substrate enrichment was
transient, and disappeared following the abandonment, and subsequent collapse of burrow
systems, when gerbil colonies migrated away from the area. The mixing of soil horizons also
resulted in a more homogeneous substrate, which was more friable, and thus drier. The high
pH and salinity of the topsoil layer in areas undisturbed by gerbil burrowing, and
concentrations of particular elements associated with either the topsoil covering or the ash,
were reduced as a consequence of substrate mixing in disturbed areas. Gerbil impacts on the
substrate of this habitat seemed to promote pedogenesis, eliminating the sharp distinction
between the topsoil covering and the ash below, but the re-exposed ash of the burrow mounds
would become subject to erosion, and reduce the effectiveness of the rehabilitation effort.
Gerbil activities increased the number of plant species, especially ruderal forbs, comprising
the plant community of the PFA-dam habitat, but plant community diversity was not
significantly increased. However, numerical dominance by few tussock grass species was
diminished , possibly reflecting burial under mounds of excavated substrate. The biomass and
cover of some grass species were reduced in areas of gerbil impacts, and plant lifecycles
appeared to be completed sooner in areas affected by gerbil activities. These effects may be as
a result of the drier substrate produced following the collapse of the extensive network of
abandoned burrows. The succession of this plant community towards an underutilised
grassland state, the expected outcome of the rehabilitation effort, was minimally affected by
gerbil activities. The effects of T.brantsii activities in this PFA-dam habitat were not as
distinct as the effects noted by other authors studying fossorial rodent impacts in less
disturbed habitats. This could be because further disturbances in this habitat would merely
add to the currently disturbed state, whereas disturbance in more natural habitats, would show
more of a change from the initial state. / Thesis (M.Sc. (Zoology))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2007.
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Spatial variation of soil methane and nitrous oxide emissions in subarctic environments of Churchill, ManitobaChurchill, Jacqueline A. 07 June 2007 (has links)
Global warming, associated with elevated levels of greenhouse gases is expected to alter hydrologic regimes, permafrost extent and vegetation composition in the Hudson Bay Lowlands (HBL). Greenhouse gas (respiration, CH4 and N2O; GHG) emissions and soil gas concentrations were determined over the growing seasons of 2005 and 2006 from numerous habitats within three dominate ecosystems within the HBL, a polygonized-peat plateau, northern fringe boreal forest and palsa fen, near Churchill, Manitoba. Nitrous oxide emissions and soil concentrations were near zero however, a trend for very slight production of N2O was observed at dry aerobic sample positions while very slight consumption occurred at very wet sample locations. “Hot-spots” of intense CH4 emissions and soil concentrations occurred in the sedge-dominated areas of high moisture and plant productivity, whereas areas of low moisture and plant productivity resulted in slight CH4 consumption. Of all the ecosystems studied, the palsa fen had the greatest CH4 production, with carbon losses from CH4 occurring at rates of approximately 50 g C m-2 during the growing season. A peat plateau ecosystem site was also used to compare GHG emissions using a similar vegetation type (Cladina stellaris) and under differing soil conditions. Based on the results, slight gradients in soil conditions such as moisture content, peat accumulation and active layer depths altered respiration emissions but did not significantly affect CH4 and N2O fluxes. The differences in GHG emissions were not as great as those between different plant community types, which suggest plant community types could be used to predict GHG emissions in similar environments.
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Acoustic and satellite remote sensing of shallow nearshore marine habitats in the Gwaii Haanas National Marine Conservation AreaReshitnyk, Luba Yvanka 25 September 2013 (has links)
The ability to map nearshore habitat (i.e. submerged aquatic vegetation) is an integral component of marine conservation. The main goal of this thesis was to examine the ability of high resolution, multispectral satellite imagery and a single-beam acoustic ground discrimination system to map the location of marine habitats in Bag Harbour, found in the Gwaii Haanas National Marine Conservation Area Reserve. To meet this goal, two objectives were addressed: (1) Using the QTC View V sing-beam acoustic ground discrimination system, identify which frequency (50 kHz or 200 kHz) is best suited for mapping marine habitat; (2) evaluate the ability to map nearshore marine habitat using WorldView-2 high resolution, multispectral satellite imagery and compare the results of marine habitat maps derived from the acoustic and satellite datasets. Ground-truth data for both acoustic and satellite data were collected via towed underwater video camera on June 3rd and 4th, 2012. Acoustic data (50 and 200 kHz) were collected on June 23rd and 24th, 2012, respectively.
The results of this study are organized into two papers. The first paper focuses on objective 1 where the QTC View V single-beam acoustic ground discrimination system was used to map nearshore habitat at a site within the Gwaii Haanas National Marine Conservation Area using two survey frequencies – 50 kHz and 200 kHz. The results show that the 200 kHz data outperformed the 50 kHz data set in both thematic and spatial accuracy. The 200 kHz dataset was able to identify two species of submerged aquatic vegetation, eelgrass (Zostera marina) and a red algae (Chondrocanthus exasperatus) while the 50 kHz dataset was only able to detect the distribution of eelgrass. The best overall accuracy achieved with the 200 kHz dataset was 86% for a habitat map with three classes (dense eelgrass, dense red algae and unvegetated substrate) compared to the 50 kHz habitat classification with two classes (dense eelgrass and unvegetated substrate) that had an overall accuracy of 70%. Neither dataset was capable if discerning the distribution of green algae (Ulva spp.) or brown algae (Fucus spp.), also present at the site.
The second paper examines the benthic habitat maps created using WorldView-2 satellite imagery and the QTC View V single-beam acoustic ground discrimination system (AGDS) at 200 kHz (objective 2). Optical and acoustic remote sensing technologies both present unique capabilities of mapping nearshore habitat. Acoustic systems are able to map habitat in subtidal regions outside of the range of optical sensors while optical sensors such as WorldView-2 provide higher spatial and spectral resolution. The results of this study found that the WorldView-2 achieved the highest overall accuracy (75%) for mapping shallow (<3 m) benthic classes (green algae, brown algae, eelgrass and unvegetated substrate). The 200 kHz data were found to perform best in deeper (>3 m) regions and were able to detect the distribution of eelgrass, red algae and unvegetated substrate. A final habitat map was produced composed of these outputs to create a final, comprehensive habitat map of Bag Harbour. These results highlight the benefits and limitations of each remote sensing technology from a conservation management perspective. The main benefits of the WorldView-2 imagery stem from the high resolution (2 x 2 m) pixel resolution, with a single image covering many kilometers of coastline, and ability to discern habitats in the intertidal region that were undetectable by AGDS. However, the main limitation of this technology is the ability to acquire imagery under ideal conditions (low tide and calm seas). In contrast, the QTC View V system requires more hours spent collecting acoustic data in the field, is limited in the number of habitats it is able to detect and creates maps based on interpolated point data (compared to the continuous raster data of the WorldView-2 imagery). If, however, the objectives of the conservation management to create high resolution benthic habitat maps of subtidal habitats (e.g. eelgrass and benthic red algae) at a handful of sites (in contrast to continuous coastal coverage), the QTC View V system is more suitable. Whichever system is used ground-truth data are required to train and validate each dataset. / Graduate / 0799 / luba.reshitnyk@gmail.com
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The biology of four tuskfish species (Choerodon: Labridae) in Western Australiad.fairclough@murdoch.edu.au, David Fairclough January 2005 (has links)
The biology of four species of Choerodon (Labridae), the blue tuskfish C. cyanodus, the bluespotted tuskfish C. cauteroma, the baldchin groper C. rubescens and the blackspot tuskfish C. schoenleinii was studied in Shark Bay in Western Australia. These species are fished commercially and/or recreationally in this large subtropical marine embayment, which is a world heritage area. The biology of C. rubescens was also studied in the Abrolhos Islands, which are located ~ 300 km to the south of Shark Bay, where this labrid is an important commercial and recreational fish species. The broad aims of this project were to determine the following for the above four Choerodon species in Shark Bay. (1) Whether they are protogynous hermaphrodites, as is the case with many labrids. (2) The biological variables required for developing management plans for these species, such as the timing of spawning, the lengths and ages at both maturity and sex change, size and age compositions and growth parameters, and (3) the habitat types occupied during their life cycles and also of the purple tuskfish Choerodon cephalotes. Finally, comparisons are made between the age and size compositions, growth and reproductive biology of C. rubescens in Shark Bay and the Abrolhos Islands. Where relevant, the underlying hypotheses for the individual studies conducted during this PhD are included in the following chapters.
A macroscopic and histological examination of the gonads of the full size range of C. cyanodus, C. cauteroma, C. rubescens and C. schoenleinii, together with an analysis of the length and age compositions of female, transitional (individuals changing sex) and male individuals, demonstrated that each of these species is a protogynous hermaphrodite, i.e. individuals change sex from female to male during their life cycle. The gonads of all small (< ca 100 mm) and young (< ca 1 year old) individuals of each species comprised solely ovarian tissue and thus the individuals of each species began life as a female. All individuals subsequently become sexually mature as females and then later in life some will change to males. Since this was found to be the only method of sex change in these species, they are termed monandric. Individuals that were changing sex contained undelimited type 2 gonads sensu Sadovy and Shapiro (1987). These gonads contained both ovarian and testicular tissue that was intermixed and not separated by connective tissue. The males of each species possessed secondary testes, which retained structures of the ovary they had replaced, such as a membrane-lined ovarian lumen, lamellae and ovary wall. Furthermore, histological sections indicated that sperm were transported towards the outer walls of the testes, where the multiple sperm sinuses present in that region were presumably responsible for transporting sperm to the cloaca, rather than to a singular sperm duct as is the case with gonochoristic species.
The typically large size and different colour of the males of C. rubescens, C. schoenleinii and C. cauteroma and the bias in the sex ratios of their adults towards females suggests that the males of each of these species are either haremic, i.e. permanently territorial, or form leks, i.e. are temporarily territorial during their spawning seasons. In these three species, the presence of ripe testes that are far smaller than ripe ovaries and the release by females of eggs in batches are consistent with a single male spawning with an individual female, as commonly occurs in haremic/lekking species. In contrast to the above species, C. cyanodus was not sexually dichromatic, the sex ratio was not biased towards either sex and the weight of ripe testes remained relatively constant as body weight increased. The latter implies that the relative investment of energy by males into testicular development during the spawning season declines with increasing fish size. Thus, the males of C. cyanodus may be opportunistic spawners when small, possibly spawning in groups, and may tend towards a haremic or lek mode of life when larger.
The respective lengths and ages at which 50% of the females of C. cyanodus C. cauteroma and C. schoenleinii attained sexual maturity (L50m, A50m) in Shark Bay were ca 129, 196 and 253 mm and 2.3, 2.0 and 3.5 years of age. The corresponding L50m and A50m for C. rubescens in Shark Bay and the Abrolhos Islands were ca 274 and 279 mm, respectively, and 2.7 and 4.1 years of age, respectively. The respective lengths and ages at which 50% of the females of C. cyanodus, C. cauteroma and C. schoenleinii changed to males (L50c, A50c) in Shark Bay were 221, 310 and 556 mm and 4.1, 6.4 and 10.4 years of age. The length at which C. rubescens changed sex (L50c) was significantly greater in Shark Bay (545 mm) than in the Abrolhos Islands (479 mm), whereas the reverse pertained with respect to the age at sex change (A50c), i.e. 10.5 vs 11.9 years of age. Since some females were found in the oldest age classes of each species in Shark Bay and in the population of C. rubescens in the Abrolhos Islands, some of the females of each species do not apparently change sex.
The trends exhibited by the gonadosomatic indices of females and males and the stages of ovarian development in sequential months demonstrated that the spawning periods of each species varied. Thus, C. rubescens (in both Shark Bay and the Abrolhos Islands) and C. cauteroma spawn predominantly in spring, whereas spawning occurs in late spring/early summer in C. schoenleinii and in summer in C. cyanodus. As C. schoenleinii, C. cyanodus and C. cauteroma occur predominantly within the inner gulfs of Shark Bay, the offset in the timing of their spawning periods would be likely to reduce any potential for competition between the larvae of those three species for resources.
The trends exhibited by the mean monthly marginal increments in sectioned otoliths with differing numbers of opaque zones demonstrated that, in each species, those opaque zones were laid down annually. Thus, the numbers of opaque zones in the sectioned otoliths of individuals of each species could be used, in conjunction with the birth date and time of year when those zones are delineated, to determine their approximate ages at capture. The maximum ages recorded for the four Choerodon species in Shark Bay ranged only from 12 to 16 years. However, in that environment, the maximum lengths of C. rubescens (649 mm) and C. schoenleinii (805 mm) were far greater than those of C. cauteroma (424 mm) and C. cyanodus (382 mm). In contrast to the situation with C. rubescens in Shark Bay, this species reached a substantially older maximum age (22 years), but slightly shorter length (629 mm), and grew at a slower rate in the Abrolhos Islands, possibly reflecting the influence of greater productivity in Shark Bay and/or greater densities of this species in the Abrolhos Islands.
Although a few C. rubescens and C. schoenleinii reach large sizes in Shark Bay, most of the individuals of these species were less than 400 mm, their minimum legal length (MLL) for capture. This raises the possibility that these two sought after species, i.e. the seventh and ninth most abundant species in the recreational fishery in Shark Bay, are subjected to substantial fishing pressure. Sampling for C. cyanodus was considered representative of the sites that this species occupies in Shark Bay and the sampling methods would have been likely to have captured the full size range of this tuskfish. Thus, the failure to catch any C. cyanodus greater than 400 mm indicates that, in Shark Bay, this species does not grow to the far greater lengths of about 600 mm reported for this species as a maximum by Allen (1999). Furthermore, the 400 mm MLL for this species in Western Australia precludes the retention by fishers of this species in this environment. Choerodon cauteroma was caught at lengths up to 424 mm, which is greater than the maximum of 360 mm reported for this species (Allen, 1999). Although there is no MLL for C. cauteroma, recreational fishers are restricted to a bag limit of four fish per person per day, as is the case with all other tuskfish species.
Since fishers target large fish preferentially and the largest size classes of each of the species of tuskfish are dominated by males, heavy fishing pressure has the potential to remove a large proportion of the males of the Choerodon species that are fished in Shark Bay, i.e. C. rubescens, C. schoenleinii and C. cauteroma, and also of C. rubescens in the Abrolhos Islands. Since the ratio of females to males in catches of C. rubescens taken by the commercial fishery in the Abrolhos Islands are ca 1:1 and yet the typical adult sex ratio is heavily biased towards females (ca 14:1), that fishery is removing a substantial proportion of the males from the population. Protogynous hermaphroditic species are apparently able to respond to such pressure on the males by initiating a change in sex by the larger females. However, there is evidence from studies of other protogynous species that heavy size-selective fishing can lead to a reduction in the size and age at which a species changes sex and ultimately to a collapse in the stock.
The results of visual surveys, when taken in conjunction with the locations of the catches of each of the five Choerodon species, demonstrated that C. rubescens lives on reefs in oceanic waters along the western boundary of Shark Bay, whereas C. schoenleinii, C. cyanodus, C. cauteroma and C. cephalotes are found predominantly in the two inner gulfs of this large embayment. Choerodon cephalotes lives almost exclusively in seagrass beds, while C. schoenleinii and C. cyanodus occupy predominantly inner gulf reefs and rocky shorelines and C. cauteroma occurs in all of those three habitats. Choerodon cauteroma was the only species that underwent an obvious size-related shift during its life cycle, moving from seagrass to hard substrates, such as inner gulf reefs and rocky shorelines, as it reached adulthood.
The biological and habitat data produced during this thesis will provide fisheries and environmental managers with the types of information that will enable them to develop management plans for conserving tuskfish species and their habitats in Shark Bay. The biological data for C. rubescens in the Abrolhos Islands will be able likewise to be used to develop plans for conserving the stock of this species in waters in which it is heavily fished.
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