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  • 1
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    IUCN
    In:  In: Elasmobranch biodiversity, conservation and management: proceedings of the international seminar and workshop. , ed. by Fowler, S. L., Reed, T. M. and Dipper, F. A. Occasional Paper of the IUCN Species Survival Commission, 25 . IUCN, Gland, Switzerland, pp. 82-85. ISBN 2-8317-0650-5
    Publication Date: 2020-03-30
    Description: An annotated checklist of the sharks and rays of the South China Sea is described, together with some global statistics on the status and use of elasmobranchs. For each of the 156 recorded species, the checklist contains scientific names, synonyms, common names, global distribution, distribution in the area, status of threat, human uses, key references on taxonomy, identification, reproduction, population dynamics, and a list of people who have contributed information. The checklist is a direct printout from FishBase, a global database on finfish, developed at ICLARM in collaboration with FAO, the California Academy of Sciences, and many other partners, and supported by the European Commission (see www.fishbase.org). The goal of FishBase is to further the conservation and sustainable use of fish by bringing together the knowledge of taxonomists, fisheries experts, and conservationists, providing tools for analysing and updating this knowledge, and making it available to concerned people. How a closer link between FishBase, taxonomists and country experts can benefit the specialists, as well as elasmobranch conservation, is discussed
    Type: Book chapter , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-08-26
    Description: Juvenile and adult Loligo opalescens Berry were video taped in Monterey Bay with the remotely operated vehicle (ROV) Ventana,captured with an otter trawl in Santa Monica Bay, California, and adults were taken from the Monterey Bay fishery. Behavioral observations were made over a 13 h period of video sequences. Allometry measurements were made on 157 squids ranging in size from 12 to 151 mm mantle length (ML). In addition to ML we measured the morphometric characters of fin length(FL), fin width (FW), mantle width (MW), eye diameter (ED), head width (HW), funnel aperture diameter(FA), fourth arm length (AL) and tentacle length(TL). Loligo opalescens changes shape with ontogeny due to negative allometric growth of ED, HW, TL, MW, FA and positive allometric growth of AL, FL and fin area. The allometry measurements were used to determine the size of juvenile squids video-taped in open water. A linear regression can predict dorsal ML in mm from a dimensionless ratio of ML upon ED (r2=0.857, P〈0.001). Sizes and velocities of video-taped animals were estimated from 26 video sequences ranging from 〈1.0 to 8 s. The average velocity for squids ranging from 12–116 mm ML was 0.21 m s–1 and the maximum velocity was 1.60 m s–1(116 mm ML). Allometric measurements can provide scale for 2-dimensional images in order to estimate size, velocity and age of animals.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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