GLORIA

GEOMAR Library Ocean Research Information Access

feed icon rss

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    San Diego :Elsevier Science & Technology,
    Keywords: Seashore ecology. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (574 pages)
    Edition: 3rd ed.
    ISBN: 9780128096987
    DDC: 577.699
    Language: English
    Note: Front Cover -- THE ECOLOGY OF SANDY SHORES -- THE ECOLOGY OF SANDY SHORES -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- A Tribute to Alec Brown -- ALEXANDER CLAUDE BROWN 1931-2005 -- 1 - Introduction -- 2 - The Physical Environment -- 2.1 INTRODUCTION -- 2.2 THE LITTORAL ACTIVE ZONE -- 2.3 SAND -- Particle Size -- Porosity and Permeability -- Penetrability -- 2.4 WAVES -- Types of Waves -- Wave Energy -- Refraction -- Shoaling and Breaking -- Bound and Infragravity Waves: Surf Beat -- Edge Waves -- 2.5 OTHER DRIVERS OF WATER MOVEMENT -- Tides -- Internal Waves -- Wind -- 2.6 SAND TRANSPORT -- 2.7 INTERACTIONS AMONG BEACH SLOPE, WAVES, TIDES, AND SAND -- 2.8 BEACH INDICES -- 2.9 BEACH TYPES -- Wave-Dominated Beaches -- Tidal Effects -- 2.10 CIRCULATION CELLS AND MIXING -- 2.11 EMBAYMENTS AND HEADLANDS -- 2.12 SWASH CLIMATE -- 2.13 SLOPE -- 2.14 LATITUDINAL EFFECTS -- 2.15 CONCLUSIONS -- 3 - The Interstitial Environment -- 3.1 INTRODUCTION -- 3.2 CHARACTERISTICS OF THE SYSTEM -- Grain Size -- Mineralogy -- Sorting -- Grain Shape -- Porosity -- Pore Size -- Permeability -- Moisture Content -- Thixotropy and Dilatancy -- 3.3 PROCESSES OF WATER INPUT -- Groundwater Discharge -- Tides -- Beach Face Wave Run-up -- Subtidal Wave Pumping -- 3.4 WATER FILTRATION -- Volumes and Residence Times of Tide- and Wave-Driven Inputs -- Flow Patterns and Interstitial Climate -- Subtidal Wave Pumping: Input Volumes and Flow Patterns -- 3.5 WATER TABLE FLUCTUATIONS -- Tidal Effects -- Groundwater and Swash Effects -- Influence on Beach Face Erosion/Accretion -- Zones of Interstitial Moisture -- 3.6 INTERSTITIAL CHEMISTRY -- Temperature -- Groundwater Inputs -- Salinity -- Organic Inputs -- Oxygen Concentrations -- Nutrients -- 3.7 THE INTERSTITIAL ENVIRONMENT -- 3.8 CONCLUSIONS -- 4 - Beach and Surf-Zone Flora -- 4.1 INTRODUCTION -- 4.2 BENTHIC MICROFLORA. , 4.3 SURF-ZONE PHYTOPLANKTON -- 4.4 SEAGRASSES -- 4.5 CONCLUSIONS -- 5 - Sandy-Beach Invertebrates -- 5.1 INTRODUCTION -- 5.2 IMPORTANT GROUPS -- Phylum: Porifera -- Phylum: Cnidaria -- Phylum: Platyhelminthes -- Phylum: Acoelomorpha -- Phylum: Gnathostomulida -- Phylum: Nemertea -- Phylum: Nematoda -- Phylum: Acanthocephala -- Phylum: Rotifera -- Phylum: Gastrotricha -- Phylum: Kinorhyncha -- Phylum: Loricifera -- Phylum: Annelida -- Phylum: Echiura -- Phylum: Sipuncula -- Phylum: Brachiopoda -- Phylum: Mollusca -- Phylum: Tardigrada -- Phylum: Arthropoda -- Phylum: Bryozoa -- Phylum: Echinodermata -- Phylum: Hemichordata -- 5.3 CONCLUSIONS -- 6 - Adaptations to Sandy-Beach Life -- 6.1 INTRODUCTION -- 6.2 LOCOMOTION -- Burrowing -- Surfing and Coping With Swash -- 6.3 RHYTHMS OF ACTIVITY -- 6.4 SENSORY RESPONSES AND ORIENTATION -- 6.5 CHOICE OF HABITAT -- 6.6 NUTRITION -- 6.7 RESPIRATION -- 6.8 ENVIRONMENTAL TOLERANCES -- 6.9 REPRODUCTION -- 6.10 AGGREGATIONS AND GREGARIOUSNESS -- 6.11 AVOIDANCE OF PREDATORS -- 6.12 PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY -- 6.13 CONCLUSIONS -- 7 - Benthic Macrofauna Communities -- 7.1 INTRODUCTION -- 7.2 SAMPLING -- Sample Area and Species Accumulation Curves -- Species-Area Relationships -- 7.3 TAXONOMIC COMPOSITION -- 7.4 MACROSCALE PATTERNS -- Species Richness -- Abundance, Biomass, and Density -- Latitude -- Factors Controlling Large-Scale Patterns -- Deconstructing Diversity -- Other Trends: Body Size and Density -- Body Size -- 7.5 MESOSCALE PATTERNS -- Beach Length -- Alongshore Variation -- Across-Shore Variation -- Zonation -- Temporal Changes in Zonation -- 7.6 MICROSCALE: THE FORGOTTEN DIMENSION -- 7.7 SPECIES INTERACTIONS -- Trophic Relations -- Wrack-Dominated Shores -- Predation -- Competition -- Mutualism and Commensalism -- Parasitism -- Disturbance, Succession, and Colonization -- 7.8 CONCLUSIONS. , 8 - Benthic Macrofauna Populations -- 8.1 INTRODUCTION -- 8.2 MACROSCALE PATTERNS -- Latitude -- Beach Types, Zones, and Life Histories -- Metapopulations and Connectivity -- Long-Term Fluctuations -- 8.3 MESOSCALE PATTERNS -- Alongshore -- Across Shore -- Temporal Changes -- 8.4 MICROSCALE PATTERNS -- 8.5 CONCLUSIONS -- 9 - Interstitial Ecology -- 9.1 INTRODUCTION -- 9.2 INTERSTITIAL CLIMATE -- 9.3 SAMPLING -- 9.4 INTERSTITIAL BIOTA -- 9.5 DISTRIBUTION OF INTERSTITIAL FAUNA -- 9.6 TEMPORAL CHANGES -- 9.7 MEIOFAUNAL COMMUNITIES -- 9.8 TROPHIC RELATIONSHIPS -- 9.9 BIOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS -- 9.10 MEIOFAUNA AND POLLUTION -- 9.11 CONCLUSIONS -- 10 - Surf-Zone Zooplankton and Nekton -- 10.1 INTRODUCTION -- 10.2 ZOOPLANKTON -- Composition -- Sampling -- Adaptations -- Migrations -- Distribution -- Biomass and Abundance -- Food and Feeding Relationships -- 10.3 FISHES -- Composition -- Sampling -- Larvae, Juveniles, and Nursery Areas -- Surf-Zone Fish Assemblages -- Temporal Variability -- Spatial Variability -- Trophic Relationships -- Human Impacts -- 10.4 OTHER GROUPS -- 10.5 CONCLUSIONS -- 11 - Other Marine and Terrestrial Vertebrates -- 11.1 INTRODUCTION -- 11.2 TURTLES -- Nesting -- Threats and Conservation -- 11.3 BIRDS -- Seasonality and Migrations -- Foraging -- Nesting -- Human Impacts -- 11.4 CONCLUSIONS -- 12 - Energetics and Nutrient Cycling -- 12.1 INTRODUCTION -- 12.2 FOOD SOURCES -- 12.3 MACROSCOPIC FOOD WEBS -- Examples of Macroscopic Food Webs -- India -- Scotland -- Western Australia -- Western Cape, South Africa -- California -- Eastern Cape, South Africa -- Uruguay -- Food Web Dynamics and Trophic Niche Shifts -- Variable Land-Derived Food Sources -- Other Spatiotemporal Variations in Organic Inputs -- 12.4 INTERSTITIAL FOOD WEBS -- Scotland and India -- Western Cape -- Eastern Cape -- 12.5 THE MICROBIAL LOOP IN SURF WATERS. , 12.6 ENERGY FLOW IN BEACH AND SURF-ZONE ECOSYSTEMS -- 12.7 CASE STUDY: SANDY BEACHES OF THE EASTERN CAPE -- 12.8 NUTRIENT CYCLING -- 12.9 CONCLUSIONS -- 13 - Coastal Dune Ecosystems and Dune-Beach Interactions -- 13.1 INTRODUCTION -- 13.2 THE PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT -- 13.3 COASTAL DUNE FORMATION BY VEGETATION -- 13.4 DUNE TYPES -- 13.5 EDAPHIC FEATURES -- 13.6 WATER -- 13.7 THE GRADIENT ACROSS COASTAL DUNEFIELDS -- 13.8 DUNE VEGETATION -- 13.9 THE FAUNA -- 13.10 FOOD WEBS -- 13.11 DUNE-BEACH EXCHANGES -- 13.12 CONCLUSIONS -- 14 - Fisheries -- 14.1 INTRODUCTION -- 14.2 FISHERY TYPES, RESOURCES, AND EXTRACTION PRACTICES -- Fishery Types -- Harvested Resources and Extraction Practices -- Surf-Zone Fauna -- Supralittoral and Intertidal Benthic Invertebrates -- SUPRALITTORAL SPECIES -- INTERTIDAL POLYCHAETES AND CRUSTACEANS -- CLAMS -- 14.3 FISHERIES AS SOCIAL-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS -- System Structure -- Main Components -- Relevant Ecological Issues for Assessing and Managing the SES -- Spatial Structure -- Metapopulations -- Density-Dependent and Environmental Factors -- Ecological Effects of Fishing -- External Drivers -- 14.4 HARVESTING PHASES AND LONG-TERM TRENDS -- Harvesting Phases -- Long-term Bioeconomic Trends -- 14.5 ASSESSMENT -- Information Requirements for Monitoring Stock Condition -- Fishery Performance Indicators -- Main Concepts -- Multiple Indicators in Practice -- Assessing Trends in Reference Points -- 14.6 GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT -- Governance -- Management -- Single Species and the EAF -- Operational Management Strategies -- Spatially Explicit Strategies -- Territorial Use Rights and Privileges -- CASE STUDY: THE SURF CLAM IN CHILE -- CASE STUDY: SHELLFISHES IN GALICIA, SPAIN -- CASE STUDY: TERRITORIAL COMMUNAL RIGHTS IN THE RAZOR CLAM FISHERY, UNITED STATES -- 14.7 CONCLUSIONS -- 15 - Human Impacts -- 15.1 INTRODUCTION. , 15.2 RECREATION -- Off-road Vehicles -- Trampling and Related Recreational Activities -- 15.3 FOULING -- Beach Cleaning -- Eutrophication: Green and Golden Tides -- 15.4 POLLUTION -- Crude Oil Pollution -- Plastics and Microplastics -- Sewage and Organic Enrichment -- Heavy Metals -- Effluents -- 15.5 BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS -- 15.6 NATURAL PERTURBATIONS -- 15.7 NOURISHMENT -- 15.8 MINING -- 15.9 COASTAL DEVELOPMENT, URBANIZATION, AND ENGINEERING -- The Role of Human Pressure -- Disrupting Sediment Transport -- Impacts on Fauna -- 15.10 HUMAN INFLUENCE ON THE EVOLUTION OF BEACHES -- 15.11 IMPACT ASSESSMENTS -- Assessment Approaches: Warnings and Perspectives -- Indicators -- The Triad Approach in Pollution Assessments -- Toxicity Studies -- A Multidimensional Framework for Impact Assessments -- 15.12 CONCLUSIONS -- 16 - Climate Change -- 16.1 INTRODUCTION -- 16.2 CLIMATE CHANGE: MAIN DRIVERS AND POTENTIAL EFFECTS ON THE SANDY-BEACH HABITAT -- Ocean Warming -- Sea-level Rise -- Extreme Events and Winds -- Acidification -- 16.3 CONCEPTUAL BASIS FOR TESTING CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ON BEACHES -- 16.4 CLIMATE CHANGE AND SANDY-BEACH FAUNA -- Life Histories and Differential Responses to Climate Change -- Distribution, Range Shifts, Mass Mortalities, and Extirpations -- Demography and Population Dynamics -- Diseases -- Community and Ecosystem Responses -- Tipping Points and Regime Shifts -- 16.5 SOCIOECONOMIC EFFECTS AND MANAGEMENT -- Managing Climate Change Effects -- 16.6 CASE STUDY: SANDY BEACHES IN THE SOUTHWEST ATLANTIC -- Effects on the Environment -- Effects on the Biota at Different Organizational Levels -- 16.7 CONCLUSIONS -- 17 - Management and Conservation -- 17.1 INTRODUCTION -- 17.2 THE FRAGILE LITTORAL ACTIVE ZONE -- 17.3 MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES AND TOOLS -- Manage the LAZ as a Unit. , Identify the Basic Physical Processes and Scales Relevant to a Beach.
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Book
    Book
    Rome : Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
    Keywords: Fischerei ; Fischbestand ; Umweltbezogenes Management
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: XIV, 108 S. , graph. Darst. , 30 cm
    ISBN: 9251040451
    Series Statement: FAO fisheries technical paper 368
    DDC: 333.956
    Language: English
    Note: Literaturverz. S. 91 - 102
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Book
    Book
    Rome : Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
    Keywords: Seefischerei ; Wirbellose ; Populationsdichte ; Erhaltung ; Produktivitätszuwachs ; Seefischerei ; Schalentiere ; Population ; Erhaltung ; Produktivitätszuwachs
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: VI, 159 S.
    ISBN: 9251050171
    Series Statement: FAO fisheries technical paper 448
    DDC: 333.955
    Language: English
    Note: Druckfehler a.d. Titelblatt: Vorname des 2. Verfassers lautet richtig "Omar"
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We studied some aspects of the population dynamics of the yellow clam Mesodesma mactroides (Deshayes, 1854) which inhabits the eastern sandy beaches of Uruguay. Observations were made from March 1983 through March 1985 (harvesting season), and additional data from January 1988 to December 1989 (closed season) were also included in the analyses. Parameters of growth and mortality were estimated by methods that make use of age or length information. An age/length relationship was constructed by counting growth rings. Results were consistent with those obtained with modal class progression analysis and other length/frequency methods. The growth curve obtained from the age/length relationship did not account for seasonality in growth rate, and a seasonal growth model explained growth oscillations in a better way. The instantaneous coefficient of natural mortality (M) estimated for the closed season was 1.64, whereas an increase in fishing mortality (F) was observed during 1984. Age composition did not change during the 2 yr of study, and the first 6 mm class accounted for over 50% of the population. The main contribution of recruits was observed between late summer and early fall (February to April), and the recruitment pattern suggested one main settlement period per year. Growth and recruitment success appeared to be regulated by density-dependence processes. Some implications for management are considered in this context. Methodological aspects concerning the reliability of empirical equations and programs for estimating growth and mortality are discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Publication Date: 2022-01-31
    Description: The diversity of life in the sea is critical to the health of ocean ecosystems that support living resources and therefore essential to the economic, nutritional, recreational, and health needs of billions of people. Yet there is evidence that the biodiversity of many marine habitats is being altered in response to a changing climate and human activity. Understanding this change, and forecasting where changes are likely to occur, requires monitoring of organism diversity, distribution, abundance, and health. It requires a minimum of measurements including productivity and ecosystem function, species composition, allelic diversity, and genetic expression. These observations need to be complemented with metrics of environmental change and socio-economic drivers. However, existing global ocean observing infrastructure and programs often do not explicitly consider observations of marine biodiversity and associated processes. Much effort has focused on physical, chemical and some biogeochemical measurements. Broad partnerships, shared approaches, and best practices are now being organized to implement an integrated observing system that serves information to resource managers and decision-makers, scientists and educators, from local to global scales. This integrated observing system of ocean life is now possible due to recent developments among satellite, airborne, and in situ sensors in conjunction with increases in information system capability and capacity, along with an improved understanding of marine processes represented in new physical, biogeochemical, and biological models.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-01-26
    Description: The diversity of life in the sea is critical to the health of ocean ecosystems that support living resources and therefore essential to the economic, nutritional, recreational, and health needs of billions of people. Yet there is evidence that the biodiversity of many marine habitats is being altered in response to a changing climate and human activity. Understanding this change, and forecasting where changes are likely to occur, requires monitoring of organism diversity, distribution, abundance, and health. It requires a minimum of measurements including productivity and ecosystem function, species composition, allelic diversity, and genetic expression. These observations need to be complemented with metrics of environmental change and socio-economic drivers. However, existing global ocean observing infrastructure and programs often do not explicitly consider observations of marine biodiversity and associated processes. Much effort has focused on physical, chemical and some biogeochemical measurements. Broad partnerships, shared approaches, and best practices are now being organized to implement an integrated observing system that serves information to resource managers and decision-makers, scientists and educators, from local to global scales. This integrated observing system of ocean life is now possible due to recent developments among satellite, airborne, and in situ sensors in conjunction with increases in information system capability and capacity, along with an improved understanding of marine processes represented in new physical, biogeochemical, and biological models.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Los ecosistemas acuáticos continúan degradándose como consecuencia de las actividades humanas, afectando su capacidad de proveer servicios claves para el hombre, incluyendo alimento. Esto ha repercutido, entre otros aspectos, en los recursos marinos de importancia comercial, los cuales han disminuido en varias regiones del mundo. Una importante explicación de esta tendencia radica en que los recursos pesqueros constituyen Sistemas Social-Ecológicos (SES) complejos cuyo manejo se dificulta por la complejidad inherente a cada subsistema y por las numerosas fuentes de incertidumbre que los afectan. En un SES pesquero, el ecosistema, el recurso, los usuarios y el modo de gobernanza interactúan entre sí, afectando al sistema como un todo. En este contexto, el desarrollo de esquemas de manejo sectorizados y enfocados en actividades y servicios particulares no ha sido del todo exitoso, generándose la disminución de los recursos y la aparición de conflictos entre distintas actividades extractivas. Como respuesta, en las últimas décadas se ha enfatizado un enfoque de manejo más holístico, basado en una aproximación ecosistémica. Este documento resume conceptos fundamentales del Enfoque Ecosistémico Pesquero (EEP), resalta el rol de la participación de los usuarios en dicho esquema, en especial el co-manejo como modo de gobernanza, y resume algunas aplicaciones prácticas y lecciones aprendidas del EEP en pesquerías de pequeña escala de América Latina. El Capítulo 1 aborda el concepto de las pesquerías como SES complejos y define los componentes del sistema y las características inherentes de los recursos pesqueros que llevan a la necesidad de desarrollar un EEP para su manejo. El Capítulo 2 desarrolla con mayor profundidad el EEP, brindando definiciones y conceptos teóricos básicos para luego incluir aspectos prácticos que van desde la implementación del EEP hasta la evaluación del desempeño de un plan de manejo bajo un EEP. Uniendo los conceptos desarrollados en los Capítulos 1 y 2, el Capítulo 3 destaca el nexo fundamental entre el EEP y el co-manejo como modo de gobernanza participativo en pesquerías de pequeña escala. Se insiste en la necesidad de consolidar este modo de gobernanza en la medida en que el EEP supone una consulta continua a los actores principales desde el momento mismo de su gestación. Por último, en el Capítulo 4 se proveen ejemplos cercanos a la aplicación del EEP en pesquerías en pequeña escala de América Latina. Se hace hincapié en pesquerías de invertebrados y pesquerías que cuentan, o han contado, con la formal o informal implementación del co-manejo como modo de gobernanza. Se evalúan ventajas y debilidades como resultado de la implementación de esquemas de manejo que contemplaron aspectos relacionados con el EEP, así como las estructuras idóneas que pudieran llevar a jugar un papel protagónico a este enfoque.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: ASFA15::F::Fisheries ; ASFA15::E::Ecosystems ; ASFA15::P::Protected resources
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings , Not Known
    Format: 82pp.
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Un estudio cuantitativo del cangrejo rojo Geryon quinquedens (Smith, 1879) fue realizado en la Zona Común de Pesca Argentino-Uruguaya en primavera de 1985 y verano de 1986, entre las latitudes 35º00´S y 36º40´S y en un rango de profundidad comprendido entre 300 y 900 m. Como arte de captura fue empleada una nasa de tipo troncofónica. El área fue relevada en base a un muestreo sistemático, con estaciones ubicadas cada 20 millas y a razón de una cada 100 m de profundidad. Un crucero adicional de caminamiento acústico fue dirigido a efectos de cuantificar la superficie relevada. Las estimaciones de stock se llevaron a cabo en base a la propuesta de Arena et al. (en prensa). La abundancia relativa de G. quinquedens fue mayor entre los 400 y 700 metros de profundidad, obteniéndose rendimientos máximos de 25 kg/nasa. Los machos fueron más abundantes que las hembras, las cuales se concentraron fundamentalmente en aguas menos profundas (i.e.300 a 400 m). Los valores modales derivados del análisis de la estructura poblacional fueron muy similares para ambas estaciones, tanto para machos como para hembras (entre 111-115 mm, y entre 96-100 mm, respectivamente). Se encontró una disminución de la talla en ambos sexos y del porcentaje en hembras con el aumento de la profundidad, por lo que se deduce una estratificación batimétrica por talla y por sexo. Las hembras ovígeras fueron más abundantes en aguas menos profundas (300 y 400 m) y hacia el norte de la zona de estudio, lo cual hace suponer una zona de reproducción de la especie bien delimitada en la ZCPAU. Estimaciones preliminares del crecimiento del cangrejo rojo en base al método Wetherall (1986, modificado por Pauly, 1986) mostraron un L∞ de 138 mm para machos y 124 mm para hembras. La biomasa estimada para la zona de estudio osciló entre valores medios de 14000 ton (primavera) y 22000 ton (verano), aunque cabe destacar que problemas metodológicos, operativos y también aquellos inherentes al comportamiento del recurso podrían haber ocasionado una subestimación del stock en primavera. De acuerdo a las tallas mínimas comercializables exigidas por gran parte del mercado internacional (i.e. 110 y 114 mm), la fracción explotable de la población fluctuaría en valores cercanos a las 10000 ton. Se proponen pautas para la planificación y desarrollo de la pesquería, tales como tipo de barco y arte de captura adecuados, estimación de la captura total permisible y en base a ésta, número inicial de unidades pesqueras.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Geryon quinquedens ; Red crab fisheries ; Relative abundance ; Fishing gear ; Capture fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Refereed
    Format: 72pp.
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/9000 | 403 | 2012-08-03 18:15:46 | 9000 | United States National Marine Fisheries Service
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: The morphometric and morphological characters of the rostrum have been widely used to identify penaeid shrimp species (Heales et al., 1985; Dall et al., 1990; Pendrey et al., 1999). In this setting, one of the constraints in studies of penaeid shrimp populations has been the uncertainty in the identification of early life history stages, especially in coastal nursery habitats, where recruits and juveniles dominate the population (Dall et al., 1990; Pérez-Castañeda and Defeo, 2001). In the western Atlantic Ocean, Pérez-Farfante (1969, 1970, 1971a) described diagnostic characters of the genus Farfantepenaeus that allowed identification of individuals in the range of 8−20 mm CL (carapace length) on the basis of the following morphological features: 1) changes in the structure of the petasma and thelycum; 2) absence or presence of distomarginal spines in the ventral costa of the petasma; 3) the ratio between the keel height and the sulcus width of the sixth abdominal somite; 4) the shape and position of the rostrum with respect to the segments and flagellum of the antennule; and 5) the ratio between rostrum length (RL) and carapace length (RL/CL). In addition, she classified Farfantepenaeus into two groups according to the shape and position of the rostrum with respect to the segments and flagellum of the antennule and the ratio RL/CL: 1) F. duorarum and F. notialis: short rostrum, straight distally, and the proximodorsal margin convex, usually extending anteriorly to the end of distal antennular segment, sometimes reaching to proximal one-fourth of broadened portion of lateral antennular flagellum, with RL/CL 〈0.75; and 2) F. aztecus, F. brasiliensis, F. paulensis, and F. subtilis: long rostrum, usually almost straight along the entire length, extending anteriorly beyond the distal antennular segment, sometimes reaching to the distal one-third of broadened portion of lateral antennular flagellum, with RL/CL 〉0.80. Pérez-Farfante stressed that, for the recognition to species level of juveniles 〈10 mm CL, all the characters listed above should be considered because occasionally one alone may not prove to be diagnostic. However, the only characters that could be distinguished for small juveniles in the range 4−8 mm CL are those defined on the rostrum. Therefore, it has been almost impossible to identify and separate small specimens of Farfantepenaeus (Pérez-Farfante, 1970, 1971a; Pérez-Farfante and Kensley, 1997).
    Keywords: Biology ; Ecology ; Fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: article , TRUE
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 306-310
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2014. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Fish and Fisheries 17 (2016): 1183–1193, doi:10.1111/faf.12110.
    Description: Global change is occurring now, often with consequences far beyond those anticipated. Although there is a wide range of assessment approaches available to address specific aspects of global change, there is currently no framework to identify what governance responses have worked and where, what has facilitated change, and what preventative options are possible. To respond to this need, we present an integrated assessment framework that builds on knowledge learned from past experience of responses to global change, to enable decision makers, researchers, managers and local stakeholders to: (1) make decisions efficiently; (2) triage and improve their responses; and (3) evaluate where to most effectively allocate resources to reduce vulnerability and enhance resilience of coastal peoples. This integrated assessment framework, IMBER-ADApT is intended to enable and enhance decision making through the development a typology of case studies providing lessons on how the natural, social and governance systems respond to the challenges of global change. The typology is developed from a database of case studies detailing the systems affected by change, responses to change and, critically, an appraisal of these responses, generating knowledge-based solutions that can be applied to other comparable situations. Fisheries, which suffer from multiple pressures, are the current focus of the proposed framework, but it could be applied to a wide range of global change issues. IMBER-ADApT has the potential to contribute to timely, cost-effective policy and governing decision making and responses. It offers cross-scale learning to help ameliorate, and eventually prevent, loss of livelihoods, food sources and habitat.
    Keywords: Appraisal ; Fisheries ; Global change ; IMBER-ADApT ; Interactive governance ; Response ; Systems approach
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Preprint
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...