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The sensitivity of multiple output statistics to input parameters in a krill–predator–fishery ecosystem dynamics model

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

SEAFO

Party Status: 
Observer

There is no abstract available for this document.

Abstract: 

This paper summarises the data collected by Scientific Observers operating in the Convention Area on board longline and  finfish trawl vessels during the 2013  (based on data received by the Secretariat up to 30 Sept 2013). .
Information on observer coverage, incidental mortality (including the implementation of mitigation related CMs), tagging and  conversion factors is presented.

A potential feedback approach to ecosystem-based management: Model Predictive Control of the Antarctic krill fishery

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

Abstract: 

Pleuragramma antarcticum is the only Antarctic notothenioid characterized by a complete pelagic life cycle and plays a major trophic role in the coastal Antarctic marine ecosystem. A previous genetic study investigated the population structure of this species, but used mitochondrial DNA sequencing and was unable to discriminate between hypotheses of panmixia, with occasional fluctuations of gene pools, and population structure. In the present study, we used 16 EST-linked microsatellites to investigate the population structure of P. antarcticum along the Antarctic Peninsula (AP) shelf, a region of Antarctica highly impacted by regional warming. We found a single gene pool and an absence of inter-annual variability in the southwestern AP, while significant genetic differences were detected on a small geographic scale from samples collected off the tip of the AP, with a signal of increased fragmentation over time. Assignment tests revealed a stronger flow of migrants moving southward along the western AP, following the anti-clockwise Coastal Current, than in the opposite direction. Reduced level of gene flow along the shelf, the increase of population fragmentation with time, and the inability to capture P. antarcticum in the central region of the western AP for two consecutive years, all suggest that this sea-ice dependent species could be highly vulnerable to climate change with possible cascading effects on the Antarctic marine food web.

There is no abstract available for this document.

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