Search results
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Polar Code Phase 2 and next steps for Southern Ocean vessel management
CCAMLR Members in the work at the IMO and also identifies actions to be undertaken ahead of completion of ...
Meeting Document : CCAMLR-XXXVI/BG/26 : Author(s): Submitted by ASOC
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Research program to examine the life- cycle and resource potential of Dissostichus spp. in the Special Research Zone within the Ross Sea region marine protected area (RSRMPA) in 2019–2027
Research and Monitoring Plan for RSRMOR. The research program shall be conducted in the Special Research ...
Meeting Document : WG-SAM-2019/17 : Author(s): Delegation of the Russian Federation
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Use of cameras and sensors to monitor the behaviour and benthic impact of longline gears
sensors. Data collected by the cameras and sensors will be input to models which predict the areas in ...
Meeting Document : WG-FSA-2019/24 : Author(s): C. Darby
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Marine debris and entanglements at Bird Island and King Edward Point, South Georgia, Signy Island, South Orkneys and Goudier Island, Antarctic Peninsula 2017/18
Bird Island and two at King Edward Point with no marine mammal entanglements recorded at Signy Island ... or Goudier Island. In total, 70 items of marine debris were found in association with seabird ... colonies at Bird Island, most commonly in association with wandering albatrosses (36 items; 51 %). One ... incidence of an entangled wandering albatross was reported; a bird with a white cable tie around its leg ...
Meeting Document : SC-CAMLR-XXXVII/BG/21 : Author(s): C. Waluda
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How much is enough? analysis of the net sampling effort in the Elephant Island area necessary to adequately assess and describe krill and zooplankton assemblages during summer
operating on seasonal and interannual time scales. The results of these analyses indicate that minimal ... efforts such as 8 station transects are generally unreliable. Results from most analyses indicate that the ...
Meeting Document : WG-EMM-97/32 : Author(s): Loeb, V.
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A system-of-equations approach to modeling age structured fish populations: the case of Alaskan red king crab, Paralithodes camtschaticus
-recruit structure and provides a cohort-based estimation method that retains the underlying dynamic ... that link age-classes. The technique uses multiple observations on a cohort to further mitigate the ...
Meeting Document : WS-CRAB-93/23 : Author(s): J.A. Greenberg, S.C. Matulich and R.C. Mittelhammer (USA)
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How precautionary is the policy governing the Ross Sea Antarctic toothfish (Dissostichus mawsoni) fishery?
Abstract: This article reviews the adequacy of data and models currently being used to estimate ... This article reviews the adequacy of data and models currently being used to estimate the present ...
Meeting Document : WG-FSA-13/P02 : Author(s): P.A. Abrams
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Diet and prey consumption of Antarctic petrels Thalassoica antarctica at Svarthamaren, Dronning Maud Land and at sea outside the colony
Svarthamaren. The analyses showed that the most important food (wet weight) at Svarthamaren was Crustaceans (68 ... . 250,000 pairs) indicate that the take approximately 6,600 tons of Crustaceans, 2,600 tons of fish and 485 ...
Meeting Document : WG-EMM-97/58 : Author(s): Røv, N., Lorentsen, S., Klages, N.
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Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba Dana, demography studies in the seas of Sodruzhestvo and Cosmonauts (Indian Ocean sector of Antarctica)
to 0.028-0.041 mm per day in the fifth year under condition that E.superba grows 180 days per year ... . Bertalanffy growth curves calculated for different areas are close to that obtained by Australian researchers ...
Meeting Document : WG-KRILL-93/45 : Author(s): E.A. Pakhomov (Ukraine)
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An automated weighing and recording system as an aid for the study of the foraging ecology of Adelie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae)
to the chick per visit despite males being approximately 480g (11.5%) heavier when empty. A mass of forty five ... to the chick per visit despite males being approximately 480g (11.5%) heavier when empty. A mass of forty five ...
Meeting Document : WG-CEMP-92/20 : Author(s): K. Kerry, J. Clarke and G. Else (Australia)