Search results
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ENVIRONMENTAL, SPATIAL, TEMPORAL AND OPERATIONAL EFFECTS ON THE INCIDENTAL MORTALITY OF BIRDS IN THE LONGLINE FISHERY IN THE CROZET AND KERGUELEN AREAS 2003–2006
incidentally in large numbers (576 individuals) over the same period, and represent between 9 and 16% of ...
Meeting Document : SC-CAMLR-XXVII/12 : Author(s): Delegation of France
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Cephalopods and mesoscale oceanography at the Antarctic polar front: satellite tracked predators locate pelagic trophic interactions
attached to 9 grey-headed albatrosses Diomedea chrysostoma, breeding at Bird Island South Georgia, to ...
Meeting Document : WG-EMM-96/12 : Author(s): Murphy, E.J., Trathan, P.N., White, M.G., Bone, D.G., Hatfield, E.M.C., Rodhouse, P.G., Prince, P.A., Watkins, J.L.
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A characterisation of the toothfish fishery in Subareas 88.1 and 88.2 from 1997/98 to 2009/10
Subarea 88.1 and for 9 years in Subarea 88.2. This report summarises the timing, depth, and location of ...
Meeting Document : WG-FSA-10/23 : Author(s): S.M. Hanchet, M.L. Stevenson and A. Dunn (New Zealand)
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Summary of monitoring and research effort and preliminary results from the 2019 Scotia Sea krill monitoring survey with FV Cabo de Hornos
. In addition, deployment of four acoustic moorings and 9 replicate measurements on board of krill ...
Meeting Document : WG-EMM-2019/46 : Author(s): G. Skaret, M. Martinussen, G. McCallum, R. Pedersen, J. Rønning, A.L. Donoso, O.A. Bergstad and B.A. Krafft
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KRILLBASE: a circumpolar database of Antarctic krill and salp numerical densities, 1926–2016
Abstract: Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) and salps are major macroplankton contributors to Southern Ocean food webs and krill are also fished commercially. Managing this fishery sustainably, against a backdrop of rapid regional climate change, requires information on distribution and time
Meeting Document : WG-EMM-17/P03 : Author(s): A. Atkinson, S.L. Hill, E.A. Pakhomov, V. Siegel, R. Anadon, S. Chiba, K.L. Daly, R. Downie, S. Fielding, P. Fretwell, L. Gerrish, G.W. Hosie, M.J. Jessopp, S. Kawaguchi, B.A. Krafft, V. Loeb, J. Nishikawa, H.J. Peat, C.S. Reiss, R.M. Ross, L.B. Quetin, K. Schmidt, D.K. Steinberg, R.C. Subramaniam, G.A. Tarling and P. Ward
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Results of a research survey to monitor abundance of pre-recruit Antarctic toothfish in the southern Ross Sea, February 2012
survey had an overall c.v. of 9%, which met the target c.v. of 10%. The survey caught mainly 70–110 cm TL ...
Meeting Document : WG-SAM-12/29 : Author(s): S.M. Hanchet, S. Mormede, A. Dunn (New Zealand) and H.-S. Jo (Republic of Korea)
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Results of a CCAMLR-sponsored research survey to monitor abundance of pre-recruit Antarctic toothfish in the southern Ross Sea, February 2012
survey biomass estimate had an overall c.v. of 9%, which met the target c.v. of 10%. The survey caught ...
Meeting Document : WG-FSA-12/41 : Author(s): S.M. Hanchet, S. Mormede, S. Parker, A. Dunn (New Zealand) and H.-S. Jo (Republic of Korea)
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Estimation of the incidental capture of seabird species in commercial fisheries in New Zealand waters, 2000/01
367 seabirds (c.v. = 12%) for the six autoline vessels by area; 1065 seabirds (c.v. = 9%) were ...
Meeting Document : WG-FSA-04/55 : Author(s): S.J. Baird (New Zealand)
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Bioregionalisation and spatial ecosystem processes in the Ross Sea region
in previous CCAMLR Bioregionalisation workshops (Grant et al. 2006, SC-CAMLR XXVI/9), i.e. automated ...
Meeting Document : WG-EMM-10/30 : Author(s): B.R. Sharp, S.J. Parker, M.H. Pinkerton (New Zealand) (lead authors) also B.B. Breen, V. Cummings, A. Dunn (New Zealand), S.M. Grant (United Kingdom), S.M. Hanchet, H.J.R. Keys (New Zealand), S.J. Lockhart (USA), P. O’B. Lyver, R.L. O’Driscoll, M.J.M. Williams, P.R. Wilson (New Zealand)
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Uncertainty in reported geographical distribution and weight of krill catches from Norwegian krill fishing vessels operating continuous fishing systems
. Experiments on board ‘Saga Sea’ showed that there is an average delay of approximately 9 minutes between the ...
Meeting Document : WG-EMM-18/22 : Author(s): G. Skaret, T. Knutsen, F. Grebstad and O.A. Bergstad