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  1. Estimating the biodiversity of the sub-Antarctic Indian part for ecoregionalisation: Part I. Pelagic realm of CCAMLR areas 58.5.1 and 58.6

    methodology: (1) a taxonomic approach based on communities only, (2) a physiognomic approach used for the ...

    Meeting Document : WS-MPA-11/10 : Author(s): P. Koubbi (France), P.A. Hulley (South Africa), B. Raymond (Australia), F. Penot, S. Gasparini, J.P. Labat, P. Pruvost (France), S. Mormède (New Zealand), J.O. Irisson, G. Duhamel and P. Mayzaud (France)

  2. Krill faecal pellets drive hidden pulses of particulate organic carbon in the marginal ice zone

    Abstract:  The biological carbon pump drives a flux of particulate organic carbon (POC) through the ocean and affects atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide. Short term, episodic flux events are hard to capture with current observational techniques and may thus be underrepresented in POC flux

    Meeting Document : WG-EMM-2019/P01 : Author(s): A. Belcher, S.A. Henson, C. Manno, S.L. Hill, A. Atkinson, S.E. Thorpe, P. Fretwell, L. Ireland and G.A. Tarling

  3. Stock connectivity of Antarctic toothfish

    Abstract:  For this study, Antarctic toothfish samples were collected from CCAMLR Subareas 48.2, 48.4, 48.6, 88.1, 88.2 and 88.3, Divisions 58.4.1, 58.4.2 and 58.5.2, and the SPRFMO area north of Subarea 88.1. Using approximately equal sample numbers spatially across CCAMLR Areas, DNA from 761

    Meeting Document : WG-FSA-2019/P01 : Author(s): D. Maschette, S. Wotherspoon, A. Polanowski, B. Deagle, D. Welsford and P. Ziegler

  4. The effect of different methodologies used in penguin diet studies at three US AMLR predator research sites: Admiralty Bay, Palmer Station and Cape Shirreff

    Abstract:  Diet studies are a key component of the CCAMLR predator monitoring program as they provide direct assessments of the prey types and amounts of import to predators, which, in turn, are hypothesized to influence variability in related parameters such as breeding success, foraging trip

    Meeting Document : WG-EMM-99/46 : Author(s): W. Trivelpiece, S. Trivelpiece (USA) and K. Salwicka (Poland)

  5. DISCRIMINATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABLES THAT INFLUENCE THE CATCH PER UNIT EFFORT: THE CASE OF THE ANTARCTIC KRILL FISHERY

    Abstract:  The use of the catch per unit effort (CPUE) as an index of abundance usually requires a standardization process consisting of isolating all those exogenous factors from temporal variations in abundance from the CPUE time-series. These exogenous factors include those generated by

    Meeting Document : WG-EMM-11/P3 : Author(s): J.C. Quiroz, R. Wiff, M.A. Barrientos and F. Contreras

  6. The winter pack-ice zone provides a sheltered but food-poor habitat for larval Antarctic krill

    Abstract:  A dominant Antarctic ecological paradigm suggests that winter sea ice is generally the main feeding ground for krill larvae. Observations from our winter cruise to the southwest Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean contradict this view and present the first evidence that the pack-ice

    Meeting Document : WG-EMM-18/P04 : Author(s): B. Meyer, U. Freier, V. Grimm, J. Groeneveld, B.P.V. Hunt, S. Kerwath, R. King, C. Klaas, E. Pakhomov, K.M. Meiners, J. Melbourne-Thomas, E.J. Murphy, S.E. Thorpe, S. Stammerjohn, D. Wolf-Gladrow, L. Auerswald, A. Götz, L. Halbach, S. Jarman, S. Kawaguchi, T. Krumpen, G. Nehrke, R. Ricker, M. Sumner, M. Teschke, R. Trebilco and N.I. Yilmaz

  7. How trophic dynamics of adult Antarctic krill Euphausia superba responses to the condition of no ice in the water during the winter: a case study at South Georgia?

    Abstract:  Understanding the variation in krill diet during winter is crucial to elucidate the overwintering of krill in the Southern Ocean. The information on trophic variation of krill under ice-free waters during the winter can also provide the insight for understanding the response of krill to

    Meeting Document : WG-EMM-2019/P04 : Author(s): G.P. Zhu, H.T. Zhang, B. Deng and Q.Y. Yang

  8. Korean research plan in Subarea 88.3 in 2016/17

    /16 season the Korean flagged vessel, Greenstar, conducted 1 st year research in this area. Total of ...

    Meeting Document : WG-SAM-16/11 : Author(s): Delegation of the Republic of Korea

  9. COLLAPSE OF SOUTH AFRICA’S PENGUINS IN THE EARLY 21ST CENTURY

    Abstract:  The number of African penguins Spheniscus demersus breeding in South Africa collapsed from about 56 000 pairs in 2001 to some 21 000 pairs in 2009, a loss of 35 000 pairs (>60%) in eight years. This reduced the global population to 26 000 pairs, when including Namibian breeders, and

    Meeting Document : WG-EMM-11/P8 : Author(s): R.J.M. Crawford, R. Altwegg, B.J. Barham, P.J. Barham, J.M. Durant, B.M. Dyer, D. Geldenhuys, A.B. Makhado, L. Pichegru, P.G. Ryan, L.G. Underhill, L. Upfold, J. Visagie, L.J. Waller and P.A. Whittington

  10. Major fishery events in Kerguelen Islands: Notothenia rossii, Champsocephalus gunnari, Dissostichus eleginoides – current distribution and status of stocks

    Abstract:  The large-scale trawl exploitation targeting virgin stocks of marbled notothenia (Notothenia rossii) off the Kerguelen Islands occurred after the discovery by the Soviet Union scouting fishing fleet of the fishing grounds in the early 1970’s. The fishery shifted to icefish

    Meeting Document : WS-MPA-11/P04 : Author(s): G. Duhamel, P, Pruvost, M. Bertignac, N. Gasco and M. Hautecoeur

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