Home Home

CCAMLR

Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources

  • Home
  • Skip to Content
  • Log in

Search form

  • About CCAMLR
  • Conservation measures
  • Science
  • Fisheries
  • Compliance
  • Data
  • Meetings
  • Publications
  • Circulars
  • English
  • Français
  • Русский
  • Español
  • Home
  • Search
  • Search results
  • Site
  • 1916 mud brick school founded by women Massachusetts agricultural administrative educational town
  • Site

Current search

Search found 6034 items

  • 1916 mud brick school founded by women Massachusetts agricultural administrative educational town

Filter by content type:

  • Meeting Document (3595)
  • Conservation Measure (762)
  • Document (528)
  • Science Journal Paper (416)
  • Meeting Report (301)
  • Meeting (234)
  • Page (159)
  • Resolution (31)
  • Form (8)
Print this page
Increase font size
Decrease font size

Site

Advanced Search

Search results

  1. Age and Length Growth of Champsocephalus gunnari, Lonnberg 1905 (Pisces, Chaenichthyidae, in the Area of Elephant Island, West Zone, Antarctica

    , 4, 5 and 6 year old males and 3, 4 and 5 year old females were found. The growth curves were adjusted according ... , 4, 5 and 6 year old males and 3, 4 and 5 year old females were found. The growth curves were adjusted according ...

    Meeting Document : WG-FSA-85/11 : Author(s): A.P. Tomo and E. Barrera-Oro (Argentina)

  2. Conservation Measure Conservation Measure 33-03 (2019)

    Limitation of by-catch in new and exploratory fisheries in the 2019/20 season Limitations:  Except ... )1,2 Limitation of by-catch in new and exploratory fisheries in the 2019/20 season Species by ... exploratory fisheries in the 2019/20 season, except where specific by-catch limits apply. Directed fishing ... limits for all by-catch are set out in Annex 33-03/A. Within these catch limits, the total catch3 of by ... /C, paragraphs 2(vii) and (ix), should not be re-released. Unless otherwise specified by scientific ...

    Conservation Measure : 33-03 (2019)

  3. Conservation Measure Conservation Measure 33-03 (2002)

    Limitation of By-catch in New and Exploratory Fisheries in the 2002/03 Season Area:  Division ... -03 (2002)1 Limitation of By-catch in New and Exploratory Fisheries in the 2002/03 Season Species ... by-catch Area various Season 2002/03 Gear all 1. This conservation measure applies to new and ... where specific by-catch conservation measures apply. 2. The catch limits for all by-catch species are ... ’ should each be counted as a single species. 4. If the by-catch of any one species is equal to or ...

    Conservation Measure : 33-03 (2002)

  4. Conservation Measure Conservation Measure 33-03 (2003)

    Limitation of By-catch in New and Exploratory Fisheries in the 2003/04 Season Area:  Division ... Limitation of By-catch in New and Exploratory Fisheries in the 2003/04 Season Species by-catch Area ... specific by-catch conservation measures apply. 2. The catch limits for all by-catch species are set out ... in Annex 33-03/A. Within these catch limits, the total catch of by-catch species in any SSRU shall ... measure ‘Macrourus spp.’ and ‘skates and rays’ should each be counted as a single species. 4. If the by ...

    Conservation Measure : 33-03 (2003)

  5. ANTARCTIC KRILL AND CLIMATE CHANGE

    , and possible repercussions for resource management. The workshop was organised by the Institute of ... Marine Resources and Ecosystem Studies (IMARES) in the Netherlands, and funded by the European Commission ...

    Meeting Document : WG-EMM-11/16 : Author(s): H. Flores (Netherlands), A.S. Atkinson (UK), E. Bravo Rebolledo (Netherlands), V. Cirelli (Argentina), J. Cuzin-Roudy (France), S. Fielding (UK), J.A. van Franeker (Netherlands), J.J. Groeneveld (Netherlands), M. Haraldsson (Sweden), S. Kawaguchi (Australia), B.A. Krafft (Norway), A. Lombana (USA), E. Marschoff (Argentina), B. Meyer (Germany), G. Milinevsky (Ukraine), S. Nicol (Australia), E.A. Pakhomov (Canada), A.P. Van de Putte (Belgium), C. Reiss (USA), E. Rombolá (Argentina), K. Schmidt (UK

  6. Population dynamics of the wandering albatross Diomedea exulans at Marion Island: long-line fishing and environmental influences

    influenced by both environmental and anthropogenic effects are described. The proportion of first-time ... supplementary food being made available by the initiation of a longline fishery for Patagonian toothfish ...

    Meeting Document : WG-EMM-03/11 : Author(s): D.C. Nel, F. Taylor, P.G. Ryan and J. Cooper (South Africa)

  7. An ecosystem-based approach to management: using individual behaviour to predict the indirect effects of Antarctic krill fisheries on penguin foraging

    Abstract:  1. Changes in species’ abundance and distributions caused by human disturbances can ... predicted to cause stronger effects of krill fisheries than explained solely by the percentage of biomass ...

    Meeting Document : WG-EMM-03/34 : Author(s): S.H. Alonzo, P.V. Switzer and M. Mangel (USA)

  8. PENGUIN RESPONSES TO CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN

    likely to respond by dispersal rather than adaptation. Ecosystem changes are potentially most important ... tolerance; species with low adaptability, particularly the ice-obligates, may therefore be more affected by ...

    Meeting Document : WG-EMM-09/P09 : Author(s): J. Forcada and P.N. Trathan

  9. PREDICTING SPECIES DISTRIBUTIONS FROM MUSEUM AND HERBARIUM RECORDS USING MULTI-RESPONSE MODELS FITTED WITH MULTIVARIATE ADAPTIVE REGRESSION SPLINES

    methods for using these data. Such methods must, in particular, accommodate the difficulties caused by ... multiple species affect predictive performance, by evaluating predictions at completely independent sites ...

    Meeting Document : WS-VME-09/P02 : Author(s): Elith, J., Leathwick, J.

  10. Foraging energetics of Antarctic fur seals in relation to changes in prey availability

    seal foraging trips were twice as long in 1984 as in 1985 and total mass-specific energy expended by ... can increase their foraging effort by increasing the proportion of time spent foraging. This would ...

    Meeting Document : SC-CAMLR-VIII/BG/13 : Author(s): Delegation of United Kingdom

Pages

  • « first
  • ‹ previous
  • …
  • 317
  • 318
  • 319
  • 320
  • 321
  • 322
  • 323
  • 324
  • 325
  • …
  • next ›
  • last »

Contact us

Email: ccamlr [at] ccamlr [dot] org
Telephone: +61 3 6210 1111
Fax: +61 3 6224 8744
Address: 181 Macquarie Street, Hobart, 7000, Tasmania, Australia

 

Quick Links

  • Job vacancies
  • List of authorised vessels
  • Schedule of Conservation Measures in Force 2024/25
  • CCAMLR Venue Hire

Recent and Upcoming Meetings

  • WG-FSA-2025
  • SCIC-2025
  • SC-CAMLR-44
  • CCAMLR-44
  • SCAF-2025
  • e-CDS
  • Log in
  • CCAMLR e-groups
  • CCAMLR Discussions
  • Support
  • Copyright
  • Disclaimer and Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Webmail
© Copyright - the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources 2025, All rights reserved.  |  Top of page  |  Site by Eighty Options