Inicio Inicio

CCAMLR

Comisión para la Conservación de los Recursos Vivos Marinos Antárticos

  • Inicio
  • Contenido
  • Inicio de sesión

Formulario de búsqueda

  • Medidas de conservación
  • Acerca de la CCRVMA
  • Ciencia
  • Circulares
  • Datos
  • Ejecución
  • Publicaciones
  • Reuniones
  • Pesquerías
  • English
  • Français
  • Русский
  • Español
  • Inicio
Print this page
Increase font size
Decrease font size

Trotline

  • Leer más sobre Trotline
Abstract: 

This report presents activities and preliminary results from a krill and ecosystem monitoring survey conducted in February 2018 at the South Orkney Islands.

Autoline

  • Leer más sobre Autoline

SCIC-18

Nombre: 
Comité Permanente de Ejecución y Cumplimiento
  • Meeting documents
Doc Number Título
CCAMLR-XXXVII/10 Cooperación con otras organizaciones: acuerdos con organizaciones internacionales
Secretaría de la CCRVMA
CCAMLR-XXXVII/11 Segunda Evaluación del Funcionamiento: informe de avance
Secretaría de la CCRVMA
CCAMLR-XXXVII/12 Actividades y tendencias de la pesca INDNR en 2017/18 y listas de barcos de pesca INDNR
Secretaría de la CCRVMA
CCAMLR-XXXVII/13 Rev. 1 Informe Resumido del Procedimiento de Evaluación del Cumplimiento de la CCRVMA (PECC)
Secretaría de la CCRVMA
CCAMLR-XXXVII/14 Solicitud de Ecuador para obtener la condición de Parte no contratante (PNC) que coopera con la CCRVMA a través de su participación en el Sistema de Documentación de la Captura (SDC) de Dissostichus spp.
Secretaría de la CCRVMA
CCAMLR-XXXVII/18 Propuesta para fortalecer el seguimiento y el control de los transbordos
Delegación de Estados Unidos
CCAMLR-XXXVII/19 Seguimiento de la pesca en ecosistemas marinos vulnerables (EMV) en el Área de la Convención de la CRVMA
Delegación de Estados Unidos
CCAMLR-XXXVII/20 Propuesta de mejoras de la seguridad de los observadores: Dispositivos independientes de comunicación satelital bidireccional por satélite y balizas salvavidas individuales
Delegación de Estados Unidos
CCAMLR-XXXVII/25 FRANCIA, 2018 Propuesta de documento de trabajo: vigilancia satelital en el Área de la CCRVMA
Delegación de Francia
CCAMLR-XXXVII/26 Propuesta de la Unión Europea para modificar la Medida de Conservación 10-06
Delegación de la Unión Europea
CCAMLR-XXXVII/27 Propuesta de la Unión Europea para modificar la Medida de Conservación 10-07
Delegación de la Unión Europea
CCAMLR-XXXVII/28 Propuesta de la Unión Europea para modificar la Medida de Conservación 10-10
Delegación de la Unión Europea
CCAMLR-XXXVII/33 Propuesta de modificación de la Medida de Conservación 31-02
Delegación de la República de Corea
CCAMLR-XXXVII/34 Información presentada por la República de Angola relativa a la eliminación del Northern Warrior de las listas de barcos de pesca INDNR
Secretaría de la CCRVMA
CCAMLR-XXXVII/35 Presentación de la solicitud de Singapur para acceder a la condición de Parte no contratante (PNC) que coopera con la CCRVMA mediante su participación en el Sistema de Documentación de la Captura (SDC)
Secretaría de la CCRVMA
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/03 Trade data analysis – A report of trends and supply chains in CDS data
CCAMLR Secretariat
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/05 CCAMLR Compliance Evaluation Procedure (CCEP) – Implementation and reporting
CCAMLR Secretariat
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/06 Notifications of intent to participate in a new or exploratory fishery, or an established krill fishery, 2018/19
CCAMLR Secretariat
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/07 NCP Engagement Strategy and review
CCAMLR Secretariat
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/08 Rev. 1 Annual report of global toothfish trade data
CCAMLR Secretariat
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/09 Implementation of the Catch Documentation Scheme (CDS)
CCAMLR Secretariat
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/14 Rev. 1 Trade data analysis – Reconciliation of CDS data with fine-scale catch and effort data
CCAMLR Secretariat
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/15 Reducing plastic pollution in the Southern Ocean
Delegation of the United Kingdom
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/16 The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland’s investigation report into late removal of fishing gear following fishery closure notification
Delegation of the United Kingdom
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/18 Monitoring, control and surveillance undertaken by Chile during 2017/18 season
Delegation of Chile
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/29 The third follow-up to the cases regarding the Southern Ocean and Hong Jin 701
Delegation of the Republic of Korea
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/30 Informations sur la pêche INN dans les zones économiques exclusives (ZEE) françaises de Kerguelen et Crozet et dans la zone statistique 58 de la CCAMLR
Délégation française
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/33 New Zealand investigation reports into late removal of fishing gear following the fishery closure notifications
Delegation of New Zealand
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/34 CCAMLR inspections undertaken by New Zealand from HMNZS Otago during 2017/18
Delegation of New Zealand
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/35 Full steam ahead for the Polar Code – developing safety measures for fishing vessels and implementation of marine mammal avoidance measures
Submitted by ASOC
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/37 Closing the gaps in CCAMLR’s oversight of at-sea transhipments in the Convention Area
Submitted by ASOC
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/38 Solicitud de eliminación del barco N° OMI 9319856 de la Lista de barcos INDNR-PNC
Delegación de Chile
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/39 Australian views on the key principles of the Compliance Evaluation Procedure
Delegation of Australia
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/42 Rev. 1 Support to CAMLR to identify and deter illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing activities that undermine the objective of the CCAMLR Convention – Interim Report
Submitted by INTERPOL
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/47 INTERPOL technical report on fishing gear evidence collection
CCAMLR Secretariat on behalf of INTERPOL
  • Leer más sobre SCIC-18
  • English
  • Français
  • Русский

SCAF-18

Nombre: 
Comité Permanente de Administración y Finanzas
  • Meeting documents
Doc Number Título
CCAMLR-XXXVII/02 Rev. 1 Propuesta de mecanismo de apoyo para la implementación del Fondo de Desarrollo de la Capacidad General propuesto
Delegaciones de Australia, Nueva Zelandia, Noruega, República de Corea y Reino Unido
CCAMLR-XXXVII/03 Examen de los Estados Financieros Revisados de 2017
Secretario Ejecutivo
CCAMLR-XXXVII/04 Examen del presupuesto de 2018, proyecto de presupuesto de 2019 y proyección del presupuesto para 2020
Secretario Ejecutivo
CCAMLR-XXXVII/05 Informe del Secretario Ejecutivo, 2018 incluye el Informe del cuarto año de implementación del Plan Estratégico de la Secretaría (2015–2018)
Secretario Ejecutivo
CCAMLR-XXXVII/06 Plan Estratégico de la Secretaría de la CCRVMA (2019–2022)
Secretario Ejecutivo
CCAMLR-XXXVII/07 Cambios al Reglamento Financiero propuestos por el ICG sobre Financiación Sostenible, incluido el establecimiento de un Fondo de Operaciones
Secretario Ejecutivo
CCAMLR-XXXVII/08 Rev. 1 Cambios en los pagos por notificaciones de pesquerías nuevas y exploratorias, y de kril
Secretario Ejecutivo
CCAMLR-XXXVII/09 Propuesta de un nuevo formato de presupuesto
Secretario Ejecutivo
CCAMLR-XXXVII/11 Segunda Evaluación del Funcionamiento: informe de avance
Secretaría de la CCRVMA
CCAMLR-XXXVII/17 Informe sobre el Grupo de Trabajo por Correspondencia sobre Financiación Sostenible en 2018
Secretario Ejecutivo
CCAMLR-XXXVII/21 Rev. 1 Estrategia de sueldos y de dotación de personal de la CCRVMA (2019-2022)
Secretario Ejecutivo
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/02 Rev. 1 Review of CCAMLR Regulations for International Staff against the ICSCS and Comparator Organisations
Executive Secretary
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/04 Description of the General Fund Budget
CCAMLR Secretariat
CCAMLR-XXXVII/BG/13 Revision to the Staff Regulations
Executive Secretary
  • Leer más sobre SCAF-18
  • English
  • Français
  • Русский
Abstract: 

Climate change is a threat to marine ecosystems and the services they provide, and reducing fishing pressure is one option for mitigating the overall consequences for marine biota. We used a minimally realistic ecosystem model to examine how projected effects of ocean warming on the growth of Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba, might affect populations of krill and dependent predators (whales, penguins, seals, and fish) in the Scotia Sea. We also investigated the potential to mitigate depletion risk for predators by curtailing krill fishing at different points in the 21st century. The projected effects of ocean warming on krill biomass were strongest in the northern Scotia Sea, with a ≥ 40% decline in the mass of individual krill. Projections also suggest a 25% chance that krill biomass will fall below an established depletion threshold (75% of its unimpacted level), with consequent risks for some predator populations, especially penguins. Average penguin abundance declined by up to 30% of its unimpacted level, with up to a 50% chance of falling below the depletion threshold. Simulated krill fishing at currently permitted harvest rates further increased risks for depletion, and stopping fishing offset the increased risks associated with ocean warming in our model to some extent. These results varied by location and species group. Risk reductions at smaller spatial scales also differed from those at the regional level, which suggests that some predator populations may be more vulnerable than others to future changes in krill biomass. However, impacts on predators did not always map directly to those for krill. Our findings indicate the importance of identifying vulnerable marine populations and targeting protection measures at appropriate spatial scales, and the potential for spatially-structured management to avoid aggravating risks associated with rising ocean temperatures. This may help balance tradeoffs among marine ecosystem services in an uncertain future.

Midwater Otter Trawl

  • Leer más sobre Midwater Otter Trawl

Midwater Otter Trawl

  • Leer más sobre Midwater Otter Trawl
Abstract: 

We wish to draw the attention of Members to an online application of the R code published in the attached paper. The web-based app ‘photoR’ (https://jefferson.shinyapps.io/photor2) implements  the methods of the paper and provides summary outputs for direct input to CEMP A6b and A9 eforms. The abstract of the paper follows:

Summary

1. Collecting spatially extensive data on phenology and reproductive success is important for seabird conservation and management, but can be logistically challenging in remote regions. Autonomous time-lapse camera systems offer an opportunity to provide such coverage.

2. We describe a method to estimate nest-level breeding phenology and reproductive success of colonial Pygoscelid penguins using photographs from time-lapse cameras. The method derives from stereotypical patterns of nest attendance, where predominantly two adults are present before and during egg laying, but switch to one adult during incubation. The switch approximates the date of clutch completion and is estimated by fitting a smoothing spline to daily nest attendance data, identifying candidate dates that switch from two adults to one, and selecting the date when the first derivative of the spline is minimized. Clutch initiation and hatch dates are then estimated from the mean, species-specific interval between egg laying (Pygoscelid penguins typically lay two eggs) and the duration of the incubation period. We estimated these intervals for each species from historical field data. The phenology is adjusted when photographs indicate egg or chick presence prior to their estimated lay or hatch dates. The number of chicks alive in each study nest on its crèche date determines reproductive success estimates. The method was validated with concurrent direct observations for each species and then applied to a camera network in the Antarctic Peninsula region to demonstrate its utility.

3. Mean egg lay and incubation intervals from direct observations were similar within species across sites. In the validation study, the mean clutch initiation, hatch, and crèche dates were generally equivalent between photographs and direct observations. Estimates of reproductive success were identical. Applying the method to a time-lapse network suggested relatively high reproductive success for all species across the region and corroborated general understanding of latitudinal trends and species-level plasticity in phenology.

4. The method accurately estimated phenology and reproductive success relative to direct observations and appears well-suited to operationalize regional time-lapse camera networks. The estimation method should be applicable for other seabirds with stereotypical nest attendance patterns from which breeding phenology could be estimated.

Midwater Otter Trawl

  • Leer más sobre Midwater Otter Trawl

Páginas

  • « primero
  • ‹ anterior
  • …
  • 339
  • 340
  • 341
  • 342
  • 343
  • 344
  • 345
  • 346
  • 347
  • …
  • siguiente ›
  • última »
Suscribirse a CCAMLR RSS

Datos de contacto

Correo electrónico: ccamlr [at] ccamlr [dot] org
Teléfono: +61 3 6210 1111
Facsímil: +61 3 6224 8744
Dirección: 181 Macquarie Street, Hobart, 7000, Tasmania, Australia

 

Enlaces destacados

  • Ofertas de empleo
  • Lista de medidas de conservación vigentes en la temporada 2024/25
  • Logros de la CCRVMA
  • Folleto de la CCRVMA

Recent and Upcoming Meetings

  • WG-SAM-2025
  • WG-ASAM-2025
  • WG-EMM-2025

Footer Links Spanish

  • Inicio de sesión
  • Correo electrónico
  • Grupos de discusión de la CCRVMA
  • Grupos-e de la CCRVMA
  • Asistencia técnica
  • Derechos de autor
  • Descargo de responsabilidad y política de confidencialidad
  • Mapa del sitio
© Copyright - the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources 2025, Todos los derechos están reservado..  |  Volver arriba  |  Sitio creado por Eighty Options