1,843 research outputs found
Impact of the commercial fishery on the population of bait shrimp (Penaeus spp.) in Biscayne Bay, 1986
Monthly population size of bait shrimp in the Bay was estimated from December 1984 to July 1985. Growth rates for male and female P. duorarum showed that pink shrimp
exhibit a mean residence time in the nursery area (Biscayne Bay) of approximately 21 weeks. Monthly mortality rates were determined for each sex of pink shrimp. It was
estimated that 23% and 26% of the male and female monthly population size, respectively, was absorbed by both the fishery and ecosystem monthly. Monthly proportion of the standing stock expected to die exclusively through fishing was 6.5% and 6.0% for males and females respectively. Estimates of emigration rates showed that approximately 4.0% of the population was lost from the Bay system each month. This surplus production was about 50% of the average monthly catch by the fleet. Fishing mortality represents only 8 - 9% of the losses to the shrimp population. The
biggest source of loss is emigration, suggesting that most shrimp beyond the size at recruitment (to the fishery) are not utilized for food while in the Bay. Thus, it appears
that the direct impact of the fishery on the bait shrimp population is relatively small. (PDF contains 46 pages
Performance of the CDF Calorimeter Simulation in Tevatron Run II
The CDF experiment is successfully collecting data from ppbar collisions at
the Tevatron in Run II. As the data samples are getting larger, systematic
uncertainties due to the measurement of the jet energy scale assessed using the
calorimeter simulation have become increasingly important. In many years of
operation, the collaboration has gained experience with GFLASH, a fast
parametrization of electromagnetic and hadronic showers used for the
calorimeter simulation. We present the performance of the calorimeter
simulation and report on recent improvements based on a refined in situ tuning
technique. The central calorimeter response is reproduced with a precision of
1-2%.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; LaTeX2e, 10 .eps files, uses aipproc.cls,
aipxfm.sty and aip-6s.clo (included). Contribution to the Proceedings of the
12th International Conference on Calorimetry in High Energy Physics
(CALOR06), June 5-9, 2006, Chicago (IL), USA. To be published by American
Institute of Physics (AIP
Bait shrimp fishery of Biscayne Bay
A small but valuable live bait shrimp fishery has existed in Biscayne Bay since at least the early 1950s. In recent years there has been increasing pressure from recreational fishing and environmental groups to eliminate this fishery from the Bay because the fishing activity is generally thought to be deleterious to the environment and/or destructive to juvenile game fish.
This study was initiated to update the existing knowledge of the bait shrimp fishery in Biscayne Bay and document historical trends in number of participants, fishing
methods, fishing area, seasonality, total catch, catch-per-unit-effort, disposition of the catch, and economics of the industry. (21pp.
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Minding the bladder: individuals' experiences of adjustment to chronic pain following successful sacral neuromodulation
The merge of physical and mental health care has emphasised the need to understand the psychological experiences that can impact the mind-body relationship. This study is the first effort to explore individuals who have lived with bladder dysfunction and have undergone sacral neuromodulation that has led to device-related chronic pain. The research aims to illuminate the lived experience of adjusting to chronic pain from a device that is resolving bladder problems. The study employed semi-structured interviews and diary entries to collect data from six women living with device-related chronic pain for at least six months after device implantation. Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis yielded three superordinate themes: “The Trade-off: Chronic Pain for Corrective Bladder Function”, “The Impact of Chronic Pain” and “Living with a hidden disability: The challenge of lack of awareness”. Each superordinate theme is accompanied by subthemes derived from my interpretation of participants’ interpretation of their experiences of persistent pain following sacral neuromodulation. The empirical findings confirm that the mind and body are inextricably linked and provide new insight that highlights that the adjustment to living with pain after bladder dysfunction is a complicated process that is influenced by both individual and societal factors. These exploratory findings are considered in relation to existing literature and implications for clinical practice, training and future research are discussed
Anomaly-Free Sets of Fermions
We present new techniques for finding anomaly-free sets of fermions. Although
the anomaly cancellation conditions typically include cubic equations with
integer variables that cannot be solved in general, we prove by construction
that any chiral set of fermions can be embedded in a larger set of fermions
which is chiral and anomaly-free. Applying these techniques to extensions of
the Standard Model, we find anomaly-free models that have arbitrary quark and
lepton charges under an additional U(1) gauge group.Comment: 21 (+1) page
Maturity, ovarian cycle, fecundity, and age-specific parturition of black rockfish (Sebastes melanops)
From 1995 to 1998, we collected female black rockfish (Sebastes melanops) off Oregon in order to describe their basic reproductive life history and determine age-specific fecundity and temporal patterns in parturition. Female black rockfish had a 50% probability of being mature at 394 mm fork length and 7.5 years-of-age. The proportion of mature fish age 10 or older significantly decreased each year of this study, from 0.511 in 1996 to 0.145 in 1998. Parturition occurred between mid-January and mid-March, and peaked in February. We observed a trend of older females extruding larvae earlier in the spawning season and of younger fish primarily responsible for larval production during the later part of the season. There were differences in absolute fecundity at age between female black rockfish with prefertilization oocytes and female black rockfish with fertilized eggs; fertilized-egg fecundity estimates were considered superior. The likelihood of yolked oocytes reaching the developing embryo stage increased with maternal age. Absolute fecundity estimates (based on fertilized eggs) ranged from 299,302 embryos for a 6-year-old female to 948,152 embryos for a 16-year-old female. Relative fecundity (based on fertilized eggs) increased with age from 374 eggs/g for fish age 6 to 549 eggs/g for fish age 16
Diffuse Interstellar Bands in z < 0.6 CaII Absorbers
The diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) probably arise from complex organic
molecules whose strength in local galaxies correlates with neutral hydrogen
column density, N(HI), and dust reddening, E(B-V). Since CaII absorbers in
quasar (QSO) spectra are posited to have high N(HI) and significant E(B-V),
they represent promising sites for the detection of DIBs at cosmological
distances. Here we present the results from the first search for DIBs in 9
CaII-selected absorbers at 0.07 < z_abs < 0.55. We detect the 5780Ang DIB in
one line of sight at z_abs = 0.1556; this is only the second QSO absorber in
which a DIB has been detected. Unlike the majority of local DIB sight-lines,
both QSO absorbers with detected DIBs show weak 6284Ang absorption compared
with the 5780Ang band. This may be indicative of different physical conditions
in intermediate redshift QSO absorbers compared with local galaxies. Assuming
that local relations between the 5780Ang DIB strength and N(HI) and E(B-V)
apply in QSO absorbers, DIB detections and limits can be used to derive N(HI)
and E(B-V). For the one absorber in this study with a detected DIB, we derive
E(B-V) = 0.23mag and log[N(HI)] >= 20.9, consistent with previous conclusions
that CaII systems have high HI column densities and significant reddening. For
the remaining 8 CaII-selected absorbers with 5780Ang DIB non-detections, we
derive E(B-V) upper limits of 0.1-0.3mag.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Accepted to MNRAS Letter
Is Community-based Work Compatible with Data Collection?
Although community-based projects have introduced a successful model for addressing many social problems, less consideration has been given to how such projects should be evaluated. This paper considers whether the philosophy underlying community-based practice is compatible with data collection. Specifically at issue is whether empirical indicators are helpful to summarize a project. Although having valid knowledge is important, this paper makes a distinction between merely collecting data versus understanding the course of a project. The key point is that community participation requires a unique perspective on how knowledge is negotiated and interpreted
Maternal Age as a Determinant of Larval Growth and Survival in a Marine Fish, \u3ci\u3eSebastes Melanops\u3c/i\u3e
Relative body size has long been recognized as a factor influencing reproductive success in fishes, but maternal age has only recently been considered. We monitored growth and starvation resistance in larvae from 20 female black rockfish (Sebastes melanops), ranging in age from five to 17 years. Larvae from the oldest females in our experiments had growth rates more than three times as fast and survived starvation more than twice as long as larvae from the youngest females. Female age was a far better predictor of larval performance than female size. The apparent underlying mechanism is a greater provisioning of larvae with energy-rich triacylglycerol (TAG) lipids as female age increases. The volume of the oil globule (composed primarily of TAG) present in larvae at parturition increases with maternal age and is correlated with subsequent growth and survival. These results suggest that progeny from older females can survive under a broader range of environmental conditions compared to progeny from younger females. Age truncation commonly induced by fisheries may, therefore, have severe consequences for long-term sustainability of fish populations
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