38 research outputs found
Crab sport fisheries in Humboldt Bay and Cresent City Harbor, California
In December 1964 interviewing of sport crab fishermen was
begun in Humboldt Bay. A similar study was initiated in
Crescent City in 1965. Fifty-four anglers interviewed at
Humboldt Bay in 1964 and 1965 caught 27 Dungeness crabs,
Cancer magister. The total estimated catch during the
sampling period was 400 Dungeness crabs.
Skiff fishermen in Crescent City caught an estimated 6,318
Dungeness crabs during the 1965-66 season; 1,666 Dungeness
crabs during the 1966-67 season and 5,054 Dungeness crabs
during the 1967-68 season. There is a good potential for
increased fishing in Crescent City Harbor, Trinidad Bay and
Shelter Cove. (10p.
Diablo Canyon power plant site ecological study Quarterly Report no. 17: July 1 - September 30, 1977
During the quarter a total of 38 random 30-m2
and 152 random 1/4-m2 subtidal stations were
surveyed. Red abalone, Haliotis rufescens,
densities remained very low. There was a continued
decline in densities of giant red sea
urchins, Strongylocentrotus franciscanus, in
Diablo Cove as well as the North Control area.
The annual shore census of bull kelp, Nereocystis
luetkeana, revealed the lowest number of plants
in the surface canopy in Diablo Cove since 1973. The subtidal station data supported this observation.
Sea otter, Enhydra lutris, observations were
continued. A small group of otters continued
to raft in the Cove east of Lion Rock. Some
of these otters probably forage as far south as
South Cove.
The survey of 11 random intertidal stations
completed our Upwelling sampling effort. (16pp.
Diablo Canyon power plant site ecological study Annual Report July 1, 1976 - June 30, 1977 and Quarterly Report no. 16 April 1, 1977 - June 30, 1977
More stations were surveyed during this report period
than during any previous period. A total of 818 mandays
was spent surveying 18 permanent and 67 random
subtidal stations, 19 permanent and 50 random intertidal
stations, and 64 sportfish catch-per-unit-of-effort
stations, as well as conducting corollary laboratory
work.
In the subtidal areas, Laminaria dentigera and Pterygophora
californica, both important subsurface kelp
species, increased in their combined total numbers from
the 1976 survey. However, Nereocystis luetkeana, the
bull kelp, declined substantially in all study areas.
Population trends of many of the dominant subtidal
macro-invertebrates have varied depending on the species
and on the type of method utilized. Regression analyses
have been performed on selected species for numbers
versus depth. Red algal abundance and diversity appear
to have increased in both subtidal study areas.
Of the three observation areas, sea otters were observed
least frequently in Diablo Cove. However, there continues
to be fresh evidence of otter foraging within
Diablo Cove.
Several seasons' data for intertidal algae and invertebrates have been summarized for one study area. While the algae biomass shows a fairly clear seasonality of
abundance, the trends in numbers of the six invertebrate
species considered are not as well defined.
Because of high variability in the data, the sportfish
catch-per-unit-of-effort and hook-and-line study was
cancelled in December.
Populations of intertidal red and black abalones,
Haliotis rufescens and H. cracherodii, respectively,
appear to have remained fairly stable during the
1976-77 period.
Two other ancillary studies were also terminated during
this period: interviews of commercial abalone and
urchin fishermen, and observations of foam in Diablo Cove. (107pp.
Diablo Canyon Power Plant site ecological study Quarterly Report No. 2; October 1 - December 31, 1973
During the period October 1 - December 31, 1973, Fall surveys of permanent subtidal stations were completed with one station being surveyed. We were unable to locate 3
subtidal stations.
Intertidal studies were initiated in November. A total of 12
random stations was surveyed.
Interviews were conducted with commercial abalone fishermen
working between Pt. Buchon to Pecho Rock. We continued to
monitor the sea otter herd foraging between Pt. Buchon and
Lion Rock.
Progress was achieved in the abalone temperature tolerance
studies when a successful spawning occurred. (20pp.