201 research outputs found

    Fish and crustacea of the Western Australian south coast rivers and estuaries

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    A one year survey was undertaken to provide a preliminary check list of the fish fauna of the Western Australian south coast rivers and estuarine systems. Crustaceans collected during the survey were also included in the check list

    The inshore-marine and estuarine licensed amateur fishery of Western Australia

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    A description of the inshore-marine and estuarine licensed amateur fishery of Western Australia is reported, emphasising important historical events which influenced the development of the fishery

    Aspects of the ecology of fish and commercial crustaceans of the Blackwood River estuary, Western Australia

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    Beach seine nets, set or mesh nets, otter trawls and plankton nets were used to sample fish and commercial crustaceans every two months over the period March 1974 to March 1975, and again in July 1975 at a number of stations throughout the Blackwood River estuary, Western Australia

    Suturing collection wounds

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    This curatorial research emerges out of being affronted by a partial taxonomy of ā€˜unworkableā€™ objects paralysed within collection contexts that privilege ā€˜in perpetuityā€™ thinking as authoritative. To destabilise this, it employs curiosity, reflection and questioning to acknowledge, reject, rupture and transform the collection logics that condemn the ā€˜unworkableā€™ to be wounded objects that remain trapped in sick institutions. It re-understands fieldwork as a treatment of working slowly, in support, and in care; this fieldwork responds to an institutional call to create conditions in which people, objects and institutions can heal. It seeks new understandings of how to act, asking which forms of address can facilitate more sustainable collecting, working and exhibitionary practices. It considers critically what contingencies could emerge from the company we choose to keep. It comes to understand speculation as a conscious permitting of thinking without (empirical) knowing, highlighting unruly, devalidated, unstable, deviant and undisciplined knowledges as unfamiliar lenses through which to gaze and commune with unworkable matter, dissipate borders, and make muddy dominant ways of knowing. While some diagnose these lenses as pathology, I wish to understand them as forms of knowing that are no longer certified by dominant western and modern thought. This research is therefore a demand to negotiate and transform the default ontologies and gestures permissible when ā€˜making things publicā€™ within the museum institution.Lenanton, Kati

    Potential influence of a marine heatwave on range extensions of tropical fishes in the eastern Indian Oceanā€”Invaluable contributions from amateur observers

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    Global changes to fish distributions are expected to continue in coming decades with predicted increases in ocean temperatures and the frequency of extreme climatic events. In the eastern Indian Ocean during the 2010/11 summer, sea surface temperatures 4ā€“5 Ā°C above average and an unseasonal, anomalously strong, Leeuwin Current (LC) triggered a ā€œmarine heatwaveā€ along the west coast of Australia, with elevated water temperatures persisting for a further two years. Peak LC flows in summer/autumn transported pelagic early life history stages of summer-spawning coastal subtropical and tropical fishes southwards. This study examined whether the heatwave enabled the arrival, persistence and reproduction of such species in waters View the MathML sourceā‰„āˆ¼32Ā°S using a range of available datasets. Juveniles of Chaetodon assarius, Trachinotus botla, T. baillonii, Polydactylus plebeius, Psammoperca waigiensis and Siganus sp. recruited into nearshore waters at View the MathML sourceā‰„āˆ¼32Ā°S in 2011. Polydactylus plebeius survived until the summer of 2012/13. Trachinotus spp., P. waigiensis and Siganus sp. survived over consecutive winters, with Siganus sp. establishing a self-recruiting, breeding population two years later. A return to more typical summer water temperatures by 2013/14 was associated with an apparent recruitment failure of Siganus sp. This is a rare example of a tropical vagrant surviving to breed in temperate regions. Confirmation of range extension beyond existing limits of this and other tropical species will be primarily dependent on either continuous or intermittent recruitment from this recently established southern breeding population. Commercial fisheries catch and effort data were of limited use in this study because they were not designed to record small catches of unusual and/or non-target species. In contrast, fisheries-independent recruitment surveys recorded tropical juveniles and validated amateur observations provided important information on unusual species. The study confirmed the emerging contribution of ā€˜citizen scientistsā€™ working with researchers to document climate related impacts in the marine environment

    Management of the South Coast Purse Seine Fishery

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    This paper has presented a strategy for moving the management of the small pelagics fishery off the south coast to management of the whole fishery, which facilitates a more biologically sound and economically stable fishery

    Status of nearshore finfish stocks in south-western Western Australia: Part 1: Australian herring

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    The status of the popular nearshore finfish resource in the West Coast Bioregion (WCB) of Western Australia (WA) was largely unknown prior to this study. Previously, declining catches of several nearshore species had highlighted the risk to their sustainability and the need for greater certainty about their status. Recently, the risk further increased due to management changes in the WCB aimed at reducing the catch of demersal scalefish, which are likely to result in a shift in targeting towards nearshore species. This increase in fishing pressure on nearshore species will be on top of any increase due to the continuing human population growth in the WCB

    Biology and stock status of inshore demersal scalefish indicator species in the Gascoyne Coast Bioregion

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    (114Ā°50\u27E), includes the iconic Shark Bay and Ningaloo World Heritage areas plus the regional centre of Carnarvon and coastal towns of Denham, Coral Bay and Exmouth. The Gascoyne Bioregion is a transition zone between tropical and temperate waters and supports a diverse range of commercial invertebrate and scalefish fisheries and provides a large variety of recreational fishing opportunities. This report investigates the stock status of the inshore demersal scalefish ā€œsuiteā€ of species for the Gascoyne region. These bottom dwelling fish are primarily taken by line fishing in waters of 20-250 m depth by both the commercial and recreational sectors

    Status of nearshore finfish stocks in south-western Western Australia: Part 2: Tailor

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    The status of the nearshore finfish resource in the West Coast Bioregion (WCB) of Western Australia (WA) was largely unknown prior to this study. Previously, declining catches of several species had highlighted the risk to their sustainability and the need for greater certainty about the status of this popular resource. Recently, the risk substantially increased due to recent changes to the management of demersal scalefish, which are likely to result in a shift in targeting towards nearshore species. This increase in fishing pressure will be on top of any increase due to the continuing human population growth in the WCB

    The ways in which fish use estuaries: a refinement and expansion of the guild approach

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    Ā© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This study refines, clarifies and, where necessary, expands details of the guild approach developed by Elliott et al. (2007, Fish and Fisheries 8: 241-268) for the ways in which fish use estuaries. The estuarine usage functional group is now considered to comprise four categories, that is, marine, estuarine, diadromous and freshwater, with each containing multiple guilds. Emphasis has been placed on ensuring that the terminology and definitions of the guilds follow a consistent pattern, on highlighting the characteristics that identify the different guilds belonging to the estuarine category and in clarifying issues related to amphidromy. As the widely employed term 'estuarine dependent' has frequently been imprecisely used, the proposal that the species found in estuaries can be regarded as either obligate or facultative users of these systems is supported and considered in the guild context. Thus, for example, species in the five guilds comprising the diadromous category and those in the guilds containing species or populations confined to estuaries are obligate users, whereas those in the marine and freshwater estuarine-opportunistic guilds are facultative users
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