50 research outputs found

    Hydrographic data from the Atlantic plankton cruises of the R/V Pathfinder, December 1959 - December 1960

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    The data included in this report have resulted from a series of monthly offshore cruises conducted by the Ichthyology Research Section. The cruises were made to obtain information on the distribution and abundance of pelagic eggs and larvae of fishes. Since the biological results will be reported in a series of separate papers (Joseph, Massmann and Norcross, 1961), it was felt that the raw hydrographic data shpuld be made available in a single source. The area covered is approximately 2500 square nautical miles of the neritic zone within the 20-fathom contour. The shore line encompasses the mouth of Chesapeake Bay and extends from False Cape on the south to Wachapreague Inlet on the north. Within this area are 22 stations arranged in four transects of four stations and two transects of three stations. Three additional stations are within lower Chesapeake Bay. Surface and bottom temperatures and water samples were obtained at each station

    Chesapeake Bay Bibliography - Volume I The James River

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    The Chesapeake Bay Bibliography was initiated by the Virginia Institute of Marine Science in response to growing resource management problems of the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries. With these problems came the realization that planning and management of such a great natural resource is an overwhelming task requiring the best available information. This bibliography, therefore, was undertaken to document existing sources of information, to help identify research and data gathering needs, and to develop a comprehensive research and information services programs for individuals interested in research on, and management of the natural resources of the Chesapeake Bay region. The James River Bibliography is a subject index of literature concerning the James Basin. See also: Volumes II - Virginia (1972) focused the respective segments of the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries.Link Volume III - Maryland (1975) focused the respective segments of the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries. Link Volume IV - Virginia Waters (1976) includes and updates the water resource-oriented citations contained in Volumes I and II, and it also identifies information sources dealing with the land resources of Virginia\u27s nine coastal planning regions. Link Volume V - Virginia and Maryland Waters (1981) covers the entire Bay and its tributaries, from the fall line of the Susquehanna River, south through Maryland and Virginia to the Hampton Roads area and extends three miles into the territorial offshore waters of Virginia. The Virginia segment of the Eastern Shore on the Delmarva Peninsula is also included. Lin

    The Lantern Vol. 34, No. 2, May 1968

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    β€’ The Man Without a System β€’ A Medal for Malcolm β€’ On Hearing That Tonya Will Be Married β€’ The Black Sea β€’ Odyssey \u2767 β€’ Second Poem to Chris β€’ Singularity β€’ Period 5-A Began β€’ Long and Aching Ride β€’ Souvenirs β€’ My Eschatological Epitaph β€’ Discotheque β€’ Some Borrowed Words β€’ False Breakthrough β€’ Shore Morning β€’ The Beholder β€’ Thursday Childless β€’ A Most Prominent Role β€’ It Ran Out β€’ Shades of the Living β€’ The Dark Night of the Mind II β€’ One Step Beyond the Doors β€’ A Note of Thanks to My Parents and Teachers β€’ To a Dead Hippie β€’ A Scrap β€’ Love β€’ Haiku No. 30 β€’ Rachel β€’ There Is No Present β€’ Winter Woods β€’ One Hundred Per Cent Genuine β€’ Heaven β€’ Silence Is Like God β€’ I Soaked Up Silence β€’ Opened Letter From Whistler Homer, Insaned Assailant β€’ Sol Clutch Rides Tonight β€’ I Have Seen Destruction β€’ Upon That Night β€’ That\u27s Weird β€’ Alone β€’ Kathy\u27s Tune β€’ On Walking Home β€’ The Wheel β€’ Some Excuse, at Least β€’ Freedom to Flap β€’ Awareness β€’ Okay, You Guys β€’ You Say You Dream β€’ Bacci Miahttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1093/thumbnail.jp

    Multi-Scale Sampling to Evaluate Assemblage Dynamics in an Oceanic Marine Reserve

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    To resolve the capacity of Marine Protected Areas (MPA) to enhance fish productivity it is first necessary to understand how environmental conditions affect the distribution and abundance of fishes independent of potential reserve effects. Baseline fish production was examined from 2002–2004 through ichthyoplankton sampling in a large (10,878 km2) Southern Californian oceanic marine reserve, the Cowcod Conservation Area (CCA) that was established in 2001, and the Southern California Bight as a whole (238,000 km2 CalCOFI sampling domain). The CCA assemblage changed through time as the importance of oceanic-pelagic species decreased between 2002 (La NiΓ±a) and 2003 (El NiΓ±o) and then increased in 2004 (El NiΓ±o), while oceanic species and rockfishes displayed the opposite pattern. By contrast, the CalCOFI assemblage was relatively stable through time. Depth, temperature, and zooplankton explained more of the variability in assemblage structure at the CalCOFI scale than they did at the CCA scale. CalCOFI sampling revealed that oceanic species impinged upon the CCA between 2002 and 2003 in association with warmer offshore waters, thus explaining the increased influence of these species in the CCA during the El Nino years. Multi-scale, spatially explicit sampling and analysis was necessary to interpret assemblage dynamics in the CCA and likely will be needed to evaluate other focal oceanic marine reserves throughout the world
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