2,194 research outputs found

    The establishment of a commercial fishery for Haplochromis in the Uganda waters of Lake Victoria

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    Lake Victoria, straddling the Equator, is the second largest lake in the world, with a surface area of approximately 26,000 square miles (41,500 square kilometers) and a maximum depth of about 300 feet. Uganda possesses most of the north end of the lake which consists of a long, indented coastline and a chain of offshore islands on the edge of a 'continental shelf' separating relatively shallow sheltered inshore waters from the deeper open waters of the lake. At the present time the lake is harvested mainly by a native gill net fishery confined almost entirely to the shallow sheltered inshore waters. The annual production of all species from Uganda waters is in the region of 24,000 tons per annum, and Tilapia(Cichlidae)is commercially the most important genus. Haplochromis, a close relative of Tilapia, but generally much smaller, contributes only a small amount to this annual production; see Table 1, although they are probably the most abundant group of fish present in the lake. Through international aid programmes Uganda has been offered a canning plant and it is thought that Haplochromis is the most suitable type of fish to be utilized by such a plant. The Uganda Fisheries Department are conducting research into processing techniques and marketing and the East African Freshwater Fisheries Research Organization was asked to conduct a survey of the Haplochromis stocks of the lake with a view to estimating the ability or otherwise of these stocks to support a commercial canning industry

    Fishing gear development 1965-67

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    The commercial fisheries of lake Victoria are based principally on a number of species of tilapia althougy considerable tonnages of other genera are landed,namely clarias Bagrud,photopteru

    Phase diagram of orbital-selective Mott transitions at finite temperatures

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    Mott transitions in the two-orbital Hubbard model with different bandwidths are investigated at finite temperatures. By means of the self-energy functional approach, we discuss the stability of the intermediate phase with one orbital localized and the other itinerant, which is caused by the orbital-selective Mott transition (OSMT). It is shown that the OSMT realizes two different coexistence regions at finite temperatures in accordance with the recent results of Liebsch. We further find that the particularly interesting behavior emerges around the special condition U=UU=U' and J=0, which includes a new type of the coexistence region with three distinct states. By systematically changing the Hund coupling, we establish the global phase diagram to elucidate the key role played by the Hund coupling on the Mott transitions.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure

    Contribution of the ORSTOM fisheries department research unit to the South Pacific Commission 21st regional technical meeting on fisheries

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    Trois articles développent l'état de la pêche commerciale au Vanuatu. La pêche d'espèces démersales à Efate est étudiées en 1987 et en 1988. La sous-exploitation de l'espace de pêche est évidente avec un effort de pêche concentré sur un tiers de l'espace maritime. Les activités de pêches sont principalement limitées par la demande. L'emploi de nouvelles techniques de pêche comme le casier n'est pas économiquement viable pour le développement de la pêche villageoise. (Résumé d'auteur

    Papio cranium from the hominin-bearing site of Malapa: Implications for the evolution of modern baboon cranial morphology and South African Plio-Pleistocene biochronology.

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    A new partial cranium (UW 88-886) of the Plio-Pleistocene baboon Papio angusticeps from Malapa is identified, described and discussed. UW 88-886 represents the only non-hominin primate yet recovered from Malapa and is important both in the context of baboon evolution as well as South African hominin site biochronology. The new specimen may represent the first appearance of modern baboon anatomy and coincides almost perfectly with molecular divergence date estimates for the origin of the modern P. hamadryas radiation. The fact that the Malapa specimen is dated between ~2.026–2.36 million years ago (Ma) also has implications for the biochronology of other South African Plio-Pleistocene sites where P. angusticeps is found

    Some critical remarks on a new numerical method for simulation of dynamical systems

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68690/2/10.1177_003754976600600210.pd

    Experimental trawling operations on Lake Victoria

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    A programme has been started to investigate the feasibility of operating a trawl fishery for Haplochromis in connection with development of a proposed cannery by the Ugandan government Because of lack of gear much time has been spent on the development of boats and nets for this type of fishing

    Seeded emulsion polymerization of butadiene. 1. The propagation rate coefficient

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    The kinetics of the emulsifier-free, seeded polymn. of butadiene (I) at 60 Deg in Smith-Ewart interval III were studied in presence of Na peroxodisulfate initiator and tert-dodecyl mercaptan. The fractional conversion was based on gravimetrically calibrated online densitometry and was highly accurate. By analogy with the well-known Ugelstad plots, the product of the propagation rate coeff. (kp) and the av. no. of radicals per particle (.hivin.n) vs. seed latex particle diam. clearly showed Smith-Ewart case I and case II regimes. From a constancy in values of kp.hivin.n (case II regime) in this plot, a value for kp could be calcd. that was 3 times larger than the current literature value. Negligible thermal background initiation was present in the I system. Two linear regions in polymn. rate were obsd. in interval III. Model calcns. were presented in excellent agreement with the exptl. data. From these calcns. a value of the rate coeff. for transfer to monomer could be est

    Geographic Variation In Resource Dominance Discovery In Brazilian Ant Communities

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    A predictive framework for the ecology of species invasions requires that we learn what limits successful invaders in their native range. The red imported fire ant (Solenopsis invicta) is invasive in the United States, Puerto Rico, Australia, New Zealand, and China, Solenopsis invicta appears to be a superior competitor in its introduced range, where it can cause the local extirpation of native species, but little is known about its competitive ability in its native range in South America. Here we examine the competitive ability of S. invicta for food resources in three widely separated Brazilian ant communities. Each of these communities contains 20-40 ant species, 8-10 of which were common and frequently interacted with S. invicta. S. invicta at all three sites was attacked by several species-specific phorid parasitoids, and at one site, two other species were attacked by their own specialized parasitoids. We examined interactions in these local communities for evidence that trade-offs among ant species between resource dominance and resource discovery, and between resource dominance and parasitoid vulnerability facilitate local coexistence. The trade-off between resource dominance and resource discovery was strong and significant only at Santa Genebra, where parasitoids had no effect on the outcome of confrontations at resources. At Bonito, parasitoids significantly reduced the ability of S. invicta, which was the top-ranked behavioral dominant, from defending and usurping food resources from subordinate species. In the Pantanal, S. invicta ranked behind three other ant species in a linear hierarchy of behavioral dominance, and lost the majority of its interactions with a fourth more subordinate species, Paratrechina fulva, another invasive species. 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