East African Fisheries Research Organization Annual Report 1952


Autoria(s): East Africa High Commission
Data(s)

1952

Resumo

Several important advances have been made in our knowledge both regarding the factors which determine fertility in tropical lakes and the fish that live in them. As a result of our investigations a new theory has been put forward regarding the part played by animals in the bionomics of a lake; this theory, stated somewhat baldly, is that within certain limits the greater the number of animals in a shallow tropical lake, the greater becomes its potential fertility, and therefore the greater the number of animals it can support. The theory arises as a logical conclusion, once we accept the fact that the rate of production in such a lake is determined by the rate at which organic matter is decomposed. Bottom deposits which consist mainly of vegetable matter decompose slowly, whereas deposits which contain a high proportion of matter of animal origin decompose more rapidly. Thus the more animals in a lake, particularly animals which feed on plant material, the faster the biological cycle can proceed and the greater the density of animals it can support. This new concept will have a very profound influence on our ideas concerning the consequences of overfishing tropical waters. It also shows that efforts must be made to encourage and protect all herbivorous and detritus feeding animals, whether they be copepods, fish, or hippopotami, and whether they are of immediate economic importance or not.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/17133/7/EAFRO%2520Annual%2520Report%25201952-2.pdf

East African Fisheries Research Organization (1952) East African Fisheries Research Organization Annual Report 1952. Nairobi, Kenya, East Africa High Commission, 45pp.

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

East Africa High Commission

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/17133/

Palavras-Chave #Fisheries
Tipo

Monograph or Serial Issue

NonPeerReviewed