14 resultados para 240114 Taxonomía animal
em Aquatic Commons
Resumo:
la Sección Ictiología del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales "Bernardino Rivadavia" de Buenos Aires, comenzó desde principios del año 1952 el estudio de la merluza del sector bonaerense. Las investigaciones se limitaron a la obtención de datos biológicos de pequeñas muestras, seleccionadas de los lances de los buques pesqueros de altura, que actuaban en las áreas de pesca ubicadas hacia el sur de la latitud de Mar del Plata. Para llegar a un estudio completo biológico-pesquero de esta especie, se hizo imperiosa la necesidad de realizar investigaciones tanto sobre las particularidades merísticas y estadísticas de las poblaciones, como también de las condiciones hidrológicas del ambiente en el cual viven, abarcando áreas más extensas y manteniendo una continuidad en el tiempo. Pero, todo ello estaba supeditado a la existencia y utilización de un buque oceanográfico y de pesca experimental, como es de práctica en los países del litoral marítimo del hemisferio norte, en los cuales las investigaciones pesqueras se hallan grandemente desarrolladas. Entretanto el Servicio de Hidrografía Naval de la Secretaría de Marina, por intermedio del Departamento de Oceanografía, planeó el estudio oceanográfico sistemático del Mar Epicontinental Argentino según distintas regiones geográficas, con el fin de lograr un conocimiento más completo de la dinámica de sus aguas. Como el mundo biológico está íntimamente relacionado con la dinámica de las masas de agua, para complementar los datos hidrográficos con algunos biológicos que podrían ser de utilidad para la pesca marítima del país, se incluyó en el mencionado plan el estudio de la merluza. A tal ppropósito en las campañas efectuadas bajo la denominación de "Operación Merluza", durante el período de mayo de 1954 a febrero de 1956. ha participado en lo que a trabajos de biología pesquera se refiere, personal de la Sección Ictiología del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales "B. Rivadavia" y del Departamento de Investigaciones Pesqueras del Ministerio de Agricultura y Ganadería de la Nación. A los efectos de la correlación de las observaciones biológicas con las fisicoquímicas del ambiente, se procuró realizar salidas coordinadas a bordo de algunos barcos pesqueros que actuaban en la misma región de los cruceros oceanográficos, buscando la posibilidad de coincidencia en tiempo y espacio. Conforme a este planteamiento se efectuaron varias salidas a las áreas de pesca de altura del sector bonaerense, principalmente a bordo del barco pesquero "Presidente Mitre" de la compañía "Pesquería Argentina de los Mares del Sud" de Buenos Aires. De acuerdo con el plan general de las campañas oceanográficas de la "Operación Merluza" (ver Capurro, 1955), los estudios de biología pesquera tuvieron los siguientes objetivos: 1o) Conocer la composición faunística, por distintos grupos de organismos, de los lances efectuados en la zona de pesca de altura del sector bonaerense y el grado de abundancia aparente de las especies de peces de importancia comercial; 2o) Determinar desde el punto de vista taxonómico las especies de peces extraídas, en particular las de la familia Merlucciidae, tratando de dilucidar si la merluza del Mar Argentino pertenece o no a una sola especie y si dentro de la misma existen entidades menores; 3o) Estudiar la estadística biológica de la población de merluza, según la distribución de las frecuencias por clases de largo total, y al mismo tiempo establecer el porcentaje de las clases comerciales y el estado del efectivo de la población;4o) Determinar las clases de edad, el ritmo de crecimiento y las relaciones entre la longitud y el peso total del cuerpo; 5o) Obtener un conocimiento más exacto acerca de la proporción de los sexos y el estado fisiológico de las gonadas a través del ciclo sexual; 6o) Determinar los componentes faunísticos que constituyen el alimento principal de la merluza, la cadena alimentaria, las variaciones individuales, estacionales y regionales del régimen nutritivo; 7o) Establecer las relaciones entre la dinámica de la población de merluza y las condiciones hidrológicas del ambiente; y 8o) Calcular el rendimiento de captura por unidad de esfuerzo en la zona de pesca de altura y relacionar los valores promedios con el fin de lograr alguna información acerca de los desplazamientos estacionales de la merluza. El presente trabajo se refiere a los tóptópicos mencionados y contiene los resultados obtenidos durante un período de 22 meses, es decir desde mayo de 1954 a febrero de 1956. Las conclusiones a las cuales se arribó tienen validez para la zona de pesca de altura del sector bonaerense y en especial para las condiciones de captura del buque "Presidente Mitre" en lo que a la estadística biológica se refiere. Además, uno de los fines de aplicación práctica de este trabajo fué el de verificar en qué medida las muestras biológicas obtenidas de los lances de la pesca comercial de altura, pueden servir de base para el estudio estadístico de la población de una determinada especie que se captura en gran cantidad. También merece destacarse que el presente trabajo constituye el punto de partida para el estudio biológico estadístico de la población de merluza en su dinámica a través del factor tiempo para un período mayor que debe sobrepasar el lapso normal del ciclo vital de esta especie. La finalidad de todo esto es la de obtener una base de comparación científica y estadística para un futuro control racional de la pesca de merluza en el Mar Argentino. Por último, los resultados del estudio de la merluza — en conexión con los de las campañas oceanográficas efectuadas en el sector bonaerense — podrían constituir los fundamentos iniciales para la confección de la carta pesquera del Mar Argentino. (PDF tiene 223 paginas.)
Resumo:
The three areas in Rookery Bay, near Marco Island and Fakahatchee Bay were sampled from July 1971 through July 1972, and 1,006,640 individual animals were collected, of which the majority (55%) came from the Marco area. The large disparity between the catches at Marco and the remaining study areas was due mainly to the appearance of high numbers of species of polychaetes and echinoderms that were of very minor importance or absent from the catches in Rookery Bay and Fakahatchee Bay. When only the major classes of animals in the catch are considered (i.e., crustaceans, fish and mollusks) the total counts for Fakahatchee (298,830) and Marco (275,075) are quite comparable but both exceed Rookery Bay (119,388) by a considerable margin. The effects of the red tide outbreak in the summer of 1971 were apparently restricted to the Rookery Bay Sanctuary and may account for some of the observed differences. For the purposes of making controlled comparisons between the study areas, three common habitats were selected in each area so that a mud bottom habitat, a sand-shell bottom habitat and a vegetated bottom habitat were located in each of the study areas. Total catches by habitat types for crustaceans, fish and mollusks and certain of the more abundant species show clearly the overwhelming importance of the vegetated bottom as a habitat for animals. By habitat the vegetated areas had the most "indicator species" with five, the mud habitat was next with three and the sand-shell habitat third with two. Thus the vegetated habitat would be the best choice if a single habitat were to be used to detect environmental changes between study areas. (PDF contains 137 pages)
Resumo:
This manual presents geographic information by state of occurrence, and descriptions of the socio-economic impact created by the invasion of non-indigenous and native transplanted animal species in the Laurentian Great Lakes and the coastal waters of the United States. It is not a comprehensive literature review, but rather is intended as a primer for those unfamiliar with the socio-economic impacts of invasive aquatic and marine animals. Readers should also note that the information contained in this manual is current as of its publication date. New information and new species are routinely being added to the wider literature base. Most of the information was gathered from a number of web sites maintained by government agencies, commissions, academic institutions and museums. Additional information was taken from the primary and secondary literature. This manual focuses on socio-economic consequences of invasive species. Thus, ecological impacts, when noted in the literature, are not discussed unless a connection to socio-economic factors can be made. For a majority of the species listed, either the impact of their invasion is not understood, or it is not published in sources surveyed. In the species summaries, sources of information are cited except for information from the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database http://nas.er.usgs.gov. This website formed the base information used in creating tables on geographic distribution, and in many of the species summaries provided. Thus, whenever information is given without specific author/source and date citation, it has come from this comprehensive source. (PDF contains 90 pages)
Resumo:
In this study we (1) synthesized 65 yr of odontocete stranding data around the main Hawaiian Islands (1937–2002); (2) analyzed stranding patterns and trends over time; and (3) compared occurrence patterns based on sightings of live animals with stranding data and evaluated the compatibility of these data sets. From 1937 to 2002, 202 odontocete strandings were recorded by the National Marine Fisheries Service, Pacific Islands Regional Office. Strandings increased through time due to increased reporting effort and occurred throughout the year. The four most common of 16 species reported were Kogia spp. (18%), spinner dolphins (Stenella longirostris) (15%), striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba) (11%), and sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) (10%). The highest proportion of strandings was recorded on O‘ahu (48%), followed by Maui/La¯na‘i (24%), Kaua‘i (12%), Hawai‘i (11%), and Moloka‘i (5%). Comparison with four previously published live animal survey studies suggests that stranding records are a good indicator of species composition and yield reasonable data on the frequency of occurrence of species in the region they cover.
Resumo:
The estimated potential of Nigerian fish resources is 1,830,994 tonnes(t) whereas the demand based on per capita consumption of 12.0kg and a population of 88.5 million is 1.085 million tonnes. Supply is presently less than 500,000 tons. The gap between demand and supply have to be met through improved utilization and increased availability of fish and fishery products. The role of fish in nutrition is recognized, since it supplies a good balance of protein, vitamins and minerals and a relatively low caloric content. This paper appraises the consumption and utilisation pattern of fish in Nigeria, the spoilage of fish and prevention of losses as a means of increasing the availability of fish for human consumption and consequent control of aggravated animal protein deficiency - induced malnutrition. The paper further highlights the point that without increased landings, increased supply of fish can be achieved through reduction of postharvest loss of what is presently caught. The use of newly designed smoke - drying equipment to achieve such goal is highlighted. The paper also emphasises the need to put into human food chain those non-conventional fishery resources and by-catch of shrimp and demersal trawl fishes by conversion into high value protein products like fish cakes, fish pies and salted dried cakes
Resumo:
Dosidicus gigas is a large pelagic cephalopod of the eastern Pacific that has recently undergone an unexpected, significant range expansion up the coast of North America. The impact that such a range expansion is expected to have on local fisheries and marine ecosystems has motivated a thorough study of this top predator, a squid whose lifestyle has been quite mysterious until recently. Unfortunately, Dosidicus spends daylight hours at depths prohibitive to making observations without significant artificial interference. Observations of this squid‟s natural behaviors have thus far been considerably limited by the bright illumination and loud noises of remotely-operated-vehicles, or else the presence of humans from boats or with SCUBA. However, recent technological innovations have allowed for observations to take place in the absence of humans, or significant human intrusion, through the use of animal-borne devices such as National Geographic‟s CRITTERCAM. Utilizing the advanced video recording and data logging technology of this device, this study seeks to characterize unknown components of Dosidicus gigas behavior at depth. Data from two successful CRITTERCAM deployments reveal an assortment of new observations concerning Dosidicus lifestyle. Tri-axial accelerometers enable a confident description of Dosidicus orientation during ascents, descents, and depth maintenance behavior - previously not possible with simple depth tags. Video documentation of intraspecific interactions between Dosidicus permits the identification of ten chromatic components, a previously undescribed basal chromatic behavior, and multiple distinct body postures. And finally, based on visualizations of spermatophore release by D. gigas and repetitive behavior patterns between squid pairs, this thesis proposes the existence of a new mating behavior in Dosidicus. This study intends to provide the first glimpse into the natural behavior of Dosidicus, establishing the groundwork for a comprehensive ethogram to be supported with data from future CRITTERCAM deployments. Cataloguing these behaviors will be useful in accounting for Dosidicus‟ current range expansion in the northeast Pacific, as well as to inform public interest in the impacts this expansion will have on local fisheries and marine ecosystems.
Resumo:
Three diets were formulated using locally available feed ingredients in Malawi to test the effect of replacing animal protein (fish meal, meat and bone meal) with soybean meal (10:0, 5:5, 0:10% of diet) as the protein source on growth and feed conversion of Oreochromis karongae. There were no significant differences in growth rate (GR), specific growth rate (SGR) and feed conversion ratios (FCR) among the three diets. It can be concluded that more expensive and limited animal protein sources can totally be replaced by cheaper soybean in order to get similar growth rates in O. karongae.
Resumo:
An experiment was conducted with Labeo rohita fingerlings in an indoor static fish rearing water system of glass made aquaria. Five experimental diets A, B, C, D and E were formulated containing 33% dietary protein level in five treatments each having two replicates containing 12 fingerlings of mean total initial weight of 13.00±0.2g. Sixty days of feeding trial in this experiment showed that fish fed on diet 'A' containing fish meal and diet 'E' containing mixed plant sources protein had significantly highest and lowest growth respectively. However, no significant difference of growth was found in fish fed on diets C and D containing meat and bone meal, and mix of animal protein source diets respectively. The result showed that the apparent protein digestibility (APD) of diets 'A' and 'E' had significantly best and least values respectively. Food conversion ratio (FCR) and protein efficiency ratio (PER) ranged between 1.37 to 2.17 and 1.38 to 2.18 respectively. On the basis of observed FCR and PER diets 'A' and 'E' produced significantly highest and lowest growth respectively.
Prospects of integration of aquaculture with animal husbandry and land crop culture in Tripura State
Resumo:
Tripura is a densely populated small state with meagre water resources. 47.51% of the population is constituted by socio-economically backward, illiterate, orthodox, tribal and scheduled castes. Some of them are nomad and a majority of the rest of the population is refugees from Bangladesh, but almost 100% is fish eater. Settlement of tribes in villages, provision of nutritious food and employment therefore calls for proper utilization of every resource they have. The State is poor in water resources but recently has created 21,636.23 ha of new water area. Tripura is rich in pig population, besides poultry birds. Paddy is the main crop cultivated in arable lands. An integration of livestock raising and land based agriculture with pisciculture practices around mini barrages will help in solving the problems to a great extent. The paper is an attempt to outline the prospects of integration of aquaculture with animal husbandry and land based crop culture in Tripura State.
Resumo:
Although shrimp head meal alone does not provide for good growth and survival, fish meal can provide high survival rate. The addition of shrimp head improves this diet. It is suggested that cholesterol present in shrimp could have caused this difference. Composition of the test diets is tabulated, as are proximate chemical analysis of the diets, and the mean initial weights, final weights, weight gains, survival rate, feed consumed, protein consumed, of Penaeus monodon postlarvae, feed conversion and protein efficiency ratio.
Resumo:
This workshop was implemented as part of the Transboundary Diagnostic Analysis (TDA). The main focus was on the shrimp and fish aquaculture sectors and addressed issues such as aquatic animal health and transfers of aquatic animals and plants.
Resumo:
Identification of venomous species of Persian Gulf cone snails and characterization of venom composition and their features is so important from the point of medical importance. Marine cone snails from the genus Conus are estimated to consist of up to 700 species. The venom of cone snails has yielded a rich source of novel neuroactive peptides or conotoxins. The present study was aimed to study the analgesic effect of Persian Gulf Conus textile and its comparison with morphine in mouse model. The specimens of Conus textile were collected of Larak Island from depth of 7 m. The collected samples were transferred to laboratory alive and were stored at -700 c. he veno s ducts were separated and ho ogenized with deionized water he ixture centrifuged at rp for inutes upernatant was considered as extracted veno and stored at - C after lyophylization. The protein profile of venom determined by using SDS-PAGE and HPLC used to investigate the extracted venom and to evaluate the analgesic activity, formalin test was carried out. SDS-PAGE indicated several bands ranged between 6 and 250 kDa. Chromatogram of the venom demonstrated more than 44 large and small fractions. The amount of 10 ng of Conus crude venom and analgesic peptide showed the best anti-pain activity in formalin test. No death observed up to 100 mg/kg, which is 250,000 times higher than the effective dose.Venom characterization of Persian Gulf Conus textile may be of medical importance and potential for new pharmaceutical drugs as well.
Resumo:
This work is based on the analysis of 420 planktonic samples of 7 oceanopraphic cruises distributed over the Argentine, Uruguayan and South brasilian continental shelf (SW Atlantic ocean), as well as from some oceanic sectors, adjacent to the continental slope. Vertical hauls were performed in all stations from 100 m depth to surface, except in the Walter Herwig cruise (where vertical hauls were predominantly performed out of slope sectors, between 300 and 500 m depth to surface) and Productividad cruise in which only surface waters were hauled. A list of 27 species are determined, corresponding to 5 families: Iospilidae (3 species), Lopadorrhynchidae (4), Alciopidae (9), Typhloscolecidae (5) and Tomopteridae (6). Larvae and epitokous forms of benthonic species are not taken into account. The genus Iospilus is revised, Pariospilus and Iospilopsis being considered their synonyms; the identity of Pariospilus affinis Viguier is maintained, being transferred to the genus Iospilus. The species Vanadis studeri Apstein is redescribed and its synonymy is established. The taxonomic value of the apical glands of Tomopteris species is discussed and some specimens are found to coincide with T. kefersteini in relation to the mentioned glands. All the species found in this work are described and illustrated, a systematic key being added for their identification. Considering the vertical nature of the hauls, it was not possible to specify the habitats of the different species; for this reason they are grouped as species from subtropical and subantartic areas of influence. The first group, made up of 17 species, shows and evident graduation in its latitudinal distribution, some of them being more restricted in their distribution than the others. The second group, of 4 species, is found south to the tropical convergence, in transitional waters, towards cold sectors. The third group, of 6 species, is found to be distributed all along the continental shelf, in subtropical and subantartic regions, and extending their distribution northwards, possibly related to deep water levels. The general scheme is coincident with the distribution of other planktonic groups (Copepods, Euphausiids). As a general feature, neither coastal nor shelf water specimens of pelagic Polychaeta were found, with exception of T. septentrionalis. A comparison with the results in Tebble's paper (1960) in the southwest Atlantic ocean is made, 12 of our species being coincidently found in the same hydrological area by that author. The drift of the main water masses of the South Atlantic ocean is accepted as a possible cause for the distribution of the pelagic Polychaeta of the southwest Atlantic regions.