4 resultados para polytechnic
em Aquatic Commons
Resumo:
Pond Action is an independent freshwater conservation project which was started in 1987. It is based in the School of Biological and Molecular Sciences in Oxford Polytechnic and has five full-time staff with two senior advisors. The main aim of Pond Action's work has been to promote the conservation of ponds by creating a sound, scientific basis for pond conservation. An essential aspect of this work is the need to make the results of scientific work available and understandable to everybody concerned with pond conservation.
Resumo:
The report is presented under the following headings: Officer-in-charge's report; The Zambia/Zimbabwe SADCC Lake Kariba Fisheries Research and Development Project; Comparative study of growth of Limnothrissa miodon (Boulenger) in Lake Kariba; An analysis of the effects of fishing location and gear on kapenta catches on Lake Kariba; Hydro-acoustic surveys in Lake Kariba; The pre-recruitment ecology of the freshwater sardine Limnothrissa miodon (Boulenger) in Lake Kariba; Report on short course in zooplankton quantitative sampling methods held at the Freshwater Biology Laboratory, Windermere from 19 to 30 November 1990; Report on training: post-graduate training - Humberside Polytechnic, UK; Postharvest fish technology in Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe; and assessment of the abundance of inshore fish stocks and evaluating the effects of fishing pressure on the biology of commercially important species and ecological studies on Synodontis zambezensis .
Resumo:
This is the assessment and exploitation of eel (Anguilla anguilla. L) stocks in the River Thames and its catchment performed by the Polytechnic of Central London and The Thames Water Authority Research Project between April 1985 and April 1986. The report makes an examination of the pre-pollution history of the Thames eel fishing industry to permit an assessment of the recovery of the eel stock following the cleaning up of the Tideway. Archive material shows that the 19th Century stock was larger and more widely distributed than it is today, and the natural recruitment of elvers to the system is now much smaller. Sampling of commercial catches and trapping studies, including comparisons of different mesh sizes, have been undertaken in order to develop a statistical model of the Inner Estuary eel stock and its fishery. Local migrations and activity throughout the year are studied. Electro—fishing methods and eel traps are compared using mark-recapture techniques in order to develop an accurate means of assessing relative abundance and distribution. Work so far has concentrated mainly on the Rivers Darent and Roding but a preliminary distribution map for the whole catchment has been prepared. An experimental trapping site was established on the River Darent to investigate natural recruitment and up—river migration of elvers and juvenile eels. 1790 small eels were taken in 1985 providing information on the scale, timings and factors affecting the migration.