8 resultados para marine species introductions
em Acceda, el repositorio institucional de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. España
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Eliminadas las páginas en blanco
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Máster Oficial en Cultivos Marinos. Trabajo presentado como requisito parcial para la obtención del Título de Máster Oficial en Cultivos Marinos, otorgado por la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (ULPGC), el Instituto Canario de Ciencias Marinas (ICCM), y el Centro Internacional de Altos Estudios Agronómicos Mediterráneos de Zaragoza (CIHEAM)
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The incorporation of new marine species in aquaculture is esencial to development of this activity. The recent advances on the establishment oftechniques to produce red porgy (Pagrus pagrus), allow to consider it as a strong potencialto aquaculture, being predictable its implement in the Canary Archipel. Neverthe!ess, so far it is not posible to produce it comercially, due to difficulties in assuring a continual supply of larvae and fry. Knowing this, it is crucialto continue studying the production techniques oflarvae and the feeding system during this periodo For this, the aim of tbe work is to optimize production
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Programa de doctorado: Ecología y gestión de recursos vivos marinos
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Máster Oficial en Gestión Costera
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Trabajo dirigido por Juan Luis Gómez Pinchetti y Ricardo Haroun Tabraue
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[EN] We describe 12 new polymorphic dinucleotide microsatellite loci and multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction conditions from the loggerhead sea turtle Caretta caretta. Levels of polymorphism were assessed in 50 individuals from the nesting population of the Cape Verde Islands.
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[EN] The presence of Harpa doris Röding, 1798 in marine deposits of the last interglacial period, ~. 130-120. ka (marine isotope stage or MIS 5.5) in the Canary Islands (Gran Canaria, Lanzarote and Fuerteventura) enabled us to compare this occurrence with its present habitat in the Gulf of Guinea and the Cape Verde Islands, well to the south. This comparison leads to the conclusion that sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the waters around the Canary Islands during the last interglacial period were at least 3.3. °C higher than today. H. doris is found in association with the large gastropod Persististrombus latus (Gmelin, 1791) as well as the coral Siderastrea radians (Pallas, 1766).