981 resultados para Fichte, Immanuel Hermann von, 1796-1879,


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The pressure of users other than shipping and fishery on the national EEZs for territorial claims has increased in recent years. So it becomes necessary to carry out a spatial planning for which all users have to indicate their recent and planned future activities. For the German waters in the North Sea a first attempt was made to calculate the mean international landings for the commercially important fish and crustacean species on the spatial scale of ICES-rectangles. The relationships between the German and international landings per species are listed in a table and the distribution of the landings for each species within the area are shown in 13 figures.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Fish larvae surveys provide information on the species composition in an area of investigation and leads to a better understanding of the entire fish community. Since 2000 every year in April/May an ichthyoplankton survey in ICES-Subdivision 22 and 24 has been performed to sample the plankton community in the western Baltic Sea. One objective was to acquire indicators of possible changes in the natural structures of the fish community. The time series derived from the Bongo-Net samples is too short to show a trend in larval densities. Up to now samples in the western Baltic Sea yielded only low mean densities. According to the reproductive biology the fish species were divided in three major groups: -Fish species with a long developmental phase in the plankton community -Small short living species with benthic eggs and a reduced planktonic phase -Guests without local spawning populations Species were identified, which were absent in the plankton of the western Baltic Sea in the 1960s and 1970s.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Smelt (Osmerus eperlanus L.) from the river Elbe has a long tradition as local food speciality. It is offered baked or fried every year during spring in many restaurants along the river. Information about the composition of the edible part and its changes during fishing season are scarce. In earlier days the fish was mostly sold by local fisherman directly after catch. Today the fish is also offered as ungutted fresh fish in ice on the whole sale market. The freshness of this fish has not been studied. Smelt from the river Elbe is known to contain nematode larvae (Pseudoterranova decipiens) in the muscle meat. Actual quantitative data on the abundance and prevalence in the commercially offered ice stored fish are missing.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The aim of the investigation was to prove if different farming conditions like conventional and organical farming of rainbow trout may cause differences in quality which are detectable by physical methods such as colour measurement and differential scanning calorimetry. Colour measurement revealed remarkable differences in lightness. Smoked trouts originating from conventionally farmed fish were much lighter than those of organically farmed trouts. This difference in L* could already be found when colour measurements were taken on the raw material. However, during chilled storage differences were equalized. Redness and yellowness were not significantly influenced by farming and did not change remarkably during chill storage. Based on earlier investigations on changes in thermal stability caused by heating, DSC curves of smoked trout could be used to verify that the core temperature of smoked fish had reached at least 60 °C during hot smoking process. This temperature is demanded by the guidelines of the German Food Code. In the DSC curves only the actin peak was still visible. All other proteins were obviously denatured during the hot smoking. When DSC curves were taken from smoked trout after different durations of chilled storage it could be seen that the denaturation temperature of actin decreased almost linearly with progression of storage time.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Parvalbumins, calcium-binding, heat-stable proteins of considerable allergenic potential, are occurring in high concentration in light muscle of many fish species. Lack of knowledge about parvalbumins in sturgeon tissues prompted us to study the distribution of this type of proteins in light and dark muscle, as well as in swim bladder and skin of Atlantic sturgeon, Acipenser oxyrhynchus, and three other sturgeon species. Results: Light and dark muscle of sturgeons contained water soluble proteins with following properties: (1) Great stability against heating at 70 or 80 °C. (2) Isolelectric points between 3.85 and 5.66. (3) Treatment of proteins separated by isoelectric focusing with the dye “stains all” gave blue protein bands. (4) The molecular mass was about 10 to 14 kDalton. (5) Concentration of acidic, heat-stable proteins was higher in light than in dark muscle. Taken together, these findings gave strong indication for the presence of parvalbumins in muscle tissue of sturgeons. This conclusion was corroborated by immunological tests. However, parvalbumin could not be detected in swim bladder tissue. Skin preparations showed only traces of parvalbumins, possibly resulting from residual muscle tissue.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Quantitative data on twaite shad are collected annually in spring and autumn since 1974 by the Demersal Young Fish Survey. Results for occurrence of these anadromous species show that twaite shad has been caught in the entire Wadden Sea area despite of the poorly suited 3-m shrimp beam trawl applied in the survey. Regional differences occur: Only sporadic catches are observed in the northern part of the German Wadden Sea, while more frequent ones occurred southwards and in the East Frisian Islands region. The obvious recent increase of abundance of Alosa fallax in spring allows for a lower ranking in the Red List of Endangered Species, while Allis shad (Alosa alosa) requires the same classification, as it was the never caught during the thirty years of surveys.