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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: This document, which is directed at the fishing sector, researchers, conservationists and fishery administrators, was developed by researchers who are members of the Specialists Group for Marine Turtle Research and conservation in the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean (SWA) in response to the urgent need to evaluate the impact generated on sea turtles by fisheries. Historically, sea turtle conservation efforts have focused almost exclusively on the protection of nesting beaches. Nevertheless, over the last decade, research has proved incidental mortality as a result of fishing activities to be one of the greatest threats to these animals. This type of interaction is not only problematic for turtles, but also generates financial losses for fishermen and businesses. In spite of the efforts that are currently underway, researchers still do not have a detailed understanding of the impact that bycatch produces on sea turtle populations in the SWA. We have a long way to go before its effects can be minimized. Further research is needed regarding the biology and ecology of the various turtle species as well as the effective application of mitigation measures. The life cycles of sea turtles are long and complex. Turtles occupy various ecosystems (nesting beaches, coastal, neritic and oceanic zones, as well as pelagic and demersal areas) throughout their lifetimes, transcending various Exclusive Economic Zones and International Waters. The five species that inhabit the SWA region perform vast feeding and reproductive migrations, traveling through areas where many different fishing fleets operate. Therefore, sea turtles in the SWA interact with virtually all fisheries. These circumstances make it necessary to carry out biological, fishing related and conservation studies on a regional level. The efficiency of the existing international and national legal instruments has yet to be determined, in terms of their effectiveness in protecting sea turtles. In some cases, legislation that is specifically related to the interaction between fisheries and turtles does exist, such as those laws requiring the mandatory use of turtle excluding devices (TEDs). There are also explicit bans on sea turtle capture. Nevertheless, none of these regulations prevent sea turtle bycatch. Although some regional legal instruments are needed, these and the existing legislation will only be effective if they are accompanied by a broader range of permanent education and control measures, to achieve the commitment of all the parties involved. The ecosystem approach is gaining popularity among fishery administration organizations. Research and conservation efforts should also be moving in that direction. A regional and international effort is required in order to compile information regarding the bycatch produced by the various types of fisheries and fleets operating in the area. The enormous increase in fishing pressure that these fleets are exerting in this area has not been accompanied by an increase in information regarding the bycatch of species that have no commercial value. Pelagic longlining is one of the fishing methods, which must be most closely monitored, due to the high levels of bycatch that it produces, as well its ample distribution throughout the region, and the high level of fishing effort that it accounts for. Coastal trawlers and gillnetters must also be considered critical players, because they too produce a large rate of bycatch. These are the three types of fisheries that are most broadly distributed throughout the region, accounting for the majority of the fishing effort. Most of the institutions that work toward sea turtle conservation in the area have only begun to address the issue of bycatch over the last decade. This timeframe is reflected in the scope and quantity of the available publications, as well as the progress of activities directed at mitigating this problem. All of the institutions that have been mentioned in this report have made the gathering of information regarding interaction between sea turtles and fisheries one of their top priorities. Some institutions are even developing working programs for monitoring fisheries and testing mitigation measures. Many of these institutions have managed to develop adequate relationships with fishermen, ship owners and administrators. Nevertheless, limited access to funding is an obstacle to the development and testing of mitigation measures. The SWA network, which is a very valuable instrument that was created in 2003, has allowed the region’s institutions and researchers to exchange information and share their experience, in addition to lending each other support in carrying out joint activities, thus strengthening sea turtle conservation efforts. The capacity demonstrated so far by the region’s researchers and institutions, testifies to their ability to continue to make progress in knowledge generation and tests of bycatch mitigation measures.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Ecology ; Fishing gear ; Fisheries ; Ecology ; Fishing gear
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book
    Format: 71 pp
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Este documento, dirigido al sector pesquero, investigadores, conservacionistas y administradores de las pesquerías, surge como respuesta de investigadores pertenecientes al Grupo de Especialistas en Investigación y Conservación de Tortugas Marinas en el Atlántico Sud Occidental (ASO) a la urgente necesidad de evaluar el impacto de las pesquerías sobre las tortugas marinas. Históricamente, los esfuerzos referidos a la conservación de las tortugas marinas se han dirigido casi exclusivamente a proteger las playas de anidación. Sin embargo en la última década se ha podido comprobar que una de las mayores amenazas es la mortalidad incidental causada por las pesquerías. Esta interacción no implica únicamente un problema para las tortugas, sino que también genera pérdidas económicas para los pescadores y las empresas.
    Description: This document, which is directed at the fishing sector, researchers, conservationists and fishery administrators, was developed by researchers who are members of the Specialists Group for Marine Turtle Research and Conservation in the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean (SWA) in response to the urgent need to evaluate the impact generated on sea turtles by fisheries. Historically, sea turtle conservation efforts have focused almost exclusively on the protection of nesting beaches. Nevertheless, over the last decade, research has proved incidental mortality as a result of fishing activities to be one of the greatest threats to these animals. This type of interaction is not only problematic for turtles, but also generates financial losses for fishermen and businesses.
    Description: Cont. fotografías
    Description: Published
    Description: Sea Turtle, keeping
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Ecology ; Fishing gear ; Fisheries ; Ecology ; Fishing gear
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book
    Format: 71
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  • 3
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution June 2009
    Description: The application of elemental and isotopic metal palaeoredox tracers to the geologic past rests on an understanding of modern metal cycles. This study reevaluates the surface-cycling of Mo and Re in near-surface reservoirs. Revised river averages of Mo and Re are 1.8- and 7.9-fold larger than previous estimates. The river concentrations of 8.0 nmol Mo kg−1 and 11.2 pmol Re kg−1 (pre-anthropogenic), result in shorter seawater response times of 4.4×105 yr (τMo) and 1.3×105 yr (τRe pre-anthropogenic). These metals, especially Re, are more sensitive to changing source and sink fluxes than previously thought. Evaluation of Mo and Re concentrations in high temperature fluids from the Manus Basin indicate that Re is essentially absent from the hydrothermal end member and Mo is present at concentrations considerably lower than ambient seawater. The sink fluxes represented by hydrothermal circulation are negligible in comparison to the revised river source fluxes. Anthropogenic contributions to the Re flux to seawater are seen in the high concentrations of certain impacted water samples such as those associated with mining sites. It may also be seen in a significant, variable, Re enrichment feature in the Hudson River estuary. This Re enrichment feature is not the result of estuarine mixing or the remobilization of sediment-hosted Re. On the basis of a Re - SO2− 4 correlation we are able to quantify and correct for the anthropogenic Re, which corresponds to ~33% of the modern river average. This study documents the development of an analytical method for stable Re isotopes. Though complicated by analyte requirements and 187Re – 187Os decay, Re isotope measurements have a reproducibility of ±0.05h for analyte concentrations of 20 ng Re mL−1. Total Re isotopic variability to date is 0.9h. This includes 0.3h across five commercially available Re products, and 0.5h across a black shale weathering profile. δ187Re variability across the weathering profile was systematic with the most weathered samples showing the most significant 187Re depletions. The Re isotopic weathering profile is well described by both two-component mixing and Rayleigh fractionation. There are currently insufficient data to discriminate between the two models.
    Description: We would like to acknowledge financial support from NSF-EAR grant 0519387 and from the WHOI Academic Programs Office as well as support for the WHOI Plasma Mass Spectrometry Facility from NSF-EAR/IF grants 0318137 and 0651366.
    Keywords: Rhenium ; Isotopes ; Geochemistry ; Ian Fletcher (Ship) Cruise ; Tioga (Ship) Cruise ; Melville (Ship) Cruise
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Commissions Sous Régionale des Pêches, Dakar (Sénégal) IUCN, Dakar (Sénégal)
    Description: Published
    Description: accés à la ressource, licence de pêche, immatriculation, marquage, embarcation, pêche industrielle, navire de pêche, marin, observateur, réglementation, pêche artisanale, engin de pêche, repos biologique, zone de pêche, repos biologique, statistique, contrôle, qualité des produits, importation, exportation, affrêtement, Etat côtier, port, pêcherie, stocks
    Keywords: Fishery management ; Stocks ; Fishery resources ; Fishing effort ; Fishing vessels ; Fish inspection ; Fishery resources ; Resource surveys ; Artisanal fishing ; Fishery management ; Fishery regulations ; Fishery statistics ; Fishing effort ; Fishing vessels ; Fish inspection ; Quality control ; Stocks
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book
    Format: 179868 bytes
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  • 5
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution November 1980
    Description: Plankton samples have been carefully collected from a variety of marine environments under the rigorous conditions necessary to prevent contamination for major and trace-chemical analysis. Immediately after collection, the samples were subjected to a series of physical and chemical leaching-decomposition experiments designed to identify the major and trace element composition of particulate carrier phases. Elements examined through some or all of these experiments were: C, N, P, Mg, Ca, Si, Fe, Mn, Ni, Cu, Cd, Al, Ba, and Zn. Emphasis was placed on the identification of trace element/major element ratios in the biogenic materials. The majority of the trace elements in the samples were directly associated with the non-skeletal organic phases of the plankton. These associations included a very labile fraction which was rapidly released into seawater and a more refractory fraction which involved specific metal-organic binding. Calcium carbonate and opal were not significant carriers for any of the trace elements studied. A refractory phase containing Al and Fe in terrigenous ratios was present in all samples, even from the more remote marine locations. The concentration of this carrier phase within the plankton samples varied in proportion to the estimated rate of supply of terrigenous matter and in opposition to the rate of production of the biogenic particulate matter. The aluminosilicates contributed insignificant amounts to the other trace elements studied. A trace concentration of particulate Al was identified which was more labile and associated with the organic fractions of the samples. Variations in the surface water concentrations of dissolved Cu, Ni, Cd, and Zn with respect to P are compared to the ratios measured in the plankton samples and their regeneration products. The trace element/major element ratios ,in the residual plankton materials can be combined with estimates of the carrier fluxes to account for the transport of trace elements required to maintain their deep enrichment. A variety of processes determining the geochemical cycles of specific trace elements were identified. As much as 50% of the Cd, Ni, Mn, and P are rapidly released from plankton and recycled within the surface ocean. During this process, the metal/P ratio in the residual particles must decrease by 10-30% for Cd and increase by a factor of 2-4 for Ni and Cu to balance their deep enrichments. Although Mn is taken up and regenerated by plankton, the magnitude of this process is small with respect to other non-biogenic Mn fluxes and has very little influence on its dissolved distribution. The Ba content of all known surface carriers is insufficient to account for the deep enrichment of Ba. A secondary concentration process results in the formation of significant particulate Ba within the upper thermocline.
    Description: Portions of the data in this research have been collected under the NSF grant DES 75-03826 and ONR grant N00014-80-C-0273. I have been supported for the last three years on an NSF National Needs Graduate Traineeship to the MIT-WHOI Joint Program. Ship time was generously provided by various principal investigators of the NSF Galapagos Hydrothermal research program and the NSF-IDOE MANOP program.
    Keywords: Geochemistry ; Chemical oceanography ; Trace elements in water ; Atlantis II (Ship : 1963-) Cruise AII93-4 ; Knorr (Ship : 1970-) Cruise KN64-02
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 6
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Philosophy and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution November 1980
    Description: Suspended particulate matter was collected by sediment traps deployed in the Sargasso Sea (Site S2), the north equatorial Atlantic (Site E), the north equatorial Pacific (Site P), and the Panama Basin (STIE Site). Additional samples of suspended particles were obtained by in situ filtration at Site F., at the STIE Site, and in the Guatemala Basin. Concentrations of dissolved Th and Pa were determined by extraction onto manganese dioxide adsorbers at Site P, at a second site in the Sargasso Sea (Site D), at the STIE Site and in the Guatemala Basin. Sediment samples were obtained from cores taken near Sites E and P. Results have shown unequivocally that suspended particulate matter in the open ocean preferentially scavenges Th relative to Pa. This behavior could not have been predicted from the known physical chemistry of Th and Pa. Dissolved 230Th/231Pa activity ratios were 3-5 at Sites P and D and 3-8 at the STIE Site. In contrast, unsupported 230Th/231Pa ratios were 22-35 (average 29.7 for 7 samples) in sediment-trap samples from greater than 2000 m at Sites S2, E and P. Ratios were lower in particulate matter sampled at shallower depths. Particles filtered at 3600 m and 5000 m at Site E had ratios of 50 and 40. In contrast to the open ocean samples described above, samples collected by six sediment traps at depths of 667-3791 m in the Panama Basin had unsupported 230Th/231Pa ratios of 4-8, and the deepest samples had the lowest ratios. Fractionation of Th and Pa that was observed at the three open ocean sites either does not occur or occurs to a very limited extent in the Panama Basin. Particulate 230Th/231Pa ratios were negatively correlated with the concentration of suspended particles. However, variable scavenging rates, as indicated by variable particle concentration, do not completely control the ratio at which Th and Pa are scavenged from solution. Major biogenic and inorganic components of trapped material were found in approximately the same proportions in the STIE samples and in samples from Sites E and S2. Lower 230Th/231Pa ratios found in the STIE samples must therefore result from subtle changes in the chemical properties of the particles. Consideration of 230Th/23lPa ratios in several depositional environments indicates that no single factor controls the ratio at which Th and Pa are adsorbed from seawater. Fluxes of 210Th and 231Pa were less than their rates of production in the overlying water column in every trap at Sites S2, E, and P. In the Panama Basin, fluxes measured with the same traps were greater than or equal to their rates of production. These results are a strong indication that even extremely reactive elements such as Th and Pa are redistributed within the oceans. Redistribution occurs because variable scavenging rates in different environments set up horizontal concentration gradients. Horizontal mixing processes produce a net horizontal transport of Th and Pa from areas of 1ow scavenging rates to areas of high scavenging rates. Protactinium is redistributed to a greater extent than Th. Fluxes of 230Th can be used to set lower limits for horizonttal transport of Pa even when absolute trapping efficiencies of the sediment traps are not known. Less than 50% of the Pa produced at the open ocean sites is removed from the water column by scavenging to settling particles. The remainder is removed by horizontal transport to other environments. At Sites E and P, 230Th/231Pa ratios were identical in the deepest sediment trap sample and in surface sediments. However, 230Th/232Th and 231Pa/232Th ratios were 2.5 times higher in trapped particles than in surface sediments. The 230Th/232Th ratios were 5.5 times higher in particles filtered at 3600 m and 5000 m at Site E than in surface sediments. This observation is best explained by dissolution of most of the 230Th and 231Pa scavenged by settling particles during remineralization of labile biogenic phases. The behaviors of certain other radioisotopes were also studied. 232Th is present only in detrital mineral components of trapped material. Concentrations of 232Th in trapped particles correlate closely with Al and K, at ratios approaching that of average shale or crustal abundances at Site E and P and basalts at the STIE Site. High specifìc activities of 228Th and 239+240Pu were found in sediment trap samples throughout the water column at Sites E and P and in the Panama Basin. The dominant source of these isotopes is near the sea surface and also near the sea floor in the case of 228Th. Thus it appears that the bulk of the trapped material is recently derived from the sea surface where it incorporates these isotopes,with little loss during rapid transit through the water column. A bioauthigenic form of particulate uranium is produced at the sea surface and remineralized in the deep ocean along with its labile carrier phase(s). This flux of uranium to the deep ocean is 0.25-1.0 dpm/cm2103 years, which is insufficient to cause a measurable concentration gradient in the uranium distribution within the mixing time of the oceans. Increased concentrations and fluxes of particulate uranium were not found in the eastern equatorial North Pacific under areas of an intense oxygen minimum. Therefore, reduction of uranium to the tetravalent state with subsequent scavenging to settling particles in oxygen minima is not a mechanism removing uranium from the oceans.
    Description: Financial support for parts of this work have come from many sources, including: National Science Foundation Grants OCE-7826318, OCE-7825724, and OCE-7727004; Department of Energy Contract EY-76-S-02-3566; a Cottrell Research Grant from the Research Corporation; the WHOI Ocean Industries Program; a fellowship from the WHOI Education Office, and the Paul Fye Fellowship
    Keywords: Chemical oceanography ; Geochemistry ; Radioisotopes in oceanography ; Thorium ; Protactinium ; Knorr (Ship : 1970-) Cruise KN73-16 ; Oceanus (Ship : 1975-) Cruise OC78-1 ; Chain (Ship : 1958-) Cruise CH75-2
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 7
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution June 1982
    Description: The concentrations and isotopic compositions of helium have been measured in a number of mantle derived oceanic basalts. The goal of this research is to use the helium isotopic systematics to constrain the nature and origin of mantle heterogeneity in the oceanic mantle. Studies of helium partitioning in mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) glass, performed by crushing and melting in vacuo, show that a significant fraction of the helium resides within vesicles. Measured concentrations are therefore a function of original helium content, magmatic history, vesicle size and quantity, and grain size analyzed. The helium solubility inferred from the results is 3.7 x 10-4 cc STP/g-atm), which is significantly higher (by a factor of 5) than the enstatite value (Kirsten, 1968) most often used in the literature. Concentrations obtained from basaltic phenocrysts and glasses suggest that helium behaves as an incompatible element with respect to olivine, clinopyroxene, and plagioclase. Diffusion rates for helium in basaltic glass (in the temperature range 125-400˚C), determined using the method of stepwise heating, yielded an activation energy of 19.9 ± 1 Kcal/mole and 1nDo = -2.7 ± .6 (cgs units). Extrapolation of these results to ocean floor temperatures (0˚C) gives a diffusivity of 1.0 ± .6 x 10-17 cm2/sec, indicating that diffusion is an insignificant mechanism for helium loss from fresh basaltic glasses. The diffusion and partitioning studies suggest that these processes will not alter the helium isotopic ratios in basaltic melts. Therefore, the isotopic composition of the oceanic mantle can be inferred by extracting the helium from basaltic glasses and phenocrysts. A survey of the helium isotopic ratios in MORB glasses from all over the mid-ocean ridge system shows that there is considerable variation; the 3He/4He ratios range from 6.5 to 14.2 x atmospheric. The results from a number of oceanic island basalts show even more variability, with the 3He/4He ratios ranging from 5.0 x atmospheric (for alkali islands such as Gough and Tristan da Cunha) to 31.9 x atmospheric (for Loihi Seamount). The regional variability, and the correlations with 87Sr/86Sr can best be explained by the presence of three distinct reservoirs in the mantle which mix with one another. The three mantle source regions are believed to be 1) the depleted source for normal MORB (with 3He/4He -8.4 x atmospheric), presumed to be in the upper mantle; 2) an undepleted mantle reservoir with 3He/4He 〉 8.4 x atmospheric; and 3) a recycled oceanic crust reservoir with 3He/4He 〈 8.4 x atmospheric. A model for mantle structure that is consistent with the observations is proposed and discussed in light of the geophysical data. 3He concentrations for the different mantle reservoirs are inferred from the measurements, and suggest that the present-day 3He flux, and the 3He in MORB glasses, is ultimately derived from the lower mantle. Consideration of the 3He flux, available 3He/36Ar measurements, and the atmospheric 36Ar inventory, shows that present-day degassing rates are insufficient to generate the atmospheric argon. It is suggested that an episode of more rapid mant1e outgassing occurred in the past.
    Keywords: Helium isotopes ; Geochemistry ; Rocks, Igneous ; Basalt ; Volcanism ; Chain (Ship : 1958-) Cruise CH115 ; Atlantis II (Ship : 1963-) Cruise AII107-6
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 8
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution January 1983
    Description: Isotope studies of nitrogen and carbon were undertaken to investigate the fate of particulate organic matter (POM) during its residence in the water column and after deposition on the seafloor. The processes focused on were water-column transformations and sedimentary diagenesis. Sampling sites were chosen to provide POM subject to different specific mineralization processes (nitrification, denitrification, and sulfate reduction), different lengths of water column (duration of the mineralization process), and differences in the size of the organic-matter flux. The δl5N and δ13C of plankton, POM, and sediments from several oceanic sites were related to biological and hydrographic processes identified from nutrient, temperature, and salinity profiles. This was done to determine what effect these processes have on the δ15N of POM. Four stations were studied in the upwelling area off the coast of Peru and one station was studied in the Gulf of Maine. Important factors controlling the δ15N of plankton appear to be the concentration and δl5N of nitrate in the surface waters, and the relative zooplankton and phytoplankton abundances. Plankton from the Peru Upwelling Area are enriched in 15N as compared to plankton from other parts of the world's oceans where denitrification is absent. This enrichment may be due to the assimilation of 15N-enriched nitrate, produced by the selective reduction of 14N during denitrification. Zooplankton are 3 to 4% enriched in 15N as compared with phytoplankton. Production of 14N -enriched fecal pellets is suggested as a mechanism for this trophic enrichment. In the surface waters, the δl5N of POM is similar to that of plankton. In the Peru Upwelling Area, the δ15N of POM from the oxygen-deficient waters decreases with increasing depth. In the Gulf of Maine, below the euphotic zone in the oxic deep waters, the δ15N of POM increases with increasing depth. The difference in isotopic alteration may be due to the effect of different redox conditions on the mechanism and sequence by which specific organic nitrogen compounds, variably enriched in 15M, undergo degradation. Furthermore, bacterial growth on nitrogen-poor particles in the deep waters of the Peru Upwelling Area may contribute to the low δ15N of POM. In contrast to the large range in δ15N (-2 to +17%) of the POM, the range of δ15N in the sediments is small (+5 to +9%). Within a core, the average variation in δ15N was only 1.8%. Temporal variability in the δ15N of sedimenting POM and benthic activity appear to be important in determining the δ15N of the sediments. The large changes in POM concentration and isotope content at the sediment/water interface as compared with the more constant values found down-core, suggest that processes occuring at the sediment/water interface are critical, although bioturbation may also be important in determining the δ15N of oxic sediments. If diagenesis causes a significant loss of organic matter, profiles of organic carbon and nitrogen contents should show decreases with increasing depth and C/N ratios should increase with increasing depth (Reimers, 1981). Since none of the sedimentary profiles exhibited such trends, it is concluded that diagenesis was insufficient to erase the percent carbon, nitrogen and C/N ratio signatures generated by the POM flux and alterations at the sediment/water interface. Temporal variability in the δ15N of bottom-water POM may be caused by changes in deep-water currents which transport POM horizontally and to changes in bacterial and possibly other biological activity in the water column. This thesis work suggests that δ15N may be a useful tool in studying the geochemistry of POM in the marine environment. In addition, this research has shown that interpretation of the sedimentary 15N record must include consideration of isotopic alteration associated with bacterial remineralization of POM and benthic activity.
    Description: Funds for this research were provided by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology / Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Joint Program in Oceanography, the National Science Foundation under Grant No. OCE-8024442, and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation through the Center for Coastal Research of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
    Keywords: Nitrogen ; Isotopes ; Marine sediments ; Chemical oceanography ; Isotope geology ; Geochemistry ; Atlantis II (Ship : 1963-) Cruise AII108-3 ; Atlantis II (Ship : 1963-) Cruise AII108-4
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution February 2006
    Description: Between 9º-25º E on the ultraslow-spreading Southwest Indian Ridge lie two sharply contrasting supersegments. One 630 km long supersegment erupts N-MORB that is progressively enriched in incompatible element concentrations from east to west. The second 400 km long supersegment contains three separate volcanic centers erupting EMORB and connected by long amagmatic accretionary segments, where mantle is emplaced directly to the seafloor with only scattered N-MORB and E-MORB erupted. Rather than a major break in mantle composition at the discontinuity between the supersegments, this sharp contrast in geometry, physiography, and chemistry reflects “source” versus “process” dominated generation of basalt. Robust along-axis correlation of ridge characteristics (i.e. morphology, upwelling rate, lithospheric thickness), basalt chemistry, and crustal thickness (estimated from gravity) provides a unique opportunity to compare the influence of spreading geometry and rate on MORB generation. What had not been well established until now is the importance of melting processes rather than source at spreading rates 〈 20 mm/yr. Along the orthogonally spreading supersegment (14 mm/yr) moderate degrees of partial melting effectively sample the bulk mantle source, while on the obliquely spreading supersegment (7-14 mm/yr) suppression of mantle melting to low degrees means that the bulk source is not uniformly sampled, and thus “process” rather than “source” dominates melt chemistry.
    Description: The main body of work consisting of major element, trace element, and isotopic data acquisition and interpretation (Chapter 2 & 3) was funded by H. Dick’s grant from the National Science Foundation-OCE 9907630. National Science Foundation-OCE 0137325 supported the U-series work described in Chapter 4. The published work of Chapter 5 was funded by National Science Foundation-EAR 9804891, NSF-OCE 9416620, and NSF-OCE 0096634.
    Keywords: Crust ; Geochemistry ; Knorr (Ship : 1970-) Cruise KN162 ; Melville (Ship) Cruise VAN-7 ; Agulhas (Ship) Cruise AG22
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 10
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution February 2007
    Description: Oceanic spreading centers are sites of magmatic, tectonic, and hydrothermal processes. In this thesis I present experimental and seismological constraints on the evolution of these complex regions of focused crustal accretion and extension. Experimental results from drained, triaxial deformation experiments on partially molten olivine reveal that melt extraction rates are linearly dependent on effective mean stress when the effective mean stress is low and non-linearly dependent on effective mean stress when it is high. Microearthquakes recorded above an inferred magma reservoir along the TAG segment of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge delineate for the first time the arcuate, subsurface structure of a long-lived, active detachment fault. This fault penetrates the entire oceanic crust and forms the high-permeability pathway necessary to sustain long-lived, high-temperature hydrothermal venting in this region. Long-lived detachment faulting exhumes lower crustal and mantle rocks. Residual stresses generated by thermal expansion anisotropy and mismatch in the uplifting, cooling rock trigger grain boundary microfractures if stress intensities at the tips of naturally occurring flaws exceed a critical stress intensity factor. Experimental results coupled with geomechanical models indicate that pervasive grain boundary cracking occurs in mantle peridotite when it is uplifted to within 4 km of the seafloor. Whereas faults provide the high-permeability pathways necessary to sustain high-temperature fluid circulation, grain boundary cracks form the interconnected network required for pervasive alteration of the oceanic lithosphere. This thesis provides fundamental constraints on the rheology, evolution, and alteration of the lithosphere at oceanic spreading centers.
    Description: Research was funded by a MIT Presidential Fellowship and NSF grants OCE-0095936, OCE-9907224, OCE-0137329, OCE-6892222, and OCE-6897400.
    Keywords: Seismology ; Sea-floor spreading
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 11
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    Unknown
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution August, 1977
    Description: In the highly productive coastal surface waters near Walvis Bay, methane is present in concentrations considerably above those which would be predicted from solubility equilibrium with the atmosphere. A one dimensional diffusive model and a one dimensional horizontal advection diffusion model were used to describe the methane distribution. Evaluation of the model fits to the data suggests that both advective supply of methane-rich coastal waters and in situ biological methane production are important sources for the mixed layer methane excess. The complexity of the hydrographic regime near Walvis Bay makes it impossible to make a quantitative estimate of the rate of methane production. In the less productive Murray-Wilkinson Basin in the Gulf of Maine, a mixed layer methane excess is also observed. Methane concentrations are closely correlated with hydrographic parameters and the source of methane at a middepth maximum appears to be the highly anoxic sediments in the adjoining Franklin Basin. Diffusion of methane from the middepth maximum is probably adequate to maintain the surface methane excess against loss across the air-sea interface. Coastal waters are frequently enriched in methane, and it has been shown that advective supply of these methane-rich waters may be a significant source of methane for the mixed layer near the coast. Thus the widespread occurrence of a methane maximum at the base of the mixed layer in the open ocean, coupled with surface waters typically 30-70% supersaturated with respect to solubility equilbrium, suggests that advective supply of methane might be an important methane source for the open ocean as well. However, a study of the western subtropical Atlantic shows that advective transport can probably supply only a fraction of the methane present in the maximum. Also the loss of methane across the air-sea interface was observed to be twenty times greater than the flux from the maximum. Thus in situ methane production must be very important to the open ocean methane distribution. A series of phytoplankton culture experiments demonstrated that cultures of both Coccolithus huxleyi and Thalassiosira pseudonana produce trace amounts of methane during logarithmic growth. (Because the cultures are highly oxygenated, anaerobic methane bacteria can be neglected as methane sources. However heterotrophic bacteria cannot be excluded as possible sources of methane to the cultures.) After three algal generations, the rate of methane increase closely parallels the growth curve suggesting that the methane is in fact coming from the algae. A methane production rate of 2 x 10-10 nmole methane/viable cell/hr was calculated from the data. This rate is three to four orders of magnitude slower than the rates of oxygen consumption and glutamate and glucose uptake measured by other workers. for algae and bacteria. The methane production rate calculated from the culture experiments is the correct order of magnitude to account for the methane production occurring in the open ocean. Methane is present in quite low concentrations in the deep ocean. By calculating water mass ages from GEOSECS and other data, it is possible to estimate methane consumption rates in the deep sea. Methane consumption is rapid at first (probably greater than 0.06 nmole/l/yr). At depth consumption appears extremely slow. This may be due to the fact that the methane concentrations in the deep sea are so low that methane oxidizing bacteria cannot use methane as a substrate, or due to reduced metabolic activity in the bacteria at the high pressures and low temperatures of the sea floor. Methane is present in very high concentrations in anoxic basins, indicating that methanogenic bacteria are active. However, near the anoxic-oxic interface in both the Black Sea and the Cariaco Trench a one dimensional advection diffusion model predicts that methane consumption is occurring in the anoxic zone. In the Black Sea the methane depletion may be indicative of the presence of rapid methane oxidation near the Bosporus overflow. However in the Cariaco Trench the validity of such an explanation is difficult to evaluate since the overflow process is so poorly understood. A box model for the Trench has been developed which incorporates time dependence and supply of chemical species to the water from the sediments at all depths in the Trench. This model can explain the silica and sulfide data quite well, but methane depletion near the interface, relative to the model predictions, still occurs. Thus either anaerobic methane oxidation or decreased methane production in the sediments must be hypothesized.
    Description: Financial support was provided by an NSF Graduate Student Fellowship and a research fellowship from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Field and laboratory work were supported by NSF Doctoral Dissertation Support Grant DES75-0273l, ONR Contract NOOOl4-74-C0262, NR 083-004. and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Education Office.
    Keywords: Methane ; Geochemistry ; Atlantis II (Ship : 1963-) Cruise AII93-3 ; Atlantis II (Ship : 1963-) Cruise AII86-1A ; Atlantis II (Ship : 1963-) Cruise AII86-2
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 12
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution December 1997
    Description: A new tomographic technique is employed to investigate the structure and dynamics of the Pacific upper mantle. We invert band-center travel times of ScS reverberations and frequency-dependent travel times of direct S phases, upper-mantle guided waves such as SS and SSS, and the R1 and G1 surface waves for the 2D composite structure in the plane of two Pacific corridors. The frequency-dependent travel times of the turning and surface waves are measured from all three components of ground motion as phase delays relative to a radially-anisotropic, spherically-symmetric oceanic mantle model, and their 2D Fréchet kernels are constructed by a coupled-mode algorithm. The travel times of the primary ScSn and sScSn phases and their first-order reverberations from the 410 and 660 discontinuities are measured as individual phases and the 2D Fréchet kernels for these band-limited signals are calculated using the paraxial ray approximation. The model parameters include shear-speed variations throughout the mantle, perturbations to radial shear-wave anisotropy in the uppermost mantle, and the topography of the 410 and 660 discontinuities. We construct vertical tomograms through two mantle corridors: one between the Tonga subduction zone and Oahu, Hawaii, which traverses the central Pacific Ocean; and the other between the Ryukyu subduction zone and Oahu, which samples the northern Philippine Sea, the western Pacific, and the entire Hawaiian swell. Tests demonstrate that the data sets for the two corridors resolve the lateral structure in the upper mantle with a scale length of a few hundreds kilometers and greater but that the resolving power decreases rapidly in the lower mantle. The model for the Tonga-Hawaii corridor reveals several interesting features, the most significant being a regular pattern of high and low shear velocities in the upper mantle between Tonga and Hawaii. These variations, which are well resolved by the data set, have a horizontal wavelength of 1500 km, a vertical dimension of 700 km, and an amplitude of about 3%, and they show a strong positive correlation with seafloor topography and geoid-height variations along this corridor. The geoid highs correspond to a series of northwest-trending swells associated with the major hotspots of the Society, Marquesas, and Hawaiian Islands. Where these swells cross the corridor, they are underlain by high shear velocities throughout the uppermost mantle, so it is unlikely that their topography is supported by thermal buoyancy. This result is substantiated by the model from the Ryukyu-Hawaii corridor, which exhibits a prominent, fast region that extends beneath the entire Hawaiian swell. This anomaly, which resides in the uppermost 200-300 km of the mantle, is also positively correlated with the undulations of the Hawaiian-swell height. The other dominant features in the Ryukyu-Hawaii model include the high-velocity subducting slabs beneath the Ryukyu and Izu-Bonin seismic zones, which extend throughout the entire upper mantle; a very low-velocity in the uppermost 160 km of the mantle beneath the northern Philippine Sea, which is ascribed to the presence of extra water in this region; and a pronounced minimum in the amount of radial anisotropy near Hawaii, which is also seen along the Tonga-Hawaii corridor. A joint inversion of the data from the two corridors reveals the same anomaly pattern and clearly demonstrates that the swells in the Central Pacific are underlain by fast velocities. It is therefore implied that the topography of the swells in the central Pacific is supported by a chemical buoyancy mechanism which is generated by basaltic volcanism and the formation of its low-density peridotitic residuum. While the basaltic depletion mechanism can produce high shear velocities in the uppermost 200 km, it cannot explain the depth extent of the fast anomalies beneath the swells which, along Tonga-Hawaii corridor, extend well into the transition zone. It is therefore hypothesized that the central Pacific is underlain by a system of convective rolls that are confined above the 660-km discontinuity. It is likely that these rolls are predominantly oriented in the direction of plate motion (like "Richter rolls ") but the limited depth of the fast anomaly beneath the Hawaiian swell (200-300 km) suggests that their pattern is probably more complicated. Nevertheless, this convection pattern appears to be strongly correlated with the locations of the Tahitian, Marquesan, and Hawaiian hotspots, which raises interesting questions for Morgan's hypothesis that these hotspots are the surface manifestations of deep-mantle plumes.
    Description: This research was supported by the National Science Foundation under grant EAR- 9628351 and by the Defense Special Weapons Agency under grant DSW A-F49620-95-1- 0051.
    Keywords: Seismic tomography ; Seismology ; Upwelling ; Ocean waves
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 13
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Master of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution June 2004
    Description: Laterally extensive, well-developed clinoforms have been mapped in Early Cretaceous deposits located in the northeastern 27,000 km2 of the Colvile Basin, North Slope of Alaska. Using public domain 2-D seismic data, well logs, core photographs, and grain size data, depositional geometries within the Nanushuk and Torok formations were interpreted in order to constrain the transport conditions associated with progradation of the shoreline and construction of the continental margin out of detritus shed from the ancestral Brooks Range. Using STRATA, a synthetic stratigraphic modeling package, constructional clinoform geometries similar to those preserved in the North Slope clinoform volume (32,400 km3) were simulated. Sediment flux, marine and nonmarine diffusivities, and basin subsidence were systematically varied until a match was found for the foreset and topset slopes, as well as progradation rates over a 6 milion year period. The ability of STRATA to match the seismically interpreted geometries allows us to constrain measures of possible water and sediment discharges consistent with the observed development of the Early Cretaceous c1inoform suite. Simulations indicate that, in order to reproduce observed geometries and trends using constant input parameters, the subsidence rate must be very small, only a fraction of the most likely rate calculated from the seismic data. Constant sediment transport parameters can successfully describe the evolution of the prograding margin only in the absence of tectonic subsidence. However, further work is needed to constrain the absolute magnitude of these values and determine a unique solution for the NPR-A clinoforms.
    Keywords: Sediment transport ; Seismology ; Drill cores
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 14
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Seychelles ; Purse seining ; Statistics ; Tuna ; Longlining ; Tuna fisheries ; Purse seines
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book , Non-Refereed
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: From 1986 to 1991, observers on board tuna purse-seiners based in Seychelles allow analysis of data such as oceanographic parameters, aspects of tuna schools and their associated sightings, as well as fishing characteristics (success rate, catches, cpue, species composition, duration of fishing sets). Performances of the four concerned countries (France, Spain, Japan, USSR) are compared.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Fishing effort ; Katsuwonus pelamis ; Thunnus obesus ; Thunnus albacares ; Purse seines ; Seychelles ; Catch composition ; Fishery biology ; Catch composition ; Catch/effort ; Environments ; Fishery biology
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Non-Refereed
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  • 16
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Seychelles ; Annual reports ; Industrial fish ; Fishery institutions
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Seychelles is composed of over 100 islands with a land area of approximately 455 km², centred close to 4°30'S and 55°30'E. The combined coastline is approximately 600 km long, the oceanic shelf totals about 50 000 km² and the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) is over 1 370 000 km². The total population (1994 census) stands at just under 74 000. in 1994, the population registered a growth rate of 2.2%. The GDP (1994) was SR 2373.8 million, fisheries representing 4.8% of this sum. Licensing agreements for foreign fishing activities provided a yearly revenue of SR8 million. Port Victoria is seen as a prime centre for tuna fishing operations in the Indian Ocean. In the artisanal fishery just under 900 persons are working. The largest contributor to catch by vessel type are the traditional whaler vessels representing 47.8% of the total catch. Over 66.3% of the catch is by the handline method. Carangidae representing 24% and Lutjanidae 19% of total landings. There are six specific objectives to the fisheries sector policy, which aims as resource development and maximisation of potential benefits. Nearshore fishery resources are considered to be heavily exploited, however opportunities exist around the distant islands and in deeper waters off the Mahe plateau shelf. Aquaculture of molluscs and prawns is being developed and carried out. The main constraints to development are seen as the lack of skilled manpower and foreign exchange.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Country profile ; Fisheries ; Seychelles ; Statistics ; Fisheries ; Fishery statistics
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Non-Refereed
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: This journal is published by NIOF, Alexandria, Egypt
    Description: Spatial and temporal variability in the saprophytic (SB) and salt tolerant saprophytic (STSB) bacterial counts as well as total coliforms (TC), E. coli (EC) and fecal streptococci (FS) were investigated in the Egyptian surface coastal waters of Aqaba and Suez Gulfs as well as Red Sea. A total of 200 samples collected from 40 sites during January, March, May, July and September 2002 were investigated. Hydrographical parameters including water temperature (oC), salinity (S%o), dissolved oxygen (DO) and pH were also measured. According to the European and Egyptian current standards, out of 200 samples analyzed during 2002, 183 samples (91.5%) were accepted for marine recreational purposes. The obtained results indicated that water quality of the investigated coastal areas was generally affected by sewage disposal and (or) other anthropic influences. However in bathing and recreational areas, the water quality was mainly affected by the excessive human presence i.e. tourists-visitors and their recreational activities. In general, the final counts of all the investigated bacterial groups were found to be in good correlation with each other.
    Description: NIOF
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Recreational waters ; Water quality ; Indicators ; Saprophytic bacteria ; Bacteria ; Bacteria ; Coastal waters
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution , Refereed , Article
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  • 19
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    Alexandria: National Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: NIOF, Alexandria, Egypt
    Description: The present study deals with the physical and chemical characteristics of the water of Abu Za'baal Ponds. Determination of physical parameters (air and water temperatures, transparency, electrical conductivity, salinity, total solids, total dissolved solids and total suspended solids) and chemical parameters (pH, DO, BOD, COD, HCO3 -, CO3 --, Cl- , SO4 --,Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+, K+, NO2-, NO3-, NH3, PO4--, TP and SiO2-) were carried out to identify the nature and quality of the water of Abu Za'baal Ponds. The present results reveal that the values of most physical and chemical parameters were higher than those of freshwater, lower than those of saline water and in the same range of the brackishwater. Thus, the water of Abu Za'baal Ponds can be classified as brackishwater.
    Description: National Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries- Alexandria, Egypt
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Abu Za'baal Ponds ; Chemical composition ; Coastal waters ; Environmental conditions ; Chemical analysis ; Chemical composition ; Coastal waters ; Environmental conditions ; Environmental effects
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution , Non-Refereed , Article
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  • 20
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Shark species, both oceanic and coastal, are very common to Seychelle waters. In the past, however, the demand for shark and shark products has always been very erratic. The ever-increasing international concern for the species and potential conflicts between fishermen and conservation groups has highlighted the issue. In the Seychelles, the shark are caught by gillnets in inshore waters and by hook-and-line and purse seine offshore. Until very recently there were no regulations controlling the shark fishery, but, partly in response to initiatives by a local conservation group, fishing for sharks with nets has been banned since 1 August 1998. A review is provided of the present situation of the fishery whilst underscoring the difficulties of formulating a Management Plan based on the limited information available. The text of Chapter 82 of the Fisheries Act of 1986 is included as an appendix to the document.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Seychelles ; Fishery management ; Legislation ; Sharks ; Fishery management ; Fishery regulations ; Legislation ; Shark fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Non-Refereed
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  • 21
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: This report reviews the spiny lobster fishery on the Mahe Plateau during the 1994 - 1995 fishing season. Following the recommendations made after the 1992 fishing season, the fishery was reopened in 1993 for two months, November and December. The monitoring programme set up in 1992 was continued to gather more information on the spiny lobster stocks so as to improve the management of this resource around the Mahe Plateau. A total of 33 licenses were issued (compared to 28 in 1993); 25 on Mahe, 2 on Praslin and 6 on La Digue. A licensed fishing unit comprised, on average, of three men. Snorkelling was used by 27 fishing units as the only catching method, 3 fishing units used traps only whilst 3 fishing units combined snorkelling with the use of traps. Over the three month open season a total of 4.1 tonnes of spiny lobsters were estimated to have been landed compared to 4.2 tonnes in 1993, most landings were on Mahe (3.03 tonnes) A catch of 0.9 tonnes was landed in November, 1.2 tonnes landed in December and 2.0 tonnes landed in January. Altogether 159 trips were undertaken equivalent to 477 man-trips for the season with 28 trips in November, 63 trips in December and 68 trips in January. The snorkelling and trap capture methods represented 70.2% and 29.8% of the catch respectively. The catch per unit of effort (CPUE) for November through January was: -36 kg/trip (November), -39 kg/trip (December), -28.5 kg/trip (January). Three main species were targeted: Panulirus penicillatus (Homard Grosse Tete), Panulirus longipes (Homard Rouge), Panulirus versicolor (Homard Vert). The catch composition by fishing method was: a) Snorkellling: Homard Grosse Tete : 80.4% Homard Rouge : 19.2% Homard Vert : 0.4% b) Trap: Homard Grosse Tete : 100%
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Lobster stock ; Seychelles ; Panulirus versicolor ; Panulirus penicillatus ; Panulirus longipes ; Resource management ; Resource management ; Lobster fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Non-Refereed
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  • 22
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    Alexandria: National Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: This journal is published by the NIOF, Egypt
    Description: Lake Manzalah; the largest delta Lake in Egypt represents a dynamic system that has been undergoing continuous and pronounced changes since long times. In the last year’s this Lake faced drastic problems that retarded its environmental and fisheries development; the most serious one is the discharge of waste water. It is attempted in the present study to investigate the chemical characters of Lake Manzalah water during 2001-2002. Water temperature ranged from an average of 12.35oC in January and 29.14oC in July. Dissolved Oxygen, pH and total dissolved solids were found in ranges optimum for the living of marine and freshwater fish species. The average concentrations of nutrients lied in the following ranges: 1.24 to 4.89 μmol PO4 -3 l-1 , 5.08 to 28.73 μmol SiO4 -2 l-1 and 1.81 to 17.7 μ_mol NO3-1 l-1 The concentrations of phosphorus and nitrogen compounds were found to be relatively higher at the southern regions of the Lake near to the outlets of the drains.
    Description: NIOF
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Hydrography ; Water ; Chemistry ; Chemical composition ; Water content ; Environment ; Chemical composition ; Environments ; Water content ; Fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution , Refereed , Article
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  • 23
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: The present report reviews the spiny lobster fishery on the Mahe Plateau for the 2001/2002 fishing season. The monitoring programme, set up in 1992, was continued this season to collect more information on the spiny lobster stock in order to improve and maintain proper management of this resource around the Mahe Plateau. For the 2001/2002 lobster fishing season, a total of 40 licenses were issued namely twenty seven on Mahe, five on Praslin and eight on La Digue. Similar to previous seasons, the most frequently used lobster fishing technique was snorkelling which involved 32 fishing units, whilst only four units used the trap method and one used both snorkelling and trap. For this three-month fishing season, a total of 5.5 tonnes of spiny lobsters were estimated to have been landed compared to 10.2 tonnes in 2000-2001 fishing season. Most landings were on Mahe, which accounted for 58.44 % of the total catch (3.214 tonnes) followed by Praslin with 13.89% (0.77 tonnes). Both La Digue and Silhouette groups had landings of 0.5 tonnes each. The month of November accounted for 1.36 tonnes, while 3.37 tonnes was landed in December and 0.81 tonnes in January. A total of 350 trips were undertaken equivalent to 803 man-trips for the season with 107 trips in November, 193 trips in December and 50 trips in January. The snorkelling and trap capture methods represented 96% and 4% of the total catch respectively. The catch rates represented by catch per unit effort(CPUE) throughout the season were as follows: - 12.75 kg/trip(November) - 17.49 kg/trip (December) - 16.35 kg/trip January). The main species targeted were: Homard Grosse Tete (Panuliruspenidilatus) Homard Rouge (Panulirus longipes) Homard Vert (Panulirus versicolor). The catch composition by fishing method was as follows: a.) Snorkelling: b.)Trap: Homard Grosse Tete: 65.68% Homard Grosse Tete: 14.21% Homard Rouge: 26.83% Homard Rouge: 85.79% Homard Vert: 7.07%
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Lobsters ; Fishery data ; Catch statistics ; Fishery statistics ; Lobster fisheries ; Catching methods
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Non-Refereed
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  • 24
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority | Victoria
    Publication Date: 2021-08-09
    Description: Published
    Description: Industrial tuna fishing
    Keywords: Tuna ; Fisheries ; Fishery economics ; Fishery industry ; Fishery statistics ; Tuna fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Non-Refereed
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Forty oyster spat collector bags were submerged at two different sites near Mahe island fofr a period between 3.2 and 11 months. Strong currents in the south-east monsoon period resulted in a few bags lying in the sand which was detrimental to spat settlement. The mean settlement rate was calculated at 15.6 oysters per bag, however 71_310= of the bags had more than 10 oysters per bag. Considering only those bags, the settlement averaged at 27 oysters per bag. The sizes of oysters in collector bags after different soaking times, indicate that growth rate in the first few months is higher than on French Polynesia. Growth rates of oysters maintained in a cage indicated an average increase of 21.7 mm in five months, between the size of 25.9 mm and 47.76 mm. The observed mortality over the same period was 29.2_310=. Oyster spat settlement did occur all year around, indicating that spawning also occurs all through the year. Pearlculture in Seychelles is technically feasible and pearl farms will depend,for their regular supply of oysters, on collecting methods of oyster spat produced by natural stocks. Natural oyster beds are reported to be limited in Seychelles and these beds are presently exploited for the supply of the artisanal craft industry and the jewellery industry. Suitable sites for farming operations, on the granitic and on the outer coraline islands, are limited. In view of these limitations, priority has to be given to the assessment of the actual status of oyster beds and then implement neccessary of the actual measures where needed. The continuation of the Sfa training and research program regarding optimum sites, settlement rates, growth rates and other biological information will be crucial for the future development of the industry.The successful development of the pearl oyster industry in Seychelles, will largely depend on the choice of adequate management options, concerning the resource as well as the potential commercial ventures. A guideline on pearlculture development has been produced to support future initiative in this field.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Pearl culture ; Seed collection ; Seychelles ; Spat ; Pinctada margaritifera ; Oyster culture ; Aquaculture development ; Oyster culture
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report
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  • 26
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Fishing performances of four different types of boats (pirogues, outboard, whalers, schooners) are studied through the analysis of the temporal evolution, between July 1985 and June 1988, for four parameters: numbers of active fishing boats,- total number of fishing trips, - average number of trips/boat, - average trip duration. The trends from these analysis reveals that the boats involved in the handline fishery in seychelles have evolved considerably. These changes must be taken into consideration in the case of an eventual reorganisation of the fleet.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Seychelles ; Fishing ; Line fishing ; Fishery statistics ; Line fishing
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Non-Refereed
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  • 27
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution October, 1976
    Description: Considerable geological and geophysical evidence now exists to support the hypothesis that seawater circulates through freshly intruded basalt at the mid-ocean ridges. As a consequence of this process, reactions between basalt and seawater take place at elevated temperatures. The mineralogy and chemistry of hydrothermally altered pillow basalts dredged from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, and belonging to the greenschist facies, have been studied in order to determine the mineralogical changes that result from hyrdrothennal alteration, and to assess the chemical fluxes that result from these reactions in terms of their possible significance in elemental geochemical budgets as potential sources and sinks for elements in seawater. Where possible, pillow basalts were studied that showed varíous degrees of a1teration within a single rock. Such samples provide the best evidence that they have been affected by hydrothermal alteration, rather than regional burial metamorphism, and provide the most useful information for elemental flux calculatìons. During hydrothermal alteration, plagioclase is generally albitised, sometimes with the formation of epidote, and albite may be subsequently a1tered to chlorite. Plagioclase, in association with skeletal clinopyroxene, alters to chlorite and epidote. Olivine is pseudomorphed by chlorite, and clinopyroxene alters to actinolite. The glassy matrix alters to an intergrowth of actinolite and chlorite. Vein minerals irclude chlorite, actinolite, epidote, quartz, and sulphides. On the basis of their minaralogy, the samples may be subdivided into chlorite-rich (〉15% chlorite and 〈15% epidote) and epidote-rich (〉15% epidote and 〈15% chlorite) assemblages. The chlorite-rich assemblages lose CaO and gain MgO, while the epidote-rich samples show very little change in composition compared with their basalt precursor. The epidote-rich samples are more oxidised than their precursors, while the chlorite-rich rocks can be further suhdivided into those that maintain the same proportions of fetrous and ferric iron, and those that show an increase in ferrous iron due to the precipitation of pyrite. The major chemical changes that occur during hydrothermal alteration of pillow basalts are uptake of MgO and H2O, and loss of SiO2 and CaO. The concentrations of Na2O and K2O are apparently not greatly changed, although. they do show some variations in the core-to rim analyses. Consideration of the elemental fluxes in terms of steady-state geochemical mass balances indicates that hydrothermal alteration provides a sink for Mg, which is extremely important in solving the problem of apparent excess magnesium input to the oceans. The amount of calcium that is leached from the rock may be of significance in the geochemical budget of calcium. The concentration of silica in the circulating fluid is probably controlled by the solubility of quartz, and considerable redistribution of silica takes place within the basaltic pile. The changes in the redox conditions during hydrothermal alteration do not affect the present-day oxidation states of the atmosphere and hydrosphere. Trace element analyses indicate that copper and strontium are leached out of the rock and migrate in the circulating fluid, with local precipitation of Cu as sulphides in veins. Li, B, Mn, Ba, Ni and Co show sufficient variation in concentration and location within the altered basalts to indicate that some leaching does take place, and hence hydrothermal alteration of basalts could produce a metal-enriched solution, which may be important in the formation of metalliferous sediments at active mid-ocean ridges.
    Description: Most of this work was supported by the National Science Foundation Grants OCE-74-2297l and DES-75-l6596.
    Keywords: Basalt ; Chemical oceanography ; Hydrothermal deposits ; Geochemistry ; Atlantis II (Ship : 1963-) Cruise AII42 ; Atlantis II (Ship : 1963-) Cruise AII60 ; Chain (Ship : 1958-) Cruise CH44
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution April, 1976
    Description: The marine geochemical cycles of iron, copper, nickel, and cadmium were studied in order to provide a basis for oceanographic models for trace metals. Copper, nickel, and cadmium can be determined in a 100 ml seawater sample using cobalt pyrrolidine dithioacarbamate chelate coprecipitation and graphite atomizer atomic absorption spectrometry. Concentration ranges likely to be encountered and estimated (1δ) analytical precisions are copper, 1 to 6 nanomole/kg (±0.1); nickel, 3 to 12 nanomole/kg (±0.3); and cadmium, 0. 0 to 1.1 nanomole/kg (±0.1). The technique may be applied to freshwater samples with slight modification. A survey of several east coast U. S. estuaries established that an iron removal process occurs commonly when rivers mix with seawater. Laboratory mixing experiments using water from the Merrimack River (Mass.) and the Mullica River (New Jersey) demonstrated that rapid iron precipitation occurs as negatively-charged iron-organic colloids react with seawater cations and coagulate. This phenomenom was modeled using a synthetic, organic-stabilized colloidal suspension of goethite. The generality of the mechanism suggests that the world-average net river input of iron to the oceans is less than 1 μmole/kg of river water, an order of magnitude below previous estimates. Profiles of cadmium were obtained for 3 GEOSECS stations in the Pacific Ocean. Cadmium shows a consistent linear correlation with phosphate which demonstrates that cadmium is regenerated in a shallow cycle within the water column. The water column correlation is consistent with data on cadmium in marine organisms. Cadmium is enriched in upwelling regions which explains reports of cadmium enrichment in plankton from the Baja California upwelling region. Copper and nickel measurements have been made for three profiles from the Pacific Ocean. Observed copper concentrations range from 1 to 6 nanomole/kg; nickel varies from 3 to 12 nanomole/kg. Copper and nickel are removed from surface waters by uptake into organisms. As noted previously, nickel is regenerated partially in a shallow cycle (like P) and also in a deep cycle (like Ba). Copper is regenerated from biological debris at the bottom but is also scavenged from the mid and deep water column by an undetermined mechanism. The scavenging residence time is 1400 years. An estimate for the continental input of Ni, 7 nanomole/kg of river water, and Cu, 18 nanomole/kg of river water, was derived from measurements in the Amazon estuary. The oceanic residence times for nickel and copper are about 10,000 years. Evidence available on the uptake laws for trace metals by plankton suggests that a consistent relationship between the uptake law and the depth of regeneration may apply.
    Description: Money in support of this research came at various times from the ONR, MIT UROP office, and a grant from the Doherty Foundation.
    Keywords: Geochemistry ; Chemical oceanography ; Trace elements in water ; Chain (Ship : 1958-) Cruise CH115
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Seychelles ; Artisanal fishing ; Tuna fisheries ; Annual reports
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Non-Refereed
    Format: 461610 bytes
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Seychelles ; Annual reports ; Tuna fisheries ; Artisanal fishing
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report
    Format: 332605 bytes
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    Format: 21
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Seychelles ; Annual reports ; Fisheries development ; Tuna fisheries ; International cooperation ; Artisanal fishing ; International cooperation
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book
    Format: 384823 bytes
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    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Management plan ; Motherships ; Seychelles ; Fishery management
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Non-Refereed
    Format: 572164 bytes
    Format: 246644 bytes
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    Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority
    Publication Date: 2021-01-30
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Fishery statistics ; Fishery policy ; Fishing vessels statistics
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book , Non-Refereed
    Format: 1946882 bytes
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    Format: 64
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    California Institute of Technology Pasadena
    In:  Seismological Laboratory Bulletin, Los Angeles California, 1 p., California Institute of Technology Pasadena, vol. 1953, no. 6, pp. 98, pp. L24306, (ISBN: 0534351875, 2nd edition)
    Publication Date: 1954
    Keywords: Earthquake catalog ; Seismology ; Seismicity
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    California Institute of Technology Pasadena
    In:  Seismological Laboratory Bulletin, Los Angeles California, 1 p., California Institute of Technology Pasadena, vol. 1951, no. 6, pp. 95, pp. L24306, (ISBN: 0534351875, 2nd edition)
    Publication Date: 1953
    Keywords: Earthquake catalog ; Seismology ; Seismicity
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    California Institute of Technology Pasadena
    In:  Seismological Laboratory Bulletin, Los Angeles California, 1 p., California Institute of Technology Pasadena, vol. 1952, no. 6, pp. 104, pp. L24306, (ISBN: 0534351875, 2nd edition)
    Publication Date: 1953
    Keywords: Earthquake catalog ; Seismology ; Seismicity
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    California Institute of Technology Pasadena
    In:  Seismological Laboratory Bulletin, Milano, California Institute of Technology Pasadena, vol. 1950, no. 6, pp. 102-103, pp. L24306, (ISBN: 0534351875, 2nd edition)
    Publication Date: 1951
    Keywords: Earthquake catalog ; Seismology ; Seismicity
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    Am. Meteor. Soc.
    In:  Professional Paper, Compendium of Meteorology, Dover, 439 pp., Am. Meteor. Soc., vol. 7, no. XVI:, pp. 1303-1311, (ISBN: 3-540-23712-7)
    Publication Date: 1951
    Keywords: Micro seismicity ; Seismology ; NOISE
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    California Institute of Technology Pasadena
    In:  Seismological Laboratory Bulletin, Milano, California Institute of Technology Pasadena, vol. 1949, no. 6, pp. 72, pp. L24306, (ISBN: 0534351875, 2nd edition)
    Publication Date: 1950
    Keywords: Earthquake catalog ; Seismology ; Seismicity
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