Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Ann M. Barse"'
Autor:
Derke Snodgrass, Jiangang Luo, Ann M. Barse, Eric D. Prince, John P. Hoolihan, Eric S. Orbesen
Publikováno v:
ICES Journal of Marine Science. 72:2364-2373
Pop-up satellite archival tags were deployed on 40 white marlin Kajika albida (synonym: Tetrapturus albidus) off the coasts of Maryland and North Carolina (United States), and the island nation of Aruba in the Caribbean. Useful data were available fo
Autor:
Stephen A. Bullard, Ann M. Barse
Publikováno v:
Journal of Parasitology. 98:735-745
Specimens of a capsalid collected from the gill arches of 2 roundscale spearfish, Tetrapturus georgii Lowe, 1840, (Perciformes: Istiophoridae), captured in the northwestern Atlantic Ocean were identified as Capsala laevis (Verrill, 1875) Johnston, 19
Autor:
Freddy Arocha, Eric D. Prince, Lawrence R. Beerkircher, Ann M. Barse, Mahmood S. Shivji, Joseph E. Serafy, Victor Restrepo
Publikováno v:
Endangered Species Research. 9:81-89
The white marlin Tetrapturus albidus (Istiophoridae) is considered to be among the most overexploited species under international management jurisdiction in the Atlantic Ocean, resulting in diverse stakeholder concerns. Efforts have been made to add
Publikováno v:
Journal of Parasitology. 92:52-57
Membership and richness of infracommunities and component communities of myxozoan fauna of the banded killifish (Fundulus diaphanus) from freshwater localities in Ontario, Quebec, New York State, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Maryland were studied.
Publikováno v:
Journal of Parasitology. 87:1366-1370
The patterns of infection of American eels Anguilla rostrata, with the introduced swimbladder nematode Anguillicola crassus, in tributaries of middle and upper Chesapeake Bay are described. A total of 423 subadult eels was collected from 8 Bay tribut
Autor:
Ann M. Barse, David H. Secor
Publikováno v:
Fisheries. 24:6-10
We investigated reports from commercial fishers of parasitized American eels (Anguilla rostrata) in the Patuxent River (located in the mid-Chesapeake Bay) and discovered that some eels were infected with an exotic swim bladder nematode, Anguillicola