Abstract New Zealand scampi (Metanephrops challengeri) is a commercially important deep-water lobster species that is caught by bottom trawling on areas of muddy seafloor on the continental shelf below 300 m. Efforts are being made to develop lower impact potting methods to harvest scampi, however, they can only be caught when out of their burrows and searching for food. This emergent food searching behaviour appears to be associated with periods of higher tidal flow. Such water flow will increase turbulence along the sea floor, which has been observed to improve the efficiency of chemosensory food searching in some lobster species. Consequently, this study examined the food search behaviour of scampi in response to odours from two types of...
Settlement processes and subsequent post-settlement survival influence the demographic structure of ...
We examine in detail, for the first time, the biological oceanographic mechanisms affecting nutritio...
40th CIESM Congress: The largest Forum on Mediterranean and Black Sea Research, 28 October - 1 Novem...
Field and laboratory tests were conducted for the kelp crab, Pugettia producta (Randall) and for the...
Abstract--The lobster, Homarus americanus, relies upon its lateral anten-nules to make initial direc...
Artificial reef areas can be used for management and conservation of commercially exploited crustace...
Abstract Background Catch per unit effort is a cost-effective index of abundance and fishing effort,...
We conducted a series of laboratory experiments to examine the orientation, settlement, and metamorp...
<div><p>The post-larval or puerulus stage of spiny, or rock, lobsters (Palinuridae) swim many kilome...
Sea ranching of lobster is a sustainable alternative to mere fishing. The method involves releasing ...
The southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) industry in Australia favours red lobsters, which are us...
Western Atlantic spiny lobsters (Panulirus argus) are superb underwater navigators. Spiny lobsters p...
The southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) industry in Australia favours red lobsters, which are us...
The Norway lobster is a burrowing decapod of elevated commercial importance for the European fishery...
American lobster larvae are concentrated in downwellings characteristic of shallow sea fronts. Stage...
Settlement processes and subsequent post-settlement survival influence the demographic structure of ...
We examine in detail, for the first time, the biological oceanographic mechanisms affecting nutritio...
40th CIESM Congress: The largest Forum on Mediterranean and Black Sea Research, 28 October - 1 Novem...
Field and laboratory tests were conducted for the kelp crab, Pugettia producta (Randall) and for the...
Abstract--The lobster, Homarus americanus, relies upon its lateral anten-nules to make initial direc...
Artificial reef areas can be used for management and conservation of commercially exploited crustace...
Abstract Background Catch per unit effort is a cost-effective index of abundance and fishing effort,...
We conducted a series of laboratory experiments to examine the orientation, settlement, and metamorp...
<div><p>The post-larval or puerulus stage of spiny, or rock, lobsters (Palinuridae) swim many kilome...
Sea ranching of lobster is a sustainable alternative to mere fishing. The method involves releasing ...
The southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) industry in Australia favours red lobsters, which are us...
Western Atlantic spiny lobsters (Panulirus argus) are superb underwater navigators. Spiny lobsters p...
The southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) industry in Australia favours red lobsters, which are us...
The Norway lobster is a burrowing decapod of elevated commercial importance for the European fishery...
American lobster larvae are concentrated in downwellings characteristic of shallow sea fronts. Stage...
Settlement processes and subsequent post-settlement survival influence the demographic structure of ...
We examine in detail, for the first time, the biological oceanographic mechanisms affecting nutritio...
40th CIESM Congress: The largest Forum on Mediterranean and Black Sea Research, 28 October - 1 Novem...