Abalone are semimobile marine gastropods that form the basis of Australia's second most valuable fishery. A site off the coast of Port Arthur. Tasmania, was visited on six occasions. On each occasion, any unmarked live abalone found were marked with a unique identification number and were recorded. Any previously marked abalone found had its identification number and whether or not it was still alive recorded. This results in integrated mark-recapture-recovery data, as in Catchpole et al. (1998, Biometrics 54, 33-46). During the study period, abalone grew in size, and we model the survival of individuals as a function of their size? estimated from a fitted growth curve. The shells of dead animals are long lasting, and we extend existing met...
Three candidate, non-nested, growth models (von Bertalanffy, Gompertz and inverse logistic) were fit...
White abalone (Haliotis sorenseni) supported an intense commercial fishery in southern California du...
Abalone are valuable marine molluscs which have been exploited for their meaty foot and bowl-like sh...
The red abalone, Haliotis rufescens Swainson 1822, supports the only recreational free-dive abalone ...
Many sedentary marine invertebrates have a fine-scale (100s m) population structure that complicates...
Growth increment data were either collected from annual Tagging/tag recapture studies, or from multi...
Managing stocks of sedentary marine invertebrates is complicated by the highly structured population...
Understanding basic life-history characteristics of white abalone (Haliotis sorenseni), such as esti...
Abalone populations in southern California have declined dramatically since the 1950s when they supp...
© CSIRO 2008The ability to identify and separately manage component populations is becoming increasi...
For over 10,000 years, black abalone (Haliotis cracherodii) were an important resource in southern C...
White abalone (Haliotis sorenseni) was once commonly found in coastal waters of the Southern Califor...
Includes bibliographical references.Decline of populations of marine broadcast spawners has led to b...
The fishery for Haliotis rubra or blacklip abalone is Tasmania's most valuable fishery, with a land...
Wild abalone populations throughout the world have declined dramatically over the past 40 years due ...
Three candidate, non-nested, growth models (von Bertalanffy, Gompertz and inverse logistic) were fit...
White abalone (Haliotis sorenseni) supported an intense commercial fishery in southern California du...
Abalone are valuable marine molluscs which have been exploited for their meaty foot and bowl-like sh...
The red abalone, Haliotis rufescens Swainson 1822, supports the only recreational free-dive abalone ...
Many sedentary marine invertebrates have a fine-scale (100s m) population structure that complicates...
Growth increment data were either collected from annual Tagging/tag recapture studies, or from multi...
Managing stocks of sedentary marine invertebrates is complicated by the highly structured population...
Understanding basic life-history characteristics of white abalone (Haliotis sorenseni), such as esti...
Abalone populations in southern California have declined dramatically since the 1950s when they supp...
© CSIRO 2008The ability to identify and separately manage component populations is becoming increasi...
For over 10,000 years, black abalone (Haliotis cracherodii) were an important resource in southern C...
White abalone (Haliotis sorenseni) was once commonly found in coastal waters of the Southern Califor...
Includes bibliographical references.Decline of populations of marine broadcast spawners has led to b...
The fishery for Haliotis rubra or blacklip abalone is Tasmania's most valuable fishery, with a land...
Wild abalone populations throughout the world have declined dramatically over the past 40 years due ...
Three candidate, non-nested, growth models (von Bertalanffy, Gompertz and inverse logistic) were fit...
White abalone (Haliotis sorenseni) supported an intense commercial fishery in southern California du...
Abalone are valuable marine molluscs which have been exploited for their meaty foot and bowl-like sh...