The blacktail, Diplodus capensis, is an inshore sparid fish distributed from Mozambique to Angola. This species forms an important component of coastal fisheries within its distribution, one being the subsistence handline fishery in southern Angola. With this fishery being critically important to the livelihoods of local communities, a biological study and stock assessment was conducted to provide information for the management of this species in southern Angola. However, with molecular evidence suggesting that the Benguela current may have separated the southern African populations of many inshore fish species over two million years ago, a morphological, taxonomic analysis was considered necessary to first investigate whether there was evi...
Excessive truncation of a population's size structure is often identified as an important deleteriou...
The contents of the alimentary tracts of D. sargus capensis were analysed to establish diet composit...
Excessive truncation of a population\u27s size structure is often identified as an important deleter...
The blacktail, Diplodus capensis, is an inshore sparid fish distributed from Mozambique to Angola. T...
The zebra sea bream, Diplodus cervinus (Sparidae) is an inshore fish comprised of two boreal subspec...
Blacktail seabream Diplodus capensis were sampled from proximate (10 km apart) exploited and unexplo...
Sparodon durbanensis (white musselcracker) is an endemic fish species in the Family Sparidae found i...
Barnard’s dentexDentex barnardiis a relatively slow-growing, late-maturing species with an int...
A general lack of biological information is hampering the effective management of Angola’s fisheries...
The genus Diplodus presents multiple cases of taxonomic conjecture. Among these the D. cervinus comp...
The South African spearfishery forms a small component of South Africa’s complex coastal fishery. Al...
Dentex macrophthalmus is a small, commercially important sparid fish that is abundant in the deeper ...
This study investigated the movement behaviour of three inshore South African sparids – blacktail (D...
The blacktail, Diplodus sargus capensis and the zebra, Diplodus cervinus hottentotus, sparid fishes ...
The sexual pattern of Diplodus cervinus hottentotus was investigated in southern Angola. Females wer...
Excessive truncation of a population's size structure is often identified as an important deleteriou...
The contents of the alimentary tracts of D. sargus capensis were analysed to establish diet composit...
Excessive truncation of a population\u27s size structure is often identified as an important deleter...
The blacktail, Diplodus capensis, is an inshore sparid fish distributed from Mozambique to Angola. T...
The zebra sea bream, Diplodus cervinus (Sparidae) is an inshore fish comprised of two boreal subspec...
Blacktail seabream Diplodus capensis were sampled from proximate (10 km apart) exploited and unexplo...
Sparodon durbanensis (white musselcracker) is an endemic fish species in the Family Sparidae found i...
Barnard’s dentexDentex barnardiis a relatively slow-growing, late-maturing species with an int...
A general lack of biological information is hampering the effective management of Angola’s fisheries...
The genus Diplodus presents multiple cases of taxonomic conjecture. Among these the D. cervinus comp...
The South African spearfishery forms a small component of South Africa’s complex coastal fishery. Al...
Dentex macrophthalmus is a small, commercially important sparid fish that is abundant in the deeper ...
This study investigated the movement behaviour of three inshore South African sparids – blacktail (D...
The blacktail, Diplodus sargus capensis and the zebra, Diplodus cervinus hottentotus, sparid fishes ...
The sexual pattern of Diplodus cervinus hottentotus was investigated in southern Angola. Females wer...
Excessive truncation of a population's size structure is often identified as an important deleteriou...
The contents of the alimentary tracts of D. sargus capensis were analysed to establish diet composit...
Excessive truncation of a population\u27s size structure is often identified as an important deleter...