There are three general classes of threat to biodiversity at the gene level: 1) extinction, which result in complete and irreversible loss of genes; 2) hybridization, which may cause re-arrangement of co-adapted genes and loss of adaptability to local conditions, and 3) reduction of genetic variability within populations. While extinction avoidance is a fundamental management objective and hybridization can usually be dismissed in marine populations, the reduction of genetic variability within populations is a plausible threat and can occur in two ways. First, a decrease in population size may result in inbreeding. Normally, marine fish have very large population sizes, and commercial extinction is likely to occur long before populations ar...
Reductions in genetic diversity can have widespread ecological consequences: populations with higher...
Global conservation policy and action have largely neglected protecting and monitoring genetic diver...
The Working Group on the Application of Genetics in Fisheries and Mariculture (WGAGFM) met at the Da...
There are three general classes of threat to biodiversity at the gene level: 1) extinction, which re...
The 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity has established an international framework for broader c...
In 1883, Thomas Huxley put forward that all the great sea fisheries are inexhaustible. This illustra...
Recent years have witnessed a surge of interest in the application of the principles of genetics to ...
Genetic methods have become indispensable for sound fishery management and will become even more so ...
In 1883, Thomas Huxley put forward that all the great sea fisheries are inexhaustible. This illustra...
Molecular genetic data have found widespread application in the identification of population and con...
Exploited fish species may have or are experiencing declines in population sizes coupled with chang...
The health of the world's oceans is intrinsically linked to the biodiversity of the ecosystems they ...
Recent conceptual and technological advances now enable fisheries geneticists to detect and monitor ...
The applications of molecular techniques in aquaculture are promising, but still some what uncertain...
1. The Baltic Sea has a rare type of brackish water environment which harbours unique genetic lineag...
Reductions in genetic diversity can have widespread ecological consequences: populations with higher...
Global conservation policy and action have largely neglected protecting and monitoring genetic diver...
The Working Group on the Application of Genetics in Fisheries and Mariculture (WGAGFM) met at the Da...
There are three general classes of threat to biodiversity at the gene level: 1) extinction, which re...
The 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity has established an international framework for broader c...
In 1883, Thomas Huxley put forward that all the great sea fisheries are inexhaustible. This illustra...
Recent years have witnessed a surge of interest in the application of the principles of genetics to ...
Genetic methods have become indispensable for sound fishery management and will become even more so ...
In 1883, Thomas Huxley put forward that all the great sea fisheries are inexhaustible. This illustra...
Molecular genetic data have found widespread application in the identification of population and con...
Exploited fish species may have or are experiencing declines in population sizes coupled with chang...
The health of the world's oceans is intrinsically linked to the biodiversity of the ecosystems they ...
Recent conceptual and technological advances now enable fisheries geneticists to detect and monitor ...
The applications of molecular techniques in aquaculture are promising, but still some what uncertain...
1. The Baltic Sea has a rare type of brackish water environment which harbours unique genetic lineag...
Reductions in genetic diversity can have widespread ecological consequences: populations with higher...
Global conservation policy and action have largely neglected protecting and monitoring genetic diver...
The Working Group on the Application of Genetics in Fisheries and Mariculture (WGAGFM) met at the Da...