Large, colourful coral reef gastropods including the Giant Triton Charonia tritonis, helmet shells (Cassidae), cowries (Cypraeidae) and volutes (Volutidae) are exploited in an unregulated and unsustainable way throughout much of the Indo-Pacific region. The consequences for their populations, for the populations of their prey or for the ecology of their habitats are rarely considered. Serious decline in stocks of edible coral reef molluscs through unregulated harvesting demonstrates the need for controls on the collection and trade of commercially important species. Continued, unrestricted collecting will eventually lead to the local extinction of vulnerable species on substantial numbers of reefs. Research on the biology and ecology of orn...
Many Pacific islands, particularly sparsely populated reef areas, have had their natural stocks of g...
Small-scale mariculture of high-value species for trade in remote islands can offer valuable alterna...
Marine invertebrates in general, especially molluscs are able to ivithstand fishing pressure, becau...
Charonia tritonis (Charoniidae), one of the largest marine gastropods and an echinoderm specialist, ...
The harvest and trade of corals and other benthic organisms from the world’s shallow tropical reefs ...
The harvest and trade of corals and other benthic organisms from the world’s shallow tropical reefs ...
Tropical marine molluscs are traded globally. Larger species with slow life histories are under thre...
Coral reefs are at the brink of a global, system-wide collapse. Human populations living at the wate...
AbstractTrade in ornamental coral reef wildlife supports a multi-million dollar industry but in some...
A recent shift in the pattern of commercial harvest in the Keppel Island region of the southern insh...
Overexploitation and habitat alteration are pushing individual species toward extinction and may pre...
Despite the current expansion of community-based marine conservation initiatives in the Pacific, few...
This report focuses on “trochus” or “mother of pearl shell” Tectus niloticus, which is a large harve...
Small-scale mariculture of high-value species for trade in remote islands can offer valuable alterna...
Coral reefs are the most biologically diverse of shallow water marine ecosystems but are being degra...
Many Pacific islands, particularly sparsely populated reef areas, have had their natural stocks of g...
Small-scale mariculture of high-value species for trade in remote islands can offer valuable alterna...
Marine invertebrates in general, especially molluscs are able to ivithstand fishing pressure, becau...
Charonia tritonis (Charoniidae), one of the largest marine gastropods and an echinoderm specialist, ...
The harvest and trade of corals and other benthic organisms from the world’s shallow tropical reefs ...
The harvest and trade of corals and other benthic organisms from the world’s shallow tropical reefs ...
Tropical marine molluscs are traded globally. Larger species with slow life histories are under thre...
Coral reefs are at the brink of a global, system-wide collapse. Human populations living at the wate...
AbstractTrade in ornamental coral reef wildlife supports a multi-million dollar industry but in some...
A recent shift in the pattern of commercial harvest in the Keppel Island region of the southern insh...
Overexploitation and habitat alteration are pushing individual species toward extinction and may pre...
Despite the current expansion of community-based marine conservation initiatives in the Pacific, few...
This report focuses on “trochus” or “mother of pearl shell” Tectus niloticus, which is a large harve...
Small-scale mariculture of high-value species for trade in remote islands can offer valuable alterna...
Coral reefs are the most biologically diverse of shallow water marine ecosystems but are being degra...
Many Pacific islands, particularly sparsely populated reef areas, have had their natural stocks of g...
Small-scale mariculture of high-value species for trade in remote islands can offer valuable alterna...
Marine invertebrates in general, especially molluscs are able to ivithstand fishing pressure, becau...