1996
DOI: 10.3354/meps138001
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Biomass of zooplankton and micronekton in the southern bluefin tuna fishing grounds off eastern Tasmania, Australia

Abstract: The southern bluefin tuna (SBT) supports a seasonal fishery off the east coast of Tasmania, Australia. The distribution of zooplankton biomass in this region was examined a s a means of finding out why the SBT are attracted to this area. We examined whether there was a particular area or depth stratum that supported significantly greater amounts of potential feed, directly or indirectly, for SBT Samples of zooplankton and micronekton were collected during the winter SBT fishery seasons in 1992-94. Five net typ… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Percentage is related to drained weight and dry weight (in parentheses). The conversion factors used to convert wet weight to dry weight came from Young et al (1996a Log(sa+l) total integrated on the whole water column SSL, IMSL. TSL, LSL, NSL, LAS, Presence (2)/absence (1) of the structural descriptors SSS, SAG, NUL of the scattering structures during a whole prospecting SSLl.5, hlSLI.5, TSLl.5, LSL1~5, NSL1.5, Presence (2)/absence (1) of the structural descriptors LASI.5, SSSI.~, NUL1.5 of the scattering structures by 100 m strata from surface to 500 m terns (Swartzman et al 1992, Simard et al 1993, Pelletier & Parma 1994, Coyle et al 1998) and stock assessments (Sullivan 1991, Guillard et al 1992, Petitgas 1993.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Percentage is related to drained weight and dry weight (in parentheses). The conversion factors used to convert wet weight to dry weight came from Young et al (1996a Log(sa+l) total integrated on the whole water column SSL, IMSL. TSL, LSL, NSL, LAS, Presence (2)/absence (1) of the structural descriptors SSS, SAG, NUL of the scattering structures during a whole prospecting SSLl.5, hlSLI.5, TSLl.5, LSL1~5, NSL1.5, Presence (2)/absence (1) of the structural descriptors LASI.5, SSSI.~, NUL1.5 of the scattering structures by 100 m strata from surface to 500 m terns (Swartzman et al 1992, Simard et al 1993, Pelletier & Parma 1994, Coyle et al 1998) and stock assessments (Sullivan 1991, Guillard et al 1992, Petitgas 1993.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fishes, molluscs and crustaceans (size-class of 1 to 10 cm) of the micronekton are the main tuna prey (Blackburn 1968, Sund et al 1981. Micronekton distribution and composition have been studied in some parts of the Pacific (Blackburn 1968, Young et al 1996a but remain poorly studied in the central South Pacific; the principal investigation was carned out by Legand et al (1972) but, unfortunately, micronekton spatial distribution was mainly described in the vertical plane and from pelagic trawls. However, micronekton biomass and composition studies are known to be biased by this type of sampling (Power 1996), particularly for micronektonic fishes, which are difficult to catch with existing techniques (Roger 1994).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The range in mean lipid content for all calcareous taxa was 0.8 to 5.9% (13 Crustacea and the mud star Ctenodiscus crispatus), while the range for non-calcareous taxa was 0.3 to 1.3% (6 polychaete worm, shucked bivalve, holothurian and chaetognath taxa). Assuming that dry weight is 20% of wet weight for calcareous taxa (Billones et al 1999) and 3.4% of wet weight for noncalcareous taxa (Young et al 1996), the range in total dry weight-specific lipid content (lipid % of dry weight, % DW) for all calcareous taxa becomes 3.8 to 29%, and for the non-calcareous taxa 8.5 to 37%. Thus, on a dry weight basis, the ranges in total lipid content of the calcareous and non-calcareous taxa overlap to a great extent.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Under such conditions the dominant large zooplankter, krill (Nyctiphanes australis), and pelagic fish, jack mackerel (Trachurus declivis) disappear from the shelf . In contrast, when nutrient-rich water dominates the shelf, primary and secondary productivity are higher (Harris et al 1987;Young et al 1993) and numbers of predators increase (Young et al 1996). The oceanographic variability evident within Great Oyster Bay makes this region an ideal area to study environmentally induced individual and population variability in loliginid squid.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%