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| | | Coastal and Marine Ecosystems |
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| The physical modification of natural aquatic inland ecosystemsthrough the damming of rivers or the building of irrigation systems, for example, has often led to the creation of new ecosystems. These activities may also have unintended impacts on marine ecosystems, as seen in the example of the retention of nutrient-rich Nile waters through the building of the Aswan High Dam and the resulting collapse of the sardine fisheryin the Nile Delta.Ecosystems, on which fisheries depend, generally range from coastal areas to the open ocean, from tropical to polar oceans, including some semi-enclosed or enclosed seas. They include the lower end of river watersheds and their plumes, bays, estuaries and lagoons, coral and other reefs, continental shelves and slopes, and upwelling areas. | | | Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs)are relatively large regions (200 000 km2 or more) of the oceans characterized by distinct bathymetry, hydrography, productivity and trophically dependent populations. | | | | Neither pristine nor exploited ecosystems are static, but are subject to environmental variations. The frequency of these environmental changes and their amplitude vary widely. The greater and more frequent they are, the more significant the implications for productivity and for the management of fisheries. Natural variability adds to the uncertainty that should be considered in managing the harvesting of the resources of an ecosystem. A system's resilience to human impacts and their capacity to recover from serious disturbances varies with such natural cycles. | | | | Of particular significance is the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon, a naturally occurring global climate cycle involving complex interactions between the surface of the ocean and the atmosphere in the tropical Pacific. El Niño (warm) and La Niña (cold) events are extreme phases on the ENSO cycle. It has been increasingly accepted that the ENSO phenomenon has a global impact. | | | | Fifty LMEs have now been identified extending across regions encompassing coastal areas from river basins and estuaries to the seaward boundary of continental shelves and the seaward margins of coastal current systems. | | | | |
 | | | |  | | | Title | Distributional atlas of fish larvae and eggs from Manta (surface) samples collected on CalCOFI surveys from 1977 to 2000
( DOCUMENT )
| | Author(s) / Editor(s) | Moser, H.G.; Charter, R.L.; Smith, P.E.; Ambrose, D.A.; Watson, W.; Charter, S.R.; Sandknop, E.M. | | Description | Summary of fish larvae and eggs collected in Manta (surface) net tows on California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigations (CalCOFI) survey cruises in the Southern California Bight from 1977 to 2000. | | Keywords | PELAGIC ECOSYSTEMS; FISH LARVAE; FRY; FISH EGGS | | Geography Keywords | PACIFIC OCEAN; SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BIGHT | | Content Language(s) | English | |
| Web Address | http://www.calcofi.org/ | |
| Type of Document | Report: Research report | | Document Status | Finished | | Publisher | California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigation | | Publication Location | La Jolla, CA | | Publication Date | May 2002 | | Hard Copy Availability | LC No 67-4236 or contact Kevin Hill (email Kevin.Hill@noaa.gov) for details | | Series Title | CalCOFI Atlas | | Reference Info | | Number of Pages | 97 pp | Volume/Issue Number | No 35 |
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| 1076 Topics - 5135 Related Knowledge - 2534 Members - 34 Editors |