skip to:
content
Global Links
Site Map
Accessibility
Contact us
Department of Agriculture and Food Western Australia
Home
About Us
Publications
Education
Employment
Events
Contacts
Search DPIRD
Search WA Government
Logon
Library Catalogue
Full Record
Back to Search Results
Title:
Otolith increment widths as tools to record and assess environmental changes in estuarine areas.
Author:
Molony, Brett W.
;
Marcus, Sheaves J.
Citation:
ACCNO:12342
Publisher:
Marine Technology Society Journal, vol. 36 no. 1, Spring
Year:
2002.
Description:
p. 44-51
Subject:
Otolith analysis.
;
Estuarine dynamics
;
Environmental monitoring.
;
Man-induced effects
Notes:
Location:Hillarys
Type:
Departmental;Journal Article
Item Availability
Item Availability
{ 2 } items found
Result
Links
Year
Volume
Part
Status
Location
Shelf No
1
On Shelf
Hillarys
West Aust Dept Fisheries Pubs CR : 2002 MOL
2
On Shelf
Hillarys
West Aust Dept Fisheries Pubs CR : 2002 MOL
Similar Items
Potato cod.
Prawns.
Characteristics of the ichthyofaunas of southwestern Australian estuaries, including comparisons with holartic estuaries and estuaries elsewhere in temperate Australia : a review
Stock structure of the goldband snapper Pristopomoides multidens (Pisces: Lutjanidae) from the waters of northern and western Australia by stable isotype ratio analysis of sagittal otolith carbonate [Subtitle:Stephen J. Newman ... [et al.]]
Size at hatching and planktonic growth determines post-settlement survivorship of a coral reef fish. [Subtitle:Preprint. Submitted to : Oecologia.]
Summer egg production rates of Paracalanid Copepods in subtropical waters adjacent to Australia's North West Cape. [Subtitle:Preprint. Submitted to : Hydrobiologia.]
Rapid changes in shelf waters and pelagic communities on the southern Northwest Shelf, Australia following a tropical cyclone. [Subtitle:Preprint. Submitted to : Continental Shelf Research]
Daytime surface swarming by Pseudeuphausia latifrons (Crustacea, Euphausiacea) off Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia.
Marine biodiversity hotspots and conservation priorities for tropical reefs.
Oil spills and west Australian marine environment.