Mostrando 3 resultados de: 3
Filtros aplicados
Emergent research and priorities for shark and ray conservation
ArticleAbstract: ABSTRACT: Over the past 4 decades there has been a growing concern for the conservation status of elPalabras claves:Conservation priorities, elasmobranch, Rays, SharksAutores:Alfaro-Shigueto J., Andrzejaczek S., Arnoldi N.S., Baum J.K., Block B.A., Britten G.L., Butner C., Caballero S., Cardeñosa D., Chapple T.K., Clarke S., Cortes E., Diana Pazmiño, Dulvy N.K., Ferretti F., Fowler S., Gallagher A.J., Gilman E., Godley B.J., Graham R.T., Hammerschlag N., Harry A.V., Heithaus M.R., Hutchinson M., Huveneers C., Kyle S.V.H., Lowe C.G., Lucifora L.O., MacKeracher T., Mangel J.C., Martins A.P.B., McCauley D.J., McClenachan L., Micheli F., Mull C., Natanson L.J., Pauly D., Pistevos J.C.A., Queiroz N., Roff G., Salvador J.J., Shea B.D., Simpfendorfer C.A., Sims D.W., Ward-Paige C., White T.D., Worm B.Fuentes:googlescopusImproving sightings-derived residency estimation for whale shark aggregations: A novel metric applied to a global data set
ArticleAbstract: The world’s largest extant fish, the whale shark Rhincodon typus, is one of the most-studied speciesPalabras claves:COLLABORATIVE, lagged identification rate, movement ecology, Photo-id, Rhincodon typusAutores:Agustines A., Alex R. Hearn, Araujo G., Bach S.S., Cochran J.E.M., Diamant S., Dove A.D.M., Fox S., Graham R.T., Green J.R., Green S.M., Hardenstine R.S., Himawan M.R., Hobbs R., Holmberg J.A., Jaidah M.Y., Labaja J., Leblond S., Legaspi C.G., Magson K., Maguiño R., Marcoux S.D., Marcoux T.M., Marley S.A., Matalobos M., Mendoza A., Miranda J.A., Norman B.M., Parra-Galván E.d.l., Parra-Venegas R.d.l., Perry C.T., Pierce S.J., Ponzo A., Prebble C.E.M., Ramirez-Macias D., Rees R., Reeve-Arnold K.E., Reynolds S.D., Robinson D.P., Rohner C.A., Rowat D.R.L., Shameel I., Snow S., Vázquez-Haikin A., Watts A.M.Fuentes:googlescopusResearch priorities for the conservation of chondrichthyans in Latin America
OtherAbstract: Latin American countries have a high diversity of sharks, rays, and chimaeras, yet many species arePalabras claves:Aquatic policy, Cartilaginous fish, management, scientific research, threatened speciesAutores:Arauz R., Arellano-Martínez M., Ayala-Bocos A., Becerril-García E.E., Bonfil R., Castillo-Géniz J.L., Charvet P., Chiaramonte G., Cisneros-Montemayor A.M., Concha F., Ehemann N.R., Espinoza M., Estupiñán-Montaño C., Fuentes K., Galvan-Magana F., Godard-Codding C.A.G., Graham R.T., Hacohen-Domené A., Hazin F.H.V., Hernández S., Hoyos-Padilla E.M., Ketchum J.T., Kingma I., Maribel Carrera-Fernández, Méndez O., Oddone M.C., Pelayo Salinas-de-León, Pérez-Jiménez J.C., Petatán-Ramírez D., Polo-Silva C.J., Rangel B., Santana-Morales O., Vélez-Zuazo X., Zanella I.Fuentes:scopus