Physical Factors Implicated in Reduced Barnacle {Balanus glandula Darwin) populations at the Squamish Estuary, B.C.
The survival, growth and fecundity of a transplanted barnacle population at the Squamish estuary, British Columbia, were studied for one year. The
transplanted barnacles were found to show poor survival, fecundity and growth compared to a control population in West Vancouver. These were related
to the prevailing stress conditions of low, fluctuating salinity and high turbidity at the estuary.
Simple
- Date (Publication)
- 2019-07
- Responsable
-
Nom de l'organisation Nom de la personne Adresse e-mail Rôle West Vancouver Laboratory
Colin Levings
Point de recherche University of British Columbia
R.S.S. Wu
Point de recherche
- Forme de la présentation
- Document numérique
- Nom
-
Fisheries and Marine Service Manuscript Reports
- Information d'édition
-
These reports contain scientific and technical information that represents an important contribution to existing knowledge but which for some reason may not be appropriate for primary scientific (i.e. Journal) publication. They differ from Technical Reports in terms of subject scope and potential audience: Manuscript Reports deal primarily with national or regional problems and distribution is generally restricted to institutions or individuals located in particular regions of Canada. No restriction is placed on subject matter and the series reflects the broad interests and policies of the Fisheries and Marine Service, namely, fisheries management, technology and development, ocean sciences and aquatic environ ments relevant to Canada.
- But
-
Experiments were designed to compare the growth, fecundity and mortality of a barnacle population at the West Vancouver Laboratory, West Vancouver
(the "control" station) with that of a transplanted barnacle population at the Squamish delta
- Etat
- Finalisé
- Fréquence de mise à jour
- Non planifiée
-
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords v15.9
-
-
Earth Science > Biological Classification > Animals/Invertebrates > Arthropods > Crustaceans > Barnacles
-
Earth Science > Biosphere > Aquatic Ecosystems > Estuarine Habitat
-
-
DFO Areas
-
-
North Pacific Ocean > South Inner Coast(Johnstone Strait, Strait of Georgia, Juan de Fuca, inlets and passages)
-
- Langue de la ressource
-
English
- Encodage des caractères
- Utf8
- Catégorie ISO
-
- Biologie, faune et flore
- Environnement
))
- Début
- 1975-06
- Fin
- 1976-05
- Informations supplémentaires
-
(c) Minister of Supply and Services Canada 1979
Cat. no. Fs 97-4/1535
ISSN 0701-7618
- Format (encodage)
-
Nom Version electronic
none
- Contact
-
Nom de l'organisation Nom de la personne Adresse e-mail Rôle Pacific Salmon Foundation
Isobel Pearsall
Distributeur
- Ressource en ligne
-
Protocole Adresse Internet Nom WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link
https://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/science/data-donnees/index-eng.html DFO Science website
WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download
https://soggy2.zoology.ubc.ca/geonetwork/srv/api/records/ca063dbd-55d6-4ba3-aeeb-795c25ec2b81/attachments/ca063dbd-55d6-4ba3-aeeb-795c25ec2b81.pdf ca063dbd-55d6-4ba3-aeeb-795c25ec2b81.pdf
- Niveau
- Jeu de données
- Généralités sur la provenance
-
Levings produced paper copy. Fraser scanned with Fujitsu Scansnap s1500 (ABBY Finereader OCR software).
Métadonnées
- Identifiant de la fiche
- ca063dbd-55d6-4ba3-aeeb-795c25ec2b81 XML
- Langue
-
eng
- Jeu de caractères
- Utf8
- Type de ressource
- Jeu de données
- Date des métadonnées
- 2023-12-19T00:18:33.436Z
- Nom du standard de métadonnées
-
North American Profile of ISO19115:2003 - Geographic information - Metadata
- Version du standard de métadonnées
-
NAP - CAN/CGSB-171.100-2009
- Contact
-
Nom de l'organisation Nom de la personne Adresse e-mail Rôle Pacific Salmon Foundation
Sarah Fraser
Auteur
- Autre langue
-
LanguageCode CharacterEncoding Français Utf8 Anglais Utf8
Aperçus

Étendue spatiale
))
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