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tidal barriers

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Book Chapter
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2004
10.7882/FS.2004.085
EISBN: 978-0-9586085-7-2
... In the urban environment the impact of human activity often results in the construction of tidal barriers to estuarine fish passage and/or highly modified fish habitats. The modified, shallow estuarine habitat of the urban Rockdale wetland corridor, Botany Bay, is used by estuarine fish and its...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2020) 41 (2): 205–213.
Published: 30 September 2020
... an often complicated data management process is required to splice data sources together. Language barriers matter too. Many of the local-scale monitoring data in countries where English is not widely spoken are often managed and available only in local languages (e.g., in Japan and South Korea), making...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2011) 35 (3): 858–863.
Published: 20 October 2011
... effort. Crocodylus porosus wildlife management human wildlife conflict freshwater saltwater crocodile Bayliss, P., Webb, G. J. W., Whitehead, P.J., Dempsey, K. and Smith, A. 1986. Estimating the abundance of saltwater crocodiles, Crocodylus porosus Schneider, in tidal wetlands...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2014) 21 (1): 75–84.
Published: 17 March 2014
...Greg Maguire; J.D. Bell A diverse fish fauna (49 species) was recorded in four tidal 0.11 ha prawn farming ponds which appear to act as fish traps. The potential deleterious effects of twelve of these species on prawn growth or survival are discussed in terms of the diet and reproductive biology...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2018) 39 (2): 188–193.
Published: 01 January 2018
... this time the larvae are transported with ocean and tidal currents, and larval settlement behaviours that provide genetic linkage between widely separated adult populations of attached or limited territory species (Scheltema 1986; Allison et al. 1998; Pineda et al. 2007). Recent studies on kelp (Coleman et...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2011) 34 (2): 190–202.
Published: 10 October 2011
... barrier. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 67: 708-720. Effects of artificial openings of intermittently opening estuaries on assemblages of macroinvertebrates in the entrance barrier Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 67 708 720 Gray, J.S. 1974. Animal-sediment relationships...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2011) 35 (3): 788–809.
Published: 20 October 2011
... in 1910 (which was rebuilt in the late 1950s). They then started to consider the construction of a weir across Sportsmans Creek in about 1916, as a tidal barrier to keep saline water from extending upstream. The Sportsmans Creek Drainage Union formed in 1925 and then financed and constructed a weir...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2011) 35 (2): 291–306.
Published: 14 October 2011
..., cyclical changes in depth reflecting the tidal cycle. These inactive dives were long compared to those typical of other large sea turtles such as C. mydas and C. caretta , up to 98 min (mean 80±12 min), and with a mean and median of 50 and 52 min, respectively. In both populations, these dives occurred...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2019) 40 (2): 231–236.
Published: 01 December 2019
.... Several morphological traits differ between the two taxa (Cogger and Heatwole 2006), but genetic analyses reveal <1% sequence divergence (Lane and Shine 2011). In some seasnake lineages, barriers to interspecific hybridisation appear to be weak (Sanders et al. 2014), but in this case sympatry without...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2011) 34 (3): 303–313.
Published: 14 October 2011
... closed or open (to the sea) lake or lagoon). The lakes are mostly closed to tidal influences as is evidenced by the absence of mangroves on the lakes shorelines. Both lakes have a history of intermittent tidal/non tidal cycles when they are open or closed by a sand barrier at their entrances (Table 1...
Journal Articles
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2014) 29 (1-2): 49–61.
Published: 17 March 2014
.... AND GABRIEL, C. J., 1962. Marine Molluscs of Victoria. Melbourne University Press: National Museum of Victoria. 475 pp. Marine Molluscs of Victoria 475 SHORT, J. W. AND POTTER, D. G., 1987. Shells of Queensland and the Great Barrier Reef, Gastropods. Robert Brown: Bathurst. 135 pp. Shells...
Book
Book Cover Image
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2003
10.7882/9780958608565
EISBN: 978-0-9586085-6-5
Book
Book Cover Image
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2004
10.7882/9780958608572
EISBN: 978-0-9586085-7-2
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2021) 41 (2): fmi–fmcliv.
Published: 09 April 2021
... migratory shorebirds in the Asia-Pacific any large-scale databases. This means that even when nationwide analyses are required, extensive negotiations are needed to access these data after which an often complicated data management process is required to splice data sources together. Language barriers...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2021) 41 (3): fmi–660.
Published: 28 October 2021
... Best-practice dingo management: six lessons from K gari (Fraser Island) Linda Behrendorff 521 Two alternate states: shrub, bird and mammal assemblages differ on either side of the Dingo Barrier Fence Charlotte H. Mills, Baptiste Wijas, Christopher E. Gordon, Mitchell Lyons, Anna Feit, Aodan Wilkinson...
Book
Book Cover Image
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2012
10.7882/9780980327250
EISBN: 978-0-9803272-6-7
Book
Book Cover Image
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 0001
10.7882/MMA.1998
EISBN: 0959995145
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2023) 43 (2): 1–148.
Published: 08 December 2023
... take into consideration new and more systematic information on their distributions, and the environmental conditions that determine favourable locations or create barriers for the various taxa. In doing so, we investigate: the characteristics 2023 AuZstoraolilaongist volume 43 (2) 147 Saunders & Pickup...
Book
Book Cover Image
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2008
10.7882/9780980327229
EISBN: 978-0-9803272-2-9