Reef fish Breeding and Hatchery Production Using Brackishwater, A Sustainable Technology with Special Reference to Clark’s Clownfish, Amphiprion Clarkii (Bennett, 1830)

Author(s):  
Swagat Ghosh ◽  
T. T. Ajith Kumar ◽  
K. Nanthinidevi ◽  
T. Balasubramanian
Aquaculture ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 224 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 69-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ike Olivotto ◽  
Marco Cardinali ◽  
Luca Barbaresi ◽  
Francesca Maradonna ◽  
Oliana Carnevali

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katrina A. Catalano ◽  
Allison G. Dedrick ◽  
Michelle R. Stuart ◽  
Jonathan B. Puritz ◽  
Humberto R. Montes ◽  
...  

AbstractDispersal drives diverse processes from population persistence to community dynamics. However, the amount of temporal variation in dispersal and its consequences for metapopulation dynamics is largely unknown for organisms with environmentally driven dispersal (e.g., many marine larvae, arthropods, and plant seeds). Here, we quantify variation in the dispersal kernel across seven years and monsoon seasons for a common coral reef fish, Amphiprion clarkii, using genetic parentage assignments. Connectivity patterns varied strongly among years and seasons in the scale and shape but not in the direction of dispersal. This interannual variation in dispersal kernels introduced temporal covariance among dispersal routes with overall positive correlations in connections across the metapopulation that may reduce stochastic metapopulation growth rates. The extent of variation in mean dispersal distance observed here among years is comparable in magnitude to the differences across reef fish species. Considering dispersal variability will be an important avenue for further metapopulation and metacommunity research across diverse taxa.


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