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:
Birds benefit from professional fishing at Mandurah, W.A. [Subtitle:by R. H. Stranger.]
Author:
Stranger, R. H.
Citation:
ACCNO:19933
Publisher:
Western Australian naturalist - Vol. 19, no.1
Year:
1992
Description:
p. 60-63
Subject:
Fisheries.
;
Commercial fishing.
;
Marine birds
;
Feeding behaviour.
;
Bycatch.
;
Mandurah - Western Australia.
Notes:
Location:Hillarys
Type:
Journal Article
Item Availability
Item Availability
{ 1 } items found
Result
Links
Year
Volume
Part
Status
Location
Shelf No
1
On Shelf
Hillarys
VF 598.200
Similar Items
Estimation of production properties of mollusk populations.
Northern prawn fishery bycatch study 1987-1992. [Subtitle:A collection of papers on research funded by the Northern Territory Fishing Industry Research and Development Trust Account (1987-91) and the Northern Territory Government. This collection includes papers from Aust. Fish. ; Aust. J. Mar. Freshwat. Res. and various N.T. publications.]
Seals & seabirds - fisheries interactions: report of a workshop, Wellington, 1992.
Population dynamics and feeding ecology of pipefish (Syngnathidae) associated with eelgrass beds of Western Port, Victoria
Exploring marine mammal-fishery interactions using 'Ecopath with Ecosim': modelling the Barents sea ecosystem.
Research on the health, husbandry and welfare of sheep during live export / Richard Norris, Barry Richards and Tony Higgs.
Western foreshore of the Peel-Harvey estuary. Draft management plan. [Subtitle:Prepared for the Peel Inlet Management Authority by the Waterways Commission.]
World review of interactions between marine mammals and fisheries.
Recent developments in the Australian fishery industry.
Marine fisheries management in Victoria - balancing commercial and amateur fishing interests and community expectations against limited resources.