The Patagonian toothfish: biology, ecology and fishery.
- M. Collins, P. Brickle, Judith Brown, M. Belchier
- Environmental ScienceAdvances in Marine Biology
- 2010
Reproductive strategy of a primitive temperate notothenioid Eleginops maclovinus
- P. Brickle, V. Laptikhovsky, A. Arkhipkin
- Biology
- 1 April 2005
Oocyte length frequencies in ovaries suggested that E. maclovinus was a batch spawner, and Gonad histology revealed that 19% of the histological samples studied were considered to be those from hermaphrodites: morphologically as male gonads but containing protoplasmic oocytes.
Mitigation of seabird mortality on factory trawlers: trials of three devices to reduce warp cable strikes
- B. Sullivan, P. Brickle, T. Reid, D. Bone, D. Middleton
- Environmental SciencePolar Biology
- 7 February 2006
Tori lines and the Warp scarer were significantly more effective at reducing contacts than the Brady Baffler, whilst tori lines represent a smaller, but still significant, improvement on the warp scarer.
Parasites of Loligo gahi from waters off the Falkland Islands, with a phylogenetically based identification of their cestode larvae
- P. Brickle, P. Olson, D. Littlewood, A. Bishop, A. Arkhipkin
- Biology
- 1 December 2001
Stomach contents of the squid revealed a highly varied diet, although krill, amphipods, and chaetognaths were the dominant prey items, and parasites were not significantly correlated with either host sex or seasonality.
Albatrosses Following Fishing Vessels: How Badly Hooked Are They on an Easy Meal?
- J. Granadeiro, R. Phillips, P. Brickle, P. Catry
- Environmental SciencePLoS ONE
- 2 March 2011
The evidence suggests that this population has little reliance on fisheries discards at a critical stage of its nesting cycle, and hence measures to limit fisheries waste on the Patagonian shelf that also reduce vessel attractiveness and the risk of incidental mortality, would be of high overall conservation benefit.
age and growth in a temperate euryhaline notothenioid, eleginops maclovinus from the falkland islands
- P. Brickle, A. Arkhipkin, Z. Shcherbich
- Environmental ScienceJournal of the Marine Biological Association of…
- 1 October 2005
E.falkland islands' mullet (eleginops maclovinus) were aged successfully using whole sagittal otoliths from 1403 individuals, and the maximum observed age was found to be 11 years.
Ontogenetic changes in the feeding habits and dietary overlap between three abundant rajid species on the Falkland Islands' shelf
- P. Brickle, V. Laptikhovsky, J. Pompert, A. Bishop
- Environmental ScienceJournal of the Marine Biological Association of…
- 19 September 2003
The ontogenetic changes in the diet and dietary overlap of three commercially important rajid species inhabiting the slope and shelf waters of the Falkland Islands were investigated, showing a marked variation with ontogeny.
Variation in the diet of the Patagonian toothfish with size, depth and season around the Falkland Islands
- A. Arkhipkin, P. Brickle, V. Laptikhovsky
- Environmental Science
- 1 August 2003
Investigation of the feeding spectrum of the Patagonian toothfish found decrease in hunting activity with depth could be related to a specific adaptation to keep neutral buoyancy by increase of lipid content in white muscles of D. eleginoides with size.
Winter foraging site fidelity of king penguins breeding at the Falkland Islands
- A. Baylis, R. Orben, P. Pistorius, P. Brickle, I. Staniland, N. Ratcliffe
- Environmental Science
- 2015
Assessing foraging site fidelity in king penguins breeding at the Falkland Islands found flexibility in foraging trip distances and durations may be a response to changes in resource availability and changes in the energetic requirements of adults and chicks over an extended breeding cycle.
Distribution and reproduction of the Patagonian toothfish Dissostichus eleginoides Smitt around the Falkland Islands
- V. Laptikhovsky, A. Arkhipkin, P. Brickle
- Environmental Science
- 1 March 2006
The migratory life style of the south-west Atlantic population of the Patagonian toothfish is probably very different from that of other populations, which tend to be resident as they are inclined to inhabit the waters around oceanic islands and sea mounts with narrow shelf areas.
...
...