Platform Recruited Reef Fish, Phase I: Do Platforms Provide Habitat That Increase the Survival of Juvenile Reef Fishes?
There are currently over 4000 functioning oil and gas platforms in the northern Gulf of Mexico (Gulf). Platform operations, and their prior drilling operations, produce trace amounts of lead, barium, vanadium, and lanthanum residues that are leached into the surrounding waters and are deposited on t...
Main Author: | Nowling, Lauren Kay |
---|---|
Other Authors: | James H. Cowan, Jr. |
Format: | Others |
Language: | en |
Published: |
LSU
2005
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-11142005-110327/ |
Similar Items
-
Reef Fish Dynamics on Louisiana Artificial Reefs: The Effects of Reef Size on Biomass Distribution and Foraging Dynamics
by: Simonsen, Kirsten A
Published: (2013) -
Acoustic Biomass of Fish Associated with an Oil and Gas Platform Before, During, and After "Reefing" it in the Northern Gulf of Mexico
by: Harwell, Grace Elizabeth
Published: (2013) -
Effects Of Mimic Artificial Oyster Reefs On The Ecology Of Juvenile Fishes In Marsh Ponds: A Before-After-Control-Impact Analysis
by: Garner, Steven B
Published: (2012) -
Studies on the Roles of Reef Design and Site Selection in Juvenile Fish Recruitment to Small Artificial Reefs
by: Sherman, Robin L.
Published: (2000) -
Artificial Reefs as Juvenile Fish Habitats in Marinas
by: Patranella, Allison
Published: (2016)