An Indexed
Bibliography of Northeast Fisheries Center
Publications, Reports, and Abstracts for 1989
Bibliography
Publications in Peer-Reviewed Media
1. Anderson, D.P., O.R. Dixon, J.E. BODAMMER, and E.F. Lizzio.
1989. Suppression of antibody producing cells in rainbow trout
spleen sections exposed to copper in vitro. J. Aquat. Anim.
Health 1: 57-61.
2. Bartlett, D.S., K.B. Bartlett, J.M. Hartman, R.C. Harriss, D.I.
Sebacher, R. Pelletier-Travis, D.D. DOW, and D.P. Brannon. 1989.
Methane emissions from the Florida Everglades: patterns of variability
in a regional wetland ecosystem. Global Biogeochem. Cycles 3(4):
363-374.
3. BERMAN, M.S., A.L. McVEY, and G. Ettershank. 1989. Age
determination of Antarctic krill using fluorescence and image analysis
of size. Polar Biol. 9: 267-271.
4. BLOGOSLAWSKI, W.J. 1989. Depuration and clam culture.
Chapter 17 (pages 415-426) in J.J. Manzi and M. Castagna, eds.
Clam mariculture in North America. Elsevier Science Publishers
B.V., Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
5. *DESPRES-PATANJO, L.I., T.R. AZAROVITZ, and C.J. BYRNE. 1988.
Twenty-five years of fish surveys in the Northwest Atlantic: the NMFS
Northeast Fisheries Center's bottom trawl survey program. Mar.
Fish. Rev. 50(4): 69-71.
6. FAHAY, M.P. The ontogeny of Steindachneria argentea Goode
and Bean with comments on its relationships. Pages 143-158 in D.M. Cohen, ed. Papers on the systematics of gadiform fishes.
Natur. Hist. Mus. Los Ang. Cty. Sci. Ser. 32.
7. FARLEY, C.A. 1989. Selected aspects of neoplastic progression
in mollusks. Chapter 4 (pages 24-31) in H.E. Kaiser, ed.
Comparative aspects of tumor development. Kluwer Academic Publishers,
Dordrecht, The Netherlands.
8. Felley, J.D., M. VECCHIONE, G.R. Gaston, and S.M. Felley.
1989. Habitat selection by demersal nekton: analysis of videotape
data. Northeast Gulf. Sci. 10(2): 69-84.
9. FOGARTY, M.J. 1989. Forecasting yield and abundance
of exploited invertebrates. Chapter 31 (pages 701-724) in J.F.
Caddy, ed. Marine invertebrate fisheries: their assessment and management.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York.
10. Gibbons, M.C., and W.J. BLOGOSLAWSKI. 1989. Predators,
pests, parasites, and diseases. Chapter 7 (pages 167-200) in J.J. Manzi and M. Castagna, eds. Clam mariculture in North America.
Elsever Science Publishers B.V., Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
11. GOLDBERG, R. 1989. Biology and culture of the surf
clam. Chapter 10 (pages 263-276) in J.J. Manzi and M. Castagna,
eds. Clam mariculture in North America. Elsever Science Publishers
B.V., Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
12. KRZYNOWEK, J., D.D. D'ENTREMONT, and J. MURPHY. 1989.
Proximate composition and fatty acid and cholesterol content of squid, Loligo pealei and Illex illecebrosus. J. Food Sci.
54(1): 45-48.
13. KRZYNOWEK, J., J. MURPHY, R.S. MANEY, and L.J. PANUNZIO.
1989. Proximate composition and fatty acid and cholesterol content
of 22 species of Northwest Atlantic fish. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos.
Admin.] Tech. Rep. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.] 74. 35 pp.
14. KRZYNOWEK, J., and L.J. PANUNZIO. 1989. Cholesterol
and fatty acids in several species of shrimp. J. Food Sci. 54(2):
237-239.
15. Lazzari, M.A., K.W. Able, and M.P. FAHAY. 1989. Life
history and food habits of the grubby, Myoxocephalus aeneus (Cottidae),
in a Cape Cod estuary. Copeia 1989(1): 7-12.
16. LOUGH, R.G., and G.R. BOLZ. 1989. The movement of cod
and haddock larvae onto the shoals of Georges Bank. J. Fish Biol.
35(Suppl. A): 71-79.
17. LOUGH, R.G., and R.W. Trites. 1989. Chaetognaths and
oceanography on Georges Bank. J. Mar. Res. 47(2): 343-369.
18. LOUGH, R.G., P.C. Valentine, D.C. POTTER, P.J. AUDITORE, G.R. BOLZ,
J.D. Neilson, and R.I. Perry. 1989. Ecology and distribution
of juvenile cod and haddock in relation to sediment type and bottom
currents on eastern Georges Bank. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 56: 1-12.
19. MacKENZIE, C.L., Jr. 1989. A guide for enhancing estuarine
molluscan shellfisheries. Mar. Fish. Rev. 51(3): 1-47.
20. MAHONEY, J.B. 1989. Algae assay of relative abundance
of phytoplankton nutrients in Northeast United States coastal and shelf
waters. Water Res. 23(5): 603-615.
21. MAHONEY, J.B. 1989. Detrimental biological effects
of phytoplankton blooms deserve increased attention. Pages 575-597 in E.M. Cosper, V.M. Bricelj, and E.J. Carpenter, eds. Coastal
and estuarine studies 35: novel phytoplankton blooms -- causes and impacts
of recurrent brown tides and other unusual blooms. Springer-Verlag,
New York.
22. MORSE, W.W. 1989. Catchability, growth, and mortality
of larval fishes. Fish. Bull., U.S. 87(3): 417-446.
23. MOUNTAIN, D.G., M. Pastuszak, and D.A. BUSCH. 1989.
Slope water intrusion to the Great South Channel during autumn, 1977-85.
J. Northwest Atl. Fish. Sci. 9: 97-102.
24. MUNROE, T.A., and M.N. Mahadeva. 1989. Symphurus callopterus (Cynoglossidae, Pleuronectiformes), a new deepwater tonguefish from
the eastern Pacific. Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 102(2): 458-467.
25. NIZINSKI, M.S. 1989. Ecological distribution, demography
and behavioral observations on Periclimenes anthophilus, an atypical
symbiotic cleaner shrimp. Bull. Mar. Sci. 45(1): 174-188.
26. PETERSON, A.E., Jr. 1989. Joint Polish-U.S. research
in fisheries. Bull. Sea Fish. Inst. 3-4(113-114): 5-7.
27. POLACHECK, T. 1989. Harbor porpoises and the gillnet
fishery. Oceanus 32: 63-70.
28. POLACHECK, T. 1989. Yellowfin tuna, Thunnus albacares,
catch rates in the western Pacific. Fish. Bull., U.S. 87(1): 123-144.
29. POLACHECK, T., and T.D. SMITH. 1989. A proposed methodology
for field testing line transect theory for shipboard surveys of cetaceans.
Rep. Int. Whal. Comm. 39: 341-345.
30. POTTER, D.C., R.G. LOUGH, R.I. Perry, and J.D. Neilson. 1989.
Comparison of the MOCNESS and IYGPT pelagic samplers for the capture
of O-group cod (Gadus morhua) on Georges Bank. J. Cons.
Int. Explor. Mer 46: 121-128.
31. SAWYER, T.K., E.J. LEWIS, J. Musselman, W.N. Adams, J. Gaines,
L. Chandler, and S. Rippey. Sewage-associated protozoans (amoebida)
and bacteria as indicators of the sanitary quality of commercial shellfish
beds. Chapter 7 (pages 73-81) in D.W. Hood, A. Shoener,
and P.K. Park, eds. Oceanic processes in marine pollution. Volume 4.
Scientific monitoring strategies for ocean waste disposal. Robert
E. Krieger Publishing Co., Malabar, Fla.
32. SHERMAN, K. 1989. Biomass yields of large marine ecosystems.
Pages 117-137 in E.M. Borgese, N. Ginsburg, and J.R. Morgan,
eds. Ocean Yearbook 8. University of Chicago Press, Chicago,
Ill.
33. SHERMAN, K. 1989. Introduction to part one: case studies
of perturbations in large marine ecosystems. Chapter 1 (pages
3-6) in K. Sherman and L.M. Alexander, eds. Biomass yields and
geography of large marine ecosystems. AAAS [Amer. Assoc. Adv.
Sci.] Sel. Symp. 111.
34. SHERMAN, K. 1989. Large marine ecosystems: a case study.
Pages 97-114 in L.M. Alexander, S. Allen, and L.C. Hanson, eds.
New developments in marine science and technology: economic, legal and
political aspects of change -- proceedings of the 22nd Annual Conference
of the Law of the Sea Institute, June 12-16, 1988, Narragansett, RI.
The Law of the Sea Institute, Honolulu, Hawaii.
35. SHERMAN, K. 1989. Large marine ecosystems: a concept
for assessing and monitoring global marine biomass change. Bull.
Sea Fish. Inst. 3-4(113-114): 25-36.
36. SHERMAN, K., and L.M. Alexander, eds. 1989. Biomass
yields and geography of large marine ecosystems. AAAS [Amer. Assoc.
Adv. Sci.] Sel. Symp. 111. 493 pp.
37. *SMITH, T.D. 1988. Stock assessment methods: the first
fifty years. Chapter 1 (pages 1-33) in J.A. Gulland, ed.
Fish population dynamics, 2nd ed. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.,
Chichester, England.
38. Springer, V.G., and B.B. COLLETTE. 1989. [Obituary:]
Robert H. Gibbs, Jr. 1929-1988. Copeia 1989(1): 245-251.
39. Sunila, I., and C.A. FARLEY. 1989. Environmental limits
for survival of sarcoma cells from the soft-shell clam Mya arenaria.
Dis. Aquat. Org. 7: 111-115.
40. *THEROUX, R.B., ed. 1988. The Woods Hole Laboratory,
1885-1985: a century of service. Mar. Fish. Rev. 50(4): 1-68.
41. Tyler, J.C., G.D. Johnson, I. Nakamura, and B.B. COLLETTE.
1989. Morphology of Luvarus imperialis (Luvaridae), with
a phylogenetic analysis of the Acanthuroidei (Pisces). Smithson.
Contrib. Zool. No. 485.78 pp.
42. VECCHIONE, M. 1989. Zooplankton distribution in three
estuarine bayous with different types of anthropogenic influence.
Estuaries 12(3): 169-179.
43. VECCHIONE, M., C.F.E. Roper, and M.J. Sweeney. 1989.
Marine flora and fauna of the eastern United States: Mollusca: Cephalopoda.
NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Rep. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]
73. 23 pp.
44. WILK, S.J., and B.M. Baker. 1989. Results of a fish-megainvertebrate
survey of the New York Bight apex, late summer 1983. Bull. N.J.
Acad. Sci. 34(2): 1-13.
45. WILLIAMS, A.B. (chair), L.G. Abele, D.L. Felder, H.H. Hobbs, Jr.,
R.B. Manning, P.A. McLaughlin, and I. PEREZ FARFANTE. 1989.
Common and scientific names of aquatic invertebrates from the United
States and Canada: decapod crustaceans. Amer. Fish. Soc. Spec.
Publ. 17. 77 pp.
46. WILLIAMS, A.B., and C.A. Child. 1989. Comparison of
some genera and species of box crabs (Brachyura: Calappidae), southwestern
North Atlantic, with description of a new genus and species. Fish.
Bull., U.S. 87: 105-121.
47. WILLIAMS, A.B., and P.J.B. Scott. 1989. Upogebia corallifora,
a new species of coral-boring shrimp from the West Indies (Decapoda:
Upogebiidae). Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 102(2): 405-410.
48. Youngbluth, M.J., T.G. Bailey, P.J. Davoll, C.A. Jacoby, P.I. Blades-Eckelbarger,
and C.A. GRISWOLD. 1989. Fecal pellet production and diel
migratory behavior by the euphausiid Meganyctiphanes norvegica affect
benthic-pelagic coupling. Deep-Sea Res. 36(10A): 1491-1502.
Publications in Non-Peer-Reviewed Media
49. ALMEIDA, F.P. 1989. Allocation of statewide-reported
MRFSS catch and landings statistics between areas: application to winter
flounder. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat.
Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-71. 18 pp.
50. ALMEIDA, F.P., T.S. BURNS, and S. CHANG. 1989. The
1988 experimental whiting fishery: a NMFS/industry cooperative program.
NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-69.
16 pp.
51. ALMEIDA, F.P., S. CHANG, and T.S. BURNS. 1989. Summer
distribution of regulated species on Georges Bank with reference to
the 1988 experimental whiting fishery. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos.
Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-70.25 pp.
52. BENWAY, R.L. 1989. Water column thermal structure across
the shelf and slope southeast of Sandy Hook, New Jersey in 1988.
NAFO [Northwest Atl. Fish. Organ.] SCR [Sci. Counc. Res.] Doc. 89/65.
Ser. No. N1645. 11 pp.
53. BENWAY, R.L., and J.W. JOSSI. 1989. Expendable bathythermograph
observations and continuous plankton records from the NMFS/Ship of Opportunity
Program for 1988. [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.,] Northeast Fish. Cent.
Ref. Doc. 89-05. 10 pp.
54. BURNETT, J., L. O'BRIEN, R.K. MAYO, J.A. DARDE, and M. BOHAN.
1989. Finfish maturity sampling and classification schemes used
during Northeast Fisheries Center bottom trawl surveys, 1963-89.
NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-76.
14 pp.
55. CARVER, J.H. 1989. Smoking fish. Chapter 6 (pages
58-68) in I. Dore. Making the most of your catch: an angler's
guide. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
56. CASEY, J.G. 1989. Isurus oxyrinchus: the shortfin
mako shark. Pages 91-94 in Canyon: the yearbook of the
Northeast big game fisherman. Offshore Informational Publications,
Inc., Bricktown, N.J.
57. CONSERVATION AND UTILIZATION DIVISION, NORTHEAST FISHERIES CENTER.
1989. Status of the fishery resources off the northeastern United
States for 1989. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS
[Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-72. 110 pp.
58. DAWSON, M., and J.L. Renfro. 1989. Mechanism of organic
anion secretion in flounder renal proximal tubule primary monolayer
cultures. Pages 35-37 in Second annual report (September
1, 1988 - August 31, 1989) by the University of Connecticut, Marine/Freshwater
Biomedical Sciences Center for the Study of Molecular, Cellular, and
Organismal Responses to Environmental Stress, for the National Institute
of Environmental Health Sciences (Grant ES03848). Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT
06460.
59. DAWSON, M., and J.L. Renfro. 1989. Xenobiotic interaction
with, and modification of, proximal tubule organic anion secretion.
Pages 32-35 in Second annual report (September 1, 1988 - August
31, 1989) by the University of Connecticut, Marine/Freshwater Biomedical
Sciences Center for the Study of Molecular, Cellular, and Organismal
Responses to Environmental Stress, for the National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences (Grant ES03848). Available from National
Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460.
60. DRAXLER, A. 1989. Water and sediment chemistry.
Pages 16-20 in Response of the habitat and biota of the inner
New York Bight to abatement of sewage sludge dumping: second annual
progress report -- 1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech.
Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
61. DRAXLER, A., L. ARLEN, P. FOURNIER, T. FINNERAN, R. BRUNO, and
M. JAMES. 1989. Sediment biogeochemistry. Pages 18-19 in Response of the habitat and biota of the inner New York Bight
to abatement of sewage sludge dumping: second annual progress report
-- 1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat.
Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
62. ENVIRONMENTAL PROCESSES DIVISION, NORTHEAST FISHERIES CENTER.
1989. Response of the habitat and biota of the inner New York
Bight to abatement of sewage sludge dumping: second annual progress
report -- 1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS
[Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67. 47 pp.
63. FOGARTY, M.J. 1989. Lobster recruitment processes.
The Lobster Newsl. 2(2): 1,4-5.
64. FOGARTY, M.J., J.G. CASEY, N.E. KOHLER, J.S. IDOINE, and H.L. PRATT.
1989. Reproductive dynamics of elasmobranch populations in response
to harvesting. Paper No. 9 at the ICES Mini-Symposium on Reproductive
Variability: Implications for the Dynamics and Well-being of Stocks,
October 10, 1989, The Hague, The Netherlands. International Council
for the Exploration of the Sea, Copenhagen, Denmark. 15 pp.
65. GIBSON, J.A. 1989. An indexed bibliography of Northeast
Fisheries Center publications and reports for 1988. NOAA [Nat.
Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-75.
32 pp.
66. HOLZWARTH, T., and J. MANNING. 1989. Description of
1986 oceanographic conditions on the Northeast Continental Shelf.
[Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.,] Northeast Fish. Cent. Ref. Doc. 89-03.
34 pp.
67. INGHAM, M. 1989. Physical oceanography of the New York
Bight--a review. Pages 4-11 in Response of the habitat
and biota of the inner New York Bight to abatement of sewage sludge
dumping: second annual progress report--1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean.
Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
68. JOSSI, J.W., and D.E. SMITH. 1989. Continuous plankton
records: Massachusetts to Cape Sable, Nova Scotia, and New York to the
Gulf Stream, 1988. NAFO [Northwest Atl. Fish. Organ.] SCR [Sci.
Counc. Res.] Doc. 89/59. Ser. No. N1639. 19 pp.
69. KAYLOR, J.D. 1989. Pickling and marinating fish.
Chapter 4 (pages 49-57) in I. Dore. Making the most of your catch:
an angler's guide. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
70. KAYLOR, J.D. 1989. Salting fish. Chapter 3 (pages
35-48) in I. Dore. Making the most of your catch: an angler's
guide. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
71. KRZYNOWEK, J. 1989. Fish and nutrition. Chapter
8 (pages 116-124)in I. Dore. Making the most of your catch: an
angler's guide. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
72. LEARSON, R.J. 1989. Handling and processing fresh fish.
Chapter 1 (pages 1-21) in I. Dore. Making the most of your catch:
an angler's guide. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
73. LEARSON, R.J. 1989. One man's trash is another's treasure.
Chapter 6 (pages 69-95) in I. Dore. Making the most of your catch:
an angler's guide. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
74. LICCIARDELLO, J.J. (deceased). 1989. Freezing the catch.
Chapter 2 (pages 22-34) in I. Dore. Making the most of your catch:
an angler's guide. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
75. LICCIARDELLO, J.J. (deceased). 1989. Yes, Virginia,
seafood is safe to eat. Chapter 7 (pages 96-115) in I.
Dore. Making the most of your catch: an angler's guide. Van Nostrand
Reinhold, New York.
76. MacLEAN, S.A. 1989. Registry of marine pathology: catalog
and description of slide accessions, vol. 3. Available from National
Marine Fisheries Service, 904 S. Morris St., Oxford, MD 21654.
129 pp.
77. MAYO, R.K., S.H. CLARK, and M.C. Annand. 1989. Stock
assessment information for pollock, Pollachius virens (L.), in
the Scotian Shelf, Georges Bank, and Gulf of Maine regions. NOAA
[Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-65.30
pp.
78. MOUNTAIN, D.G. 1989. TEMPEST: a computer program for
estimating temperature on the Northeast Continental Shelf. [Nat.
Mar. Fish. Serv.,] Northeast Fish. Cent. Ref. Doc. 89-02. 8 pp.
+ 1 5¼-inch disk.
79. MOUNTAIN, D.G., and T.J. HOLZWARTH. 1989. Surface and
bottom temperature distribution for the Northeast Continental Shelf.
NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-73.32
pp.
80. Nelson, W.R., B.E. Brown, R.J. CONSER, J.J. Hoey, S. Nichols, J.E.
Powers, M.P. SISSENWINE, S.C. Turner, and D.S. Vaughn. 1989.
Report of the NMFS Swordfish Stock Assessment Workshop, March 20-24,
1989. ICCAT [Int. Comm. Conserv. Atl. Tunas] Collect. Vol. Sci.
Pap. 32(2): 287-352.
81. PACHECO, A., R. PIKANOWSKI, D. McMILLAN, B. VALDES, and L. STEHLIK.
1989. Species composition, distribution, and abundance.
Pages 27-32 in Response of the habitat and biota of the inner
New York Bight to abatement of sewage sludge dumping: second annual
progress report--1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech.
Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
82. PACHECO, A., and J. RUGG. 1989. Fish and lobster pathology.
Pages 35-36 in Response of the habitat and biota of the inner
New York Bight to abatement of sewage sludge dumping: second annual
progress report--1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech.
Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
83. Pelletier, R.E., and D.D. DOW. 1989. Monitoring the
inundation extent of the Florida Everglades with AVHRR data in a geographic
information system. Pages 266-275 in ASPRS [Amer. Soc.
Photogram. Remote Sensing]/ACSM [Amer. Congr. Surv. Map.] Auto-Carto
9 Convention Symposium. American Society for Photogrammetry and
Remote Sensing, Falls Church, Va.
84. PENTTILA, J.A., G.A. NELSON, and J.M. BURNETT, III. 1989.
Guidelines for estimating lengths at age for 18 Northwest Atlantic finfish
and shellfish species. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech.
Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-66. 39 pp.
85. PHOEL, W.C., J. Loret, and C. Brush. 1989. Diving and
low cost remotely operated vehicles: complementary underwater research
techniques. Unpublished report available from National
Marine Fisheries Service, Bldg. 74, McGruder Rd., Highlands, NJ 07732.8
pp.
86. PHOEL, W., S. FROMM, K. SHARACK, B. MAY, and E. JONES. Sediment
metabolism. Pages 20-23 in Response of the habitat and
biota of the inner New York Bight to abatement of sewage sludge dumping:
second annual progress report -- 1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos.
Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
87. Rago, P.J., R.A. RICHARDS, R.M. Dorazio, and D.G. Deuel.
1989. Emergency striped bass research study report for 1987.
Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 1335 East-West
Hwy., Silver Spring, MD 20910. 61 pp.
88. REID, R., A. FRAME, D. RADOSH, S. FROMM, D. JEFFRESS, and J. VITALIANO.
1989. Benthic macrofauna. Pages 23-26 in Response
of the habitat and biota of the inner New York Bight to abatement of
sewage sludge dumping: second annual progress report--1988. NOAA
[Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
89. ROBOHM, R.A. 1989. An examination of bacterial disease
susceptibility in larval offspring of winter flounder inhabiting stressed
environments. Unpublished report available from National
Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460.
20 pp.
90. ROBOHM, R.A. 1989. A report on the link between stress
and bacterial disease in winter flounder. Unpublished report available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford,
CT 06460.19 pp.
91. SANO, M.A. 1989. Report of water masses receiving wastes
from ocean dumping at the 106-Mile Dumpsite, 1 October 1987 through
30 September 1988 with additional summary for calendar year 1988. [Nat.
Mar. Fish. Serv.,] Northeast Fish. Cent. Ref. Doc. 89-06. 11 pp.
92. SANO, M.H., and R.S. ARMSTRONG. 1989. Cooling of coastal
and shelf waters by wind-driven upwelling off the U.S. Northeast --
summer 1988. Oceanogr. Mon. Sum. 9(3): 3,12-13.
93. SANO, M.H., and C.P. FAIRFIELD. 1989. Anticyclonic
warm-core Gulf Stream rings off the northeastern United States during
1988. NAFO [Northwest Atl. Fish. Organ.] SCR [Sci. Counc. Res.]
Doc. 89/64. Ser. No. N1644.19 pp.
94. SANO, M.H., and C.P. FAIRFIELD. 1989. Evaluations of
differences in sea surface temperature between 1987 and 1988 for use
in study of sea turtle strandings along the southeast U.S. coast. [Nat.
Mar. Fish. Serv.,] Northeast Fish. Cent. Ref. Doc. 89-09. 28 pp.
95. SHERMAN, K. 1989. The Antarctic Marine Ecosystem: a
model for science and management during global change. Paper presented at Finker Foundation, May 11, 1989, New York, N.Y. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 28 Tarzwell Dr., Narragansett,
RI 02882-1199. 18 pp.
96. SHERMAN, K., E.B. COHEN (deceased), and R.W. Langton. 1989.
The Northeast Continental Shelf: an ecosystem at risk. Paper presented at Gulf of Maine Conference on Sustaining Our Common Heritage,
December 10-12, 1989, Portland, Maine. Available from National
Marine Fisheries Service, 28 Tarzwell Dr., Narragansett, RI 02882-1199.
57 pp.
97. SIBUNKA, J., and M.J. SILVERMAN. 1989. MARMAP surveys
of the continental shelf from Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, to Cape
Sable, Nova Scotia (1984-87). Atlas No. 3. Summary of operations.
NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-68.
197 pp.
98. SINDERMANN, C.J. 1989. Genetic threats to wild Atlantic
salmon stocks. Int. Counc. Explor. Sea C.M. [Comm. Mem.] 1989/F:15.
8 pp.
99. SINDERMANN, C.J. 1989. Report of the working group
on introductions and transfers of marine organisms. Int. Counc.
Explor. Sea C.M. [Comm. Mem.] 1989/F:16. 56 pp.
100. SINDERMANN, C.J. 1989. The shell disease syndrome
in marine crustaceans. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech.
Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-64. 43 pp.
101. SINDERMANN, C.J. (chair), F. Csulak, T.K. Sawyer, R.A. Bullis,
D.W. Engel, B.T. Estrella, E.J. Noga, J.B. PEARCE, J.C. RUGG, R. Runyon,
J.A. Tiedemann, and R.R. Young. 1989. Shell disease of crustaceans
in the New York Bight. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech.
Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-74. 47 pp.
102. SISSENWINE, M.P. 1989. Summing up. Paper presented at ICES [Int. Counc. Explor. Sea] Symposium on Multispecies Models
Relevant to Living Resources, October 2-4, 1989, The Hague, The Netherlands.
International Council for the Exploration of the Sea, Copenhagen, Denmark.
9 pp.
103. STEIMLE, F., and J. RUGG. 1989. Food habits of fish
and lobster. Pages 32-35 in Response of the habitat and
biota of the inner New York Bight to abatement of sewage sludge dumping:
second annual progress report--1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos.
Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
104. STROUT, G.A. 1989. Variation in the shelf water front
position in 1988 from Georges Bank to Cape Hatteras. NAFO [Northwest
Atl. Fish. Organ.] SCR [Sci. Counc. Res.] Doc. 89/63. Ser. No. N1643.
9 pp.
105. TUKHUNEN, B. 1989. Basic techniques for cooking fish.
Chapter 9 (pages 125-136) in I. Dore. Making the most of your
catch: an angler's guide. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
106. VALDES, B. 1989. Migration of winter flounder.
Pages 36-38 in Response of the habitat and biota of the inner
New York Bight to abatement of sewage sludge dumping: second annual
progress report -- 1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech.
Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
107. VITALIANO, J.J., and C.L. MacKENZIE, Jr. 1989. Shrimp
-- voracious predators, important prey. Underwater Nat. 18(3):
17-18.
108. WALDHAUER, R.R., and T. FINNERAN. 1989. Water column
nutrients. Pages 16-18 in Response of the habitat and biota of
the inner New York Bight to abatement of sewage sludge dumping: second
annual progress report -- 1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.]
Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
109. WILK, S. 1989. Fish and megainvertebrates. Pages
27-39 in Response of the habitat and biota of the inner New York
Bight to abatement of sewage sludge dumping: second annual progress
report -- 1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean. Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS
[Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
110. ZDANOWICZ, V., S. LEFTWICH, and E. LEIMBURG. 1989.
Sediment metals. Pages 19-20 in Response of the habitat
and biota of the inner New York Bight to abatement of sewage sludge
dumping: second annual progress report -- 1988. NOAA [Nat. Ocean.
Atmos. Admin.] Tech. Mem. NMFS [Nat. Mar. Fish. Serv.]-F/NEC-67.
Published Abstracts
111. BEJDA, A.J., B. VALDES, and A.L. STUDHOLME. 1989.
The effect of hypoxia on the growth of young-of-the-year winter flounder.
Page 42 in Program and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology
Workshop, December 5-6, 1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT
06460. (Abstr.)
112. BISAGNI, J.J. 1989. Remote detection of stratification
on Georges Bank -- "Picking on the pycnocline." Abstract
prepared for 17th Annual Middle Atlantic Bight Physical Oceanography
and Meteorology Workshop, October 26-27, 1989, Gloucester Point, Va.
Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 28 Tarzwell
Dr., Narragansett, RI 02882-1199. (Abstr.)
113. Bishop, G.A., and A.B. WILLIAMS. 1989. Taphonomy and
preservation of burrowing thalassinidean shrimps. Page I-156 in Abstracts: 28th International Geological Congress, Washington, D.C.
USA, July 9-19, 1989. Available from National Marine Fisheries
Service, National Museum of Natural History, 10th & Constitution
Ave., N.W., Washington, DC 20560. (Abstr.)
114. BODAMMER, J.E. 1989. Fine structural observations
on peritoneal phagocytes in winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus).
Abstract prepared for Joint Meeting of the American Fisheries Society,
Fish Health Section, and Eastern Fish Health Workshop, July 17-20, 1989,
Annapolis, Md. Available from National Marine Fisheries
Service, 904 S. Morris St., Oxford, MD 21654. (Abstr.)
115. BODAMMER, J.E., and G. Klein-MacPhee. 1989. A gross
and histological atlas of winter flounder larvae -- progress to date.
Page 43 in Program and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology
Workshop, December 5-6, 1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT
06460. (Abstr.)
116. BUCKLEY, L.J., A. SMIGIELSKI, T. HALAVIK, and G.C. LAURENCE.
1989. Factors contributing to variability in size and viability
of the eggs and larvae of winter flounder, Pseudopleuronectes americanus,
reared in the laboratory. Page 14 in Program and abstracts
of the Winter Flounder Biology Workshop, December 5-6, 1989, Mystic,
Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service,
212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
117. BUCKLEY, L.J., A. SMIGIELSKI, T. HALAVIK, and G.C. LAURENCE.
1989. Variability in size and viability of the eggs and larvae
of winter flounder, Pseudopleuronectes americanus, reared in
the laboratory. Abstract prepared for 13th Annual Reunion
of the American Fisheries Society, Early Life History Section, May 21-27,
1989, Merida, Mexico. Available from National Marine Fisheries
Service, 28 Tarzwell Dr., Narragansett, RI 02882-1199. (Abstr.)
118. DARDE, J.A. 1989. Delineation of inshore winter flounder
stocks in Massachusetts -- preliminary results using digital image analysis.
Page 45 in Program and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology
Workshop, December 5-6, 1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT
06460. (Abstr.)
119. DAWSON, M.A., and J.L. Renfro. 1989. Characterization
of organic anion transport by flounder renal proximal tubule in culture.
FASEB [Fed. Amer. Soc. Exp. Biol.] J. 3: A378. Abstract No. 881.
(Abstr.)
120. DAWSON, M., and J.L. Renfro. 1989. Organic anion transport
by flounder renal proximal tubule in culture: inhibition by 2,4-D and
DDA. Pages 18-19 in Program and abstracts of the Winter
Flounder Biology Workshop, December 5-6, 1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford,
CT 06460. (Abstr.)
121. DRAXLER, A.F.J. 1989. Phased cessation of sewage sludge
dumping in the inner New York Bight: sediment biogeochemistry response.
Abstract prepared for Benthic Ecology Meeting, March 17-19, 1989,
Solomons, Md. Available from National Marine Fisheries
Service, Bldg. 74, McGruder Rd., Highlands, NJ 07732. (Abstr.)
122. FARLEY, C.A. 1989. Mass mortalities and infectious
lethal diseases in bivalve mollusks and associations with geographic
transfers of populations. Page 30 in Abstracts: Aquaculture
'89, February 12-16, 1989, Los Angeles, Calif. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT
06460. (Abstr.)
123. GOLDBERG, R. 1989. Cage culture of yearling surf clams, Spisula solidissima, in coastal Georgia, USA. Page 19 in Collected abstracts of the 9th Annual Shellfish Biology Seminar,
February 21, 1989, Milford, Conn. Available from National
Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460.
(Abstr.)
124. GOLDBERG, R. 1989. Mariculture potential of juvenile
Atlantic surf clams, Spisula solidissima. Abstracts: Aquaculture
'89, February 12-16, 1989, Los Angeles, Calif. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT
06460. (Abstr.)
125. GOULD, E. 1989. Metal-exposed sea scallops: a review
and update of the effects of copper, cadmium, and zinc. Page 15 in Collected abstracts of the 9th Annual Shellfish Biology Seminar,
February 21, 1989, Milford, Conn. Available from National
Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460.
(Abstr.)
126. GOULD, E., B.A. Fowler, and D.W. Engel. 1989. Metal-exposed
sea scallops: a review and update of the effects of copper, cadmium,
and zinc. Mar. Environ. Res. 28: 219-220. (Abstr.)
127. HUGHES, J.B., D.M. PERRY, and A.T. HEBERT. 1989. Cytogenetic
and cytologic state and mortality of embryos of winter flounder, Pseudopleuronectes
americanus, from Long Island Sound and Boston Harbor. Page 50 in Program and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology Workshop, December
5-6, 1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine
Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
128. KERN, F.G. 1989. A sarcoma-like neoplasm in the hard
clam, Mercenaria mercenaria. Abstract No. 18 (page 33) in Program and abstracts: SIP [Society for Invertebrate Pathology]
XXII Annual Meeting, August 20-24, College Park, Md. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 904 S. Morris St., Oxford,
MD 21654.(Abstr.)
129. KERN, F.G. 1989. Recent changes in the range of "MSX" Haplosporidium nelsoni. Page 19 in Abstracts: Aquaculture
'89, February 12-16, 1989, Los Angeles, Calif. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT
06460. (Abstr.)
130. KERN, F.G., and A. ROSENFIELD. 1989. Shellfish health
and protection. Pages 33-34 in Abstracts: Aquaculture '89,
February 12-16, 1989, Los Angeles, Calif. Available from National
Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460.
(Abstr.)
131. LEWIS, E.J. 1989. An infection study of the oyster, Crassostrea virginica, by Haplosporidium nelsoni (MSX).
Abstract prepared for Atlantic Estuarine Research Society Meeting
-- Spring 1991, May 2-4, 1991, Beaufort, N.C. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 904 S. Morris St., Oxford, MD
21654. (Abstr.)
132. MERCALDO-ALLEN, R. 1989. Changes in the blood chemistry
of the American lobster, Homarus americanus, over the molt cycle.
Pages 25-26 in Life history of the American lobster: proceedings
of a workshop, November 29-30, 1989, Orono, Maine. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT
06460. (Abstr.)
133. NELSON, D.A., and J.B. HUGHES. 1989. A 3-year assessment
of reproductive success in winter flounder, Pseudopleuronectes americanus.
Page 28 in Program and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology
Workshop, December 5-6, 1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT
06460. (Abstr.)
134. PACHECO, A.L., and J. RUGG. 1989. Incidence of disease
in winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus) collected
during the 12-Mile Dumpsite recovery study. Page 31 in Program
and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology Workshop, December 5-6,
1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries
Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
135. PEARCE, J.B. 1989. The biological consequences of
development. Pages 6-7 in Collected abstracts of the 9th
Annual Shellfish Biology Seminar, February 21, 1989, Milford, Conn.
Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers
Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
136. PEARCE, J.B. 1989. The biology of pea crabs and their
relationship to mussels. Page 13 in Collected abstracts
of the 9th Annual Shellfish Biology Seminar, February 21, 1989, Milford,
Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service,
212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
137. PEREIRA, J.J., J. ZISKOWSKI, R. MERCALDO-ALLEN, and C. KUROPAT.
1989. Serum vitellogenin in tumored and untumored winter
flounder from the Boston Harbor area. Page 54 in Program
and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology Workshop, December 5-6,
1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries
Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
138. PIKANOWSKI, R.A. 1989. Experimental design of 12-Mile
Dumpsite recovery study -- an overview. Page 30 in Program
and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology Workshop, December 5-6,
1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries
Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
139. REID, R. 1989. Phased cessation of sewage sludge dumping
in the inner New York Bight: benthic macrofauna responses. Abstract
prepared for Benthic Ecology Meeting, March 17-19, 1989, Solomons,
Md. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, Bldg.
74, McGruder Rd., Highlands, NJ 07732. (Abstr.)
140. SINDERMANN, C.J. 1989. Pollution-associated disease
conditions in estuarine/coastal fish and shellfish: a status report
and perspective for the 1990s. Page 15 in Provisional volume
of abstracts of scientific papers and posters to be presented at the
[International Council for the Exploration of the Sea's] 77th Statutory
Meeting, October 5-13, 1989, The Hague, The Netherlands. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 904 S. Morris St., Oxford,
MD 21654. (Abstr.)
141. SINDERMANN, C.J. 1989. Role of the International Council
for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) in matters concerned with transfers
and introductions of marine organisms. Page 36 in Abstracts:
Aquaculture '89, February 12-16, 1989, Los Angeles, Calif. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford,
CT 06460. (Abstr.)
142. STILES, S., and J. CHOROMANSKI. 1989. Genetic strain
performance of oysters, site suitability, and low dissolved oxygen in
Long Island Sound. Page 14 in Collected abstracts of the
9th Annual Shellfish Biology Seminar, February 21, 1989, Milford, Conn.
Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers
Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
143. VALDES, B.A. 1989. A study of winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes
americanus) movements in the New York Bight. Page 31 in Program and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology Workshop, December
5-6, 1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine
Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
144. WIKFORS, G.H., G.E. FERRIS, B.C. SMITH, and J.W. TWAROG, Jr.
1989. Detrimental effects of cadmium-contaminated microalgae upon
laboratory-reared clams and oysters. Page 18 in Program
& abstracts: Twenty-Eighth Northeast Algae Symposium, April 29-30,
1989, Woods Hole, Mass. Available from National Marine
Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
145. WIKFORS, G.H., G.E. FERRIS, B.C. SMITH, and J.W. TWAROG, Jr.
1989. Survival and growth of juvenile clams and oysters on diets
of cadmium-contaminated microalgae. Page 16 in Collected
abstracts of the 9th Annual Shellfish Biology Seminar, February 21,
1989, Milford, Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries
Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460. (Abstr.)
146. WIKFORS, G.H., R. UKELES, and G.E. FERRIS. 1989. Nutrient
deficiency and storage products in cultured diatoms: do centric and
pennate diatoms respond alike? J. Phycol. (suppl.) 25(2): 18.
Abstr. No. 87. (Abstr.)
147. WILK, S.J., R.A. PIKANOWSKI, A.L. PACHECO, D.G. McMILLAN, and
L. STEHLIK. 1989. Distribution, relative abundance, and
size-age composition of winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus)
collected during the 12-Mile Dumpsite recovery study. Page 30 in Program and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology Workshop,
December 5-6, 1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National
Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT 06460.
(Abstr.)
148. ZDANOWICZ, V.S. 1989. Influence of cessation of sewage
sludge disposal on metal levels in New York Bight sediments. Abstract
prepared for Fifth Annual Symposium of the Society of Environmental
Toxicology and Chemistry, May 31, 1989, New Brunswick, N.J. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, Bldg. 74, McGruder Rd.,
Highlands, NJ 07732. (Abstr.)
149. ZISKOWSKI, J., J.J. PEREIRA, R. MERCALDO-ALLEN, and C. KUROPAT.
1989. New perspectives on fin erosion disease in New Haven Harbor
fish from prevalence, physiological, and radiographic studies.
Page 56 in Program and abstracts of the Winter Flounder Biology
Workshop, December 5-6, 1989, Mystic, Conn. Available from National Marine Fisheries Service, 212 Rogers Ave., Milford, CT
06460. (Abstr.)
Indices
Organisms
The American Fisheries Society
(AFS) has published lists of the scientific and common names of fishes,
mollusks, and crustaceans, respectively: 1) Robins, C.R. (Chair.), R.M.
Bailey, C.E. Bond, J.R. Brooker, E.A. Lachner, R.N. Lea, and W.B. Scott.
1980. A list of common and scientific names of fishes from the
United States and Canada. Amer. Fish. Soc. Spec. Pub. No. 12.
174 pp.; 2) Turgeon, D.D. (Chair.), A.E. Bogan, E.V. Coan, W.K. Emerson,
W.G. Lyons, W.L. Pratt, C.F.E. Roper, A. Scheltema, F.G. Thompson, and
J.D. Williams. 1988. Common and scientific names of aquatic
invertebrates from the United States and Canada: mollusks. Amer. Fish.
Soc. Spec. Pub. No. 16. 278 pp.; and 3) Williams, A.B. (Chair.),
L.G. Abele, D.L. Felder, H.H. Hobbs, Jr., R.B. Manning, P.A. McLaughlin,
and I. Perez Farfante. 1989. Common and scientific names
of aquatic invertebrates from the United States and Canada: decapod
crustaceans. Amer. Fish. Soc. Spec. Pub. No. 17. 77 pp.
For those fishes, mollusks, and crustaceans covered by the AFS lists,
only the common name -- if there is one -- is mentioned in the following
index. For organisms covered by the AFS lists for which no common
name exists, the scientific name is mentioned, followed by the encompassing
order and family names within parentheses.
For organisms not covered
by the AFS lists, if they have common names, then the common name is
mentioned, followed by the scientific name. If they don't have
common names, then the scientific name is mentioned and typically followed
by -- for higher/more advanced life forms -- encompassing higher-level
names within parentheses, or -- for lower/more primitive life forms
-- a generic descriptor within parentheses (e.g., bacterium,
alga, siphonophore).
Acadian redfish 13, 51, 57, 84
Acanthamoeba (amoeba) 31
alewife 57
American lobster 9, 57, 62, 63, 81, 82, 96, 101, 103, 109, 132
American plaice 13, 51, 57, 84
American shad 57
amoeba 31
anadromous fish 1, 57, 87, 98
anemone 25
Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) 3, 95
Atlantic cod 13, 16, 18, 30, 51, 57, 84, 112
Atlantic herring 13, 54, 57, 84, 96
Atlantic mackerel 13, 57, 84
Atlantic rockcrab 62, 81, 101, 109
Atlantic salmon 98
Atlantic surfclam 10, 11, 57, 84, 123, 124
Atlantic wolffish 13, 57
bacteria 31, 89, 90
Baltic macoma 122
bass -- see black sea bass, striped bass
bay scallop 19
bay shrimp -- see sevenspine bay shrimp
benthic macrofauna 62, 88, 134
benthos 4, 7, 9-11, 13, 14, 19, 24, 31, 39, 43, 46, 47,49, 51, 57-59,
62, 63, 73, 81, 82, 84, 88-90,
96, 97, 101, 103, 106, 107, 109, 111, 114-120, 122-126,
128-132, 135, 136, 139, 142,144, 145
bivalve mollusk 4, 7, 10, 11, 19, 31, 39, 57, 84, 96, 122-131,133-138,
142-145, 147, 149
black sea bass 57
blueback herring 57
blue crab 101
bluefin tuna 13
bluefish 57, 84
blue mussel 96, 122, 136
blue shark 64
Bonamia ostrea 122
box crab (Brachyura: Calappidae) 46
brown shrimp 14
butterfish 13, 57, 84
Calappa tortugae (Brachyura: Calappidae) 46
Calappidae -- see box crab
Capitella capitata (Capitellida: Capitellidae) 62, 88
cartilaginous fish 13, 56, 57, 62, 64, 73, 109
cephalopod 43
cetacean 27, 29
Chaetoceros calcitrans (diatom) 146
chaetognath 17
cod -- see Atlantic cod
common periwinkle 96
Condylactis gigantea (anemone) 25
copepod 53
coral 25, 47
crab -- see Atlantic rockcrab, blue crab, box crab, Dungeness crab,
Jonah crab, red deepsea crab, squatter pea crab
Crassostrea angulata (Ostreoida: Ostreidae) 122
crustacean 3, 9, 14, 15, 47, 48, 53, 57, 62, 63, 81, 82, 95,96, 100,
101, 103, 106, 107, 109, 132, 136
cusk 13, 57
Cyclozodion angustrum (Brachyura: Calappidae) 46
Cyclozodion tuberatum (Brachyura: Calappidae) 46
daggerblade grass shrimp 107
decapod crustacean 9, 14, 15, 25, 45-47, 57, 62, 63, 81, 82, 96,101,
103, 107, 109, 113, 132, 136
deepsea crab -- see red deepsea crab
demersal fish 13, 16, 18, 24, 30, 49-51, 54, 57-59, 62, 73, 77,81, 82,
84, 89, 90, 96, 103, 106, 109, 111, 112,114-120, 127, 133, 134,137,138,
143, 147, 149
demersal nekton 8
diatom 146
dogfish 57, 73
Dunaliella tertiolecta (microalga) 144, 145
Dungeness crab 9
eastern oyster 10, 19, 122, 129, 131, 142, 144, 145
edible oyster 122
eel grass (Zostera marina) 15
elasmobranch 64
epipelagic fish 41
Euphausia superba -- see Antarctic krill
euphausiid 3, 48, 95
fish -- see anadromous fish, cartilaginous fish, demersal fish, epipelagic
fish, pelagic fish
flounder -- see fourspot flounder, summer flounder, windowpane, winter
flounder, witch flounder, yellowtail flounder
fourspot flounder 62, 81, 109
goosefish 13, 73, 96
grass -- see eel grass
grubby 15
haddock 13, 16, 18, 51, 57, 84, 111
hake -- see luminous hake, red hake, silver hake, white hake
Haplosporidium costale 122
H. nelsoni 122, 129, 131
harbor porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) 27, 29
herring -- see alewife, Atlantic herring, blueback herring, river herring
ichthyoplankton 97
invertebrate 3, 4, 7, 9-12, 14, 15, 17, 19, 25, 31, 39, 43, 45,48, 53,
57, 62, 63, 81, 82, 84, 88-90,
95, 96,100, 101, 103, 106, 107, 109,113, 122-126,
128-132, 135, 136, 142, 144-146
Isochrysis galbana (microalga) 144, 145
Jonah crab 101
krill -- see Antarctic krill, Meganyctiphanes norvegica
little skate 62, 109
lobster -- see American lobster
longfin squid 12, 57
louvar 41
luminous hake 6
mackerel -- see Atlantic mackerel
macrofauna -- see benthic macrofauna
mako -- see shortfin mako
mammal -- see marine mammal
marine mammal 27, 29
megainvertebrate 62, 109
Meganyctiphanes norvegica 48
microalgae 144-146
mollusk 4, 7, 10-12, 19, 31, 39, 43, 57, 84, 96, 122-126, 128-131, 135,
136, 142, 144, 145
MSX 122, 129, 131
mussel -- see blue mussel
nekton -- see demersal nekton
Nitzschia sp. (diatom) 146
northern quahog 10, 19, 128, 144, 145
northern shortfin squid 12, 57
northern shrimp 9, 14, 57, 96
ocean pout 13, 57, 62, 81, 109
ocean quahog 57
octopus 43
Ostrea lurida (Ostreoida: Ostreidae) 122
oyster -- see eastern oyster, edible oyster, Pacific oyster
Pacific oyster 122
Paracyclois atlantis (Brachyura: Calappidae) 46
P. milneedwardsii (Brachyura: Calappidae) 46
pea crab -- see squatter pea crab
pelagic fish 13, 28, 54, 57, 64, 80, 84, 96
Penaeus esculentus (Penaeoidea: Penaeidae) -- see tiger prawn
P. vannanei (Penaeoidea: Penaeidae) 14
Periclimenes anthophilus (Palaemonoidea: Palaemonidae) 25
periwinkle -- see common periwinkle
Perkinsus marinus 122
Phaeodactylum cornutum (microalga) 144, 145
Pherusa affinis (Flabelligerida: Flabelligeridae) 62, 88
Phocoena phocoena -- see harbor porpoise
phytoplankton 20, 21, 68, 97, 144-146
pink shrimp 14
plaice -- see American plaice
plankton 20, 21, 42, 53, 68, 97, 144-146
pollock 13, 51, 57, 77, 84
porpoise -- see harbor porpoise
pout -- see ocean pout
prawn -- see tiger prawn
quahog -- see northern quahog, ocean quahog
rainbow trout 1
ray 73
red deepsea crab 101
redfish -- see Acadian redfish
red hake 13, 57, 62, 73, 81, 84, 103, 109
rhyncocoel 62, 88
river herring 57
robin -- see sea robin
rockcrab -- see Atlantic rockcrab
Saccostrea commercialis (Ostreoidea: Ostreidae) 122
Sagitta elegans (chaetognath) 17
salmon -- see Atlantic salmon
sandbar shark 64
scallop -- see bay scallop, sea scallop
scup 57, 84
sea bass -- see black sea bass
sea robin 73
sea scallop 57, 84, 125, 126
sea turtle 94
sevenspine bay shrimp 15, 107
shad -- see American shad
shark -- see blue shark, sandbar shark, shortfin mako
shortfin mako 56, 64
shortfin squid -- see northern shortfin squid
shrimp -- see brown shrimp, daggerblade grass shrimp, northern shrimp, Periclimenes anthophilus, pink shrimp, sevenspine bay
shrimp, thalassinidean, tiger prawn, Upogebia
corallifora, white shrimp
silver hake 13, 50, 51, 54, 57, 62, 73, 81, 84, 103, 109
skate 13, 57, 62, 73, 109
softshell 7, 10, 19, 39, 96, 122
spiny dogfish 57
squatter pea crab 136
squid 12, 43, 57, 73
striped bass 57, 87
Strongylocentrotus droebanchiensis (Echinoida: Strongylocentrotidae)
96
summer flounder 57, 84
surfclam -- see Atlantic surclam
swordfish 80
Symphurus callopterus (Soleoidei: Cynoglossidae) 24
thalassinidean 113
thorny skate 13
tiger prawn (Penaeus esculentus) 9
trout -- see rainbow trout
tuna -- see bluefin tuna, yellowfin tuna
turtle -- see sea turtle
Upogebia corallifora (Decapoda: Upogebiidae) 47
white hake 13, 51, 57
white shrimp 14
windowpane 51, 62, 81, 109
winter flounder 13, 49, 51, 57-59, 62, 81, 84, 89, 90, 103, 106, 109,
111, 114-120, 127, 133, 134, 137, 138, 143, 147, 149
winter skate 13
witch flounder 13, 51, 57, 84
wolffish -- see Atlantic wolffish
yellowfin tuna 13, 28
yellowtail flounder 13, 51, 54, 57, 84
zooplankton 42, 68, 97
Zostera marina -- see eel grass
Geographic Areas
To help the reader, especially the non-American
reader, locate some of the smaller and/or lesser known geographic areas,
the larger and/or better known geographic areas which encompass or adjoin
them are listed within parentheses.
Antarctic Marine Ecosystem 95
Barents Sea Ecosystem 36
Bay of Fundy 29
Benguela Ecosystem 36
Bering Sea Ecosystem 32
Bermuda 25
Boston (Mass.) Harbor 90, 127, 133, 137
Calcasieu Estuary (La.) 42
California Current Ecosystem 32
Cape Cod (Mass.) 118
Cape Cod Bay (Mass.) 15, 90
eastern Pacific 24
Everglades (Fla.) 2, 83
Georges Bank 16-18, 23, 30, 50, 51, 54, 77, 112
Georgia 123
Great Barrier Reef Ecosystem 36
Great South Channel (Mass.) 23
Gulf of Alaska 32
Gulf of Alaska Ecosystem 32
Gulf of Maine 27, 53, 54, 68, 77, 96
Gulf of Mexico 8, 32
Gulf of Mexico Ecosystem 32
Gulf of Thailand Ecosystem 36
Gulf Stream 93
Hudson-Raritan Estuary (N.J./N.Y.) 31, 62, 67
Hudson Shelf Valley 62, 67
Iberian Ecosystem 36
Insular Pacific Ecosystem 32
Kuroshio Current Ecosystem 36
Long Island Sound 90, 124, 127, 133, 142
Massachusetts 15, 49, 90, 118, 127, 133, 137
Middle Atlantic Bight 107
Nantucket Shoals (Mass.) 23
Narragansett Bay (R.I.) 128
New Haven (Conn.) Harbor 149
New York Bight 31, 44, 52, 53, 59, 60-62, 67, 68, 81, 82, 86, 88, 101,
103, 106, 108-110, 121, 134, 138, 139, 143, 147, 148
New York Bight apex 31, 44, 60-62, 67, 81, 82, 86, 88, 103, 106, 108-110,
121, 134, 138, 139, 143, 147, 148
Northeast Continental Shelf Ecosystem 32, 34, 96
Oyashio Current Ecosystem 36
106-Mile Dumpsite 52, 91, 101
Pacific -- see eastern Pacific, Insular Pacific Ecosystem, western
Pacific
Prydz Bay (Antarctica) 3
Raritan Bay (N.J./N.Y.) 31
Scotian Shelf 77
Southeast (U.S.) 94
Southeast Continental Shelf Ecosystem 32
12-Mile Dumpsite 31, 60-62, 67, 81, 82, 86, 88, 103, 106, 108-110,
121, 134, 138, 139, 143, 147, 148
Wassaw Sound (Ga.) 124
western Pacific 28
West Indies 47
Yellow Sea Ecosystem 36
Topical Subjects
abundance 9, 19, 25, 53, 56, 57, 62, 77, 80, 81, 109, 138, 147
acid -- see fatty acid, omega-3 fatty acid
age 3, 77, 84, 96, 147
age composition 77
age determination 3
age-length relationship 84
age structure 96
algal assay 20
anatomy 6
annual report 87
anoxia 21
aquaculture 4, 10, 11, 96, 98-100, 123, 136, 141
assay -- see algal assay
assessment -- see risk assessment, stock assessment
auto-regressive integrated moving-average model 9
avoidance 22
bacteriology 114
bathymetric range 46
bathythermograph -- see expendable bathythermograph
behavior -- see social behavior
bent finray condition 149
bibliography 65
biogeochemistry 2
biological effect 21, 100, 111, 116, 117, 127, 134, 139
biomass 34, 35, 62, 77, 80, 81, 96, 109
biomass yield 95
blood chemistry 132
bloom 21, 68
bottom current 62, 67
bottom trawl survey 51
bottom-water dissolved oxygen 62, 67
bottom-water stratification 62, 67
breeding 142
brown tide 21
by-catch 50, 51
cadmium 125, 126, 144, 145
cage culture 11, 123
catch 22, 28, 49-51, 57, 77, 80, 95, 96
catch per unit of effort 80
catch rate 28
catch variability 95
catchability 22
CCAMLR -- see Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living
Resources
chemical oceanography 20, 111
chemistry -- see biogeochemistry, blood chemistry, sediment chemistry,
water chemistry
chlorine 4
chlorophyll a 97
cholesterol 12-14
ciguatera poisoning 21
circulation -- see water circulation
climate change -- see global climate change
clinical progression 7
cold pool 62, 67
commercial fishery 19, 28, 50, 51, 57, 77
Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources
32, 95
common name 45
community 96
community production 96
community structure 96
compensatory mechanism 64
computer program 78
continuous plankton recorder 53
cooking -- see seafood preparation & cooking
copper 1, 125, 126
coral reef 25
CPR -- see continuous plankton recorder
CPUE -- see catch per unit of effort
culture -- see aquaculture, cage culture
current 16-18, 62, 67
cytogenetics 127
cytology 114, 127
DDA 59, 120
degradation -- see habitat degradation
density 11, 62, 97
density dependence 11
density stratification 62, 67, 112
depletion -- see stock depletion
depuration 4
development -- see ontogenetic development
diarrhetic shellfish poisoning 21
diel 17, 18, 22, 48
diel effect 22
diel movement 17, 18, 48
die-off/epizootic 7, 122
diet 144-146
digital image analysis 118
discard 50, 51
disease 1, 7, 10, 31, 39, 62, 76, 82, 89, 90, 100, 101, 109, 114,122,
128-131, 134, 135, 137, 140, 149
dissolved oxygen 62, 67, 111
distribution 16-19, 25, 43, 51, 56, 62, 81, 109, 136, 147
diving -- see SCUBA diving
DO -- see dissolved oxygen
dumping -- see ocean dumping
dumpsite 31, 52, 60-62, 67, 81, 82, 86, 88, 91, 101, 103, 106, 108-110,
121, 134, 138, 139, 143, 147, 148
dynamics -- see population dynamics
early life stage 6, 10, 11, 16, 18, 22, 30, 41, 51, 87, 89, 111, 112,
115-118, 127, 140, 144, 145
ecology 25
economics 57
ecosystem 32-35, 95, 96, 99
ecosystem effect 99
ecosystem management 33, 95
effluent plume -- see estuarine effluent plume
effort 28, 57, 80
egg 116, 117
embryo 127
endangered species 94
enhancement -- see fishery enhancement
environmental factor/influence 11, 17, 18, 35, 39, 87, 123, 131, 142,
147
environmental index 96
environmental influence -- see environmental factor/influence
epizootic -- see die-off/epizootic
equilibrium yield per recruit 80
erosion -- see fin erosion
estuary 15, 19, 42, 62, 67, 135, 140
estuarine effluent plume 62, 67
etiology 122
expendable bathythermograph 53
experimental design -- see sampling/experimental design
experimental fishery 50, 51
fatty acid 12-14
fecal pellet production 48
fecundity 64
fin erosion 149
fin rot 134
fishery 4, 11, 19, 28, 49-51, 55, 57, 69-75, 77, 96, 105
fishery enhancement 19, 99
fishery interaction 28
fishery management 19, 40, 50, 51, 77, 87, 95, 98
fishery - marine mammal interaction 27
fishery science 40
fishery technology 4, 12-14, 55, 69-75, 105
fishing gear 27, 28, 50
fishing mortality 64, 80
fitness index 149
fluorescent pigment aging method 3
flux 2
food habits 15, 56, 62, 103, 107, 109
fossil 41, 113
front 104
frozen storage 74
gear 30
gear comparison 30
genetics 98, 99, 127, 142
genetic effect 99
genetic selection 142
geographic range 46
geography 36
gillnet 27
global change 2, 34, 35, 95
global climate change 2, 34, 35
growth 11, 15, 20, 22, 56, 84, 111, 116-118, 123, 142, 144, 145
habitat 2, 8, 11, 15, 16, 18, 43, 44, 47, 83, 135
habitat degradation 135
habitat preference 16, 18
habitat selection 8
habitat type 8
habits -- see food habits
handling & processing -- see seafood handling & processing
heavy metal 1, 60, 62, 110, 125, 126, 144, 145, 148
hematology 137, 149
herbicide 59, 119, 120
heuristic model 9
histology 76, 115
histopathology 115
history 5, 37, 40; see also life history
hypoxia 21, 111
ICES -- see International Council for the Exploration of the Sea
identification -- see identification key, stock identification
identification key 43, 46
image analysis 3, 118
immunology 1, 89, 114
impoundment 100
index 15, 96, 149
indicator species 31
insecticide 59, 120
interaction -- see fishery interaction, fishery - marine mammal interaction
intermixing -- see population intermixing
international affairs 26, 99, 141
International Council for the Exploration of the Sea 37, 102, 141
intervention analysis 9
introduction/stocking/transfer 98, 99, 122, 130, 141
intrusions 23
juvenile 10,11,18,30,51,87,118,144,145
key -- see identification key
landings 49-51, 57, 77
large marine ecosystem 32-35, 95, 96
larva 6, 10, 16, 22, 30, 41, 89, 112, 115-117
larval morphology 41
legal affairs 99
length frequency 3, 44
life history 15, 27, 56, 136
limiting factor 19
line-transect survey 27, 29
liver tumor 137
logbook 50
longline 28
management 19, 32-35, 40, 50, 51, 77, 87, 95, 98, 130, 141
marination 69
Marine Biological Laboratory 40
marine mammal -- see fishery - marine mammal interaction
Marine Monitoring, Assessment, & Prediction Program 97
Marine Recreational Fisheries Statistics Survey 49
MARMAP -- see Marine Monitoring, Assessment, & Prediction Program
mass -- see water mass
maturity 54, 64, 80
maturity stage 54
MBL -- see Marine Biological Laboratory
mechanism -- see compensatory mechanism
meristics 6
mesh selection 50
metabolism -- see sediment metabolism
metal -- see heavy metal
methane 2
method/methodology 3, 4, 8, 11, 19, 27, 29, 30, 37, 39, 54, 57, 78,
85, 90, 97, 118, 138
migration 56, 62, 106, 109
MIR -- see Polish Sea Fisheries Institute
model 9, 37, 64, 80, 102, 121
molting 132
monitoring 5, 53, 68, 95, 97
morphology 41, 46, 47, 115
morphometrics 46
mortality 7, 11, 22, 64, 80, 89, 123, 127, 142, 144, 145, 149
movement 16-18, 48, 56, 143
MRFSS -- see Marine Recreational Fisheries Statistics Survey
MSVPA -- see multispecies virtual population analysis
multispecies model 102
multispecies virtual population analysis 102
name -- see common name, scientific name
NASCO -- see North Atlantic Salmon Conservation Organization
neoplasm 7, 128
neurotoxic shellfish poisoning 21
North Atlantic Salmon Conservation Organization 99
nutrient 20, 60, 62, 97, 108, 146
nutrition -- see seafood nutrition
obituary 38
ocean dumping 31, 60-62, 67, 81, 82, 86, 88, 91, 103, 106, 108-110,
121, 134, 138, 139, 143, 147, 148
oceanography -- see chemical oceanography, physical oceanography
omega-3 fatty acid 13
ontogenetic development 6
osteology 6, 41
otolith 118
oxygen -- see bottom-water dissolved oxygen, dissolved oxygen, seabed
oxygen demand, sediment oxygen demand
ozone 4
paleontology 113
paralytic shellfish poisoning 21
parasitism 10, 41, 129, 130, 136
pathogen 122
pathobiology 62, 76, 82, 100, 101, 109
pathology 62, 76, 82, 100, 109
pest 10
phaeopigment 97
phylogeny 41
physical oceanography 16-18, 22, 23, 52, 53, 62, 66-68, 78, 79, 91-94,
97, 104, 112
physiology 58, 59, 119, 120, 125, 126, 132, 137, 140, 146, 149
pickling 69
pigment -- see phaeopigment, fluorescent pigment aging method
plume -- see estuarine effluent plume
poisoning 21
Polish Sea Fisheries Institute 26
pollutant effect 1, 11, 42, 58, 59, 87, 101, 119, 120, 125, 126, 132,
133, 137, 138, 140, 144, 145
pollution 20, 31, 60-62, 67, 81, 82, 86, 88, 89, 91,100,103, 106, 108-110,
119, 121, 125,134-136, 138-140, 143-145, 147, 148
population dynamics 9, 11, 19, 37, 56, 57, 63, 64, 80, 87, 96, 142,
149
population intermixing 143
predation 10, 35, 96, 107
predator control 10
preservation -- see seafood preservation & storage
primary production 97
processing -- see seafood handling & processing
production -- see community production, fecal pellet production, primary
production
progression -- see clinical progression
proximate composition 12, 13
purse seine 28
pycnocline 112
range 43, 46, 47, 56, 129
recreational fishery 49, 55, 69-75, 77, 105
recruitment 63, 80
redox potential 60-62, 121
reef -- see coral reef
Registry of Marine Pathology 76
remotely operated vehicle 85
remote sensing 2, 83, 91, 94, 112
reproduction 11, 15, 54, 56, 64, 116, 117, 125-127, 133, 137
resuspension -- see sediment resuspension
risk assessment 130
ROMP -- see Registry of Marine Pathology
safety -- see seafood safety
salinity 53, 62, 66-68, 97, 131
salting 70
sampling 30, 50, 62
sampling/experimental design 62
sampling gear 30
sarcoma 7, 39, 122
satellite 2, 83, 91, 94, 112
scales 118
scientific name 45
SCUBA diving 85
seabed oxygen demand 86
seafood 12-14, 55, 69-75, 105
seafood handling & processing 72
seafood nutrition 12-14, 71
seafood preparation & cooking 69, 73, 105
seafood preservation & storage 55, 69, 70, 72, 74
seafood safety 75
sea sampling 50
seasonal effect 22
seasonality 20, 50, 51, 79
sediment 18, 60-62, 67, 86, 110, 121, 123, 148
sediment biogeochemistry 60-62, 121
sediment chemistry 60-62, 86, 110, 121
sediment metabolism 62, 86
sediment oxygen demand 62, 121
sediment resuspension 62
sediment transport 62, 67
seine -- see purse seine
serum vitellogenin 137
sewage sludge 30, 60-62, 67, 81, 82, 86, 88, 91, 103, 106, 108-110,
121, 134, 138, 139, 143, 147, 148
shelf water 91
shell disease 101
shellfish disease syndrome 100
Ship of Opportunity Program 52, 53
size-age composition 147
size composition 50
slope water 23, 91
sludge -- see sewage sludge
smoking 55
social behavior 25
sociology 19
SOOP -- see Ship of Opportunity Program
spatial distribution 17, 18, 25
spawning 54, 80
spawning stock biomass 80
spawning stock biomass per recruit 80
species 31, 44, 49, 62, 81, 94, 109, 115, 138
species composition 44, 62, 81, 109
species group 44
starvation 115
statistics 49, 138
stock assessment 37, 57, 77, 80, 87
stock depletion 95
stock identification 118
stock structure 80
stocking -- see introduction/stocking/transfer
storage -- see frozen storage, seafood preservation & storage
stranding 94
stratification -- see bottom-water stratification, density stratification
stress 89, 90
submersible 8
survey 5, 27, 29, 44, 49, 51, 54, 57, 77, 97
survival 64, 116, 117
symbiosis 25
systematics 6, 24, 41
tagging 62, 106, 109, 143
taphonomy 113
taxonomy
technology -- see fishery technology
temperature -- see water temperature
thermal stratification 112
tides 17
total biomass 62, 81, 109
transfer -- see introduction/stocking/transfer
transfer function model 9
trawl survey -- see bottom trawl survey
tumor 7, 128, 137
2,4-D 59, 119, 120
ultraviolet light 4
upwelling 62, 67, 92
videotape 8
virus 122
vitellogenin -- see serum vitellogenin
warm-core ring 91, 93
water chemistry 60, 62, 108
water circulation 62, 67
water mass 23, 91
water temperature 22, 52, 53, 62, 66-68, 78, 79, 92, 94, 97, 116, 117
weighout sampling 50
wetland 2, 83
WHL -- see Woods Hole Laboratory
WHOI -- see Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
wind 92
Woods Hole Laboratory 40
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution 40
XBT -- see expendable bathythermograph
yield 9, 19, 32, 34, 35, 64, 80, 87, 95, 96
young-of-the-year 111
zinc 125, 126
Center Authors
Almeida, F.P. 49-51
Arlen, L. 61
Armstrong, R.S. 92
Auditore, P.J. 18
Azarovitz, T.R. 5
Bejda, A.J. 111
Benway, R.L. 52, 53
Berman, M.S. 3
Bisagni, J.J. 112
Bodammer, J.E. 1, 114, 115
Blogoslawski, W.J. 4, 10
Bohan, M. 54
Bolz, G.R. 16, 18
Bruno, R. 61
Buckley, L.J. 116, 117
Burnett, J.M., III 54, 84
Burns, T.S. 50, 51
Busch, D.A. 23
Byrne, C.J. 5
Carver, J.H. 55, 56
Casey, J.G. 64
Chang, S. 50, 51
Choromanski, J. 142
Clark, S.H. 77
Cohen, E.B. (deceased) 96
Collette, B.B. 38, 41
Conser, R.J. 80
Darde, J.A. 54, 118
Dawson, M. 58, 59, 119, 120
D'Entremont, D.D. 12
Despres-Patanjo, L.I. 5
Dow, D.D. 2, 83
Draxler, A.F.J. 60, 61, 121
Fahay, M.P. 6, 15
Fairfield, C.P. 93, 94
Farley, C.A. 7, 39, 122
Ferris, G.E. 144-146
Finneran, T. 66, 108
Fogarty, M.J. 9, 63, 64
Fournier, P. 61
Frame, A. 88
Fromm, S. 86, 88
Gibson, J.A. 65
Goldberg, R. 11, 123, 124
Gould, E. 125, 126
Griswold, C.A. 48
Halavik, T. 116, 117
Hebert, A.T. 127
Holzwarth, T. 66, 79
Hughes, J.B. 127, 133
Idoine, J.S. 64
Ingham, M. 67
James, M. 61
Jeffress, D. 88
Jones, E. 86
Jossi, J.W. 53, 68
Kaylor, J.D. 69, 70
Kern, F.G. 128-130
Kohler, N.E. 64
Krzynowek, J. 12-14, 71
Kuropat, C. 137, 149
Laurence, G.C. 116, 117
Learson, R.J. 72, 73
Leftwich, S. 110
Leimburg, E. 110
Lewis, E.J. 31, 131
Licciardello, J.J. (deceased) 74, 75
Lough, R.G. 16-18, 30
MacKenzie, C.L., Jr. 19, 107
Mac Lean, S.A. 76
Mahoney, J.B. 20, 21
Maney, R.S. 13
Manning, J. 66
May, B. 86
Mayo, R.K. 54, 77
McMillan, D.G. 81, 147
McVey, A.L. 3
Mercaldo-Allen, R. 132, 137, 149
Morse, W.W. 22
Mountain, D.G. 23, 78, 79
Munroe, T.A. 24
Murphy, J. 12, 13
Nelson, D.A. 133
Nelson, G.A. 84
Nizinski, M.S. 25
O'Brien, L. 54
Pacheco, A.L. 81, 82, 134, 147
Panunzio, L.J. 13, 14
Pearce, J.B. 101, 135, 136
Penttila, J.A. 84
Pereira, J.J. 137, 149
Perez Farfante, I. 45
Perry, D.M. 127
Peterson, A.E., Jr. 26
Phoel, W.C. 85, 86
Pikanowski, R.A. 81, 138, 147
Polacheck, T. 27-29
Potter, D.C. 18, 30
Pratt, H.L. 64
Radosh, D. 88
Reid, R. 88, 139
Richards, R.A. 87
Robohm, R.A. 89, 90
Rosenfield, A. 130
Rugg, J. 82, 101, 103, 134
Sano, M.H. 91-94
Sawyer, T.K. 33, 101
Sharack, K. 86
Sherman, K. 32-36, 95, 96
Sibunka, J. 97
Silverman, M.J. 97
Sindermann, C.J. 98-101, 140, 141
Sissenwine, M.P. 80, 102
Smigielski, A. 116, 117
Smith, B.C. 144, 145
Smith, D.E. 68
Smith, T.D. 29, 37
Stehlik, L. 81, 147
Steimle, F. 103
Stiles, S. 142
Strout, G.A. 104
Studholme, A.L. 111
Theroux, R.B. 40
Tukhunen, B. 105
Twarog, J.W., Jr. 144, 145
Ukeles, R. 146
Valdes, B. 81, 106, 111, 143
Vecchione, M. 8, 42, 43
Vitaliano, J. 88, 107
Waldhauer, R. 108
Wikfors, G.H. 144-146
Wilk, S.J. 44, 109, 147
Williams, A.B. 45-47, 113
Zdanowicz, V.S. 110, 148
Ziskowski, J. 137, 149
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