Results 161 to 165 of about 5,779 (165)
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Zootaxa, 2015
Early development of fat snook, Centropomus parallelus (Poey 1860), is described based on embryos. and larvae obtained from rearing experiments and from specimens caught in the field, in Cananéia, southeastern Brazil, during December 1999-January 2000. Larvae of common snook, C.
Michael Kengo, Itagaki +4 more
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Early development of fat snook, Centropomus parallelus (Poey 1860), is described based on embryos. and larvae obtained from rearing experiments and from specimens caught in the field, in Cananéia, southeastern Brazil, during December 1999-January 2000. Larvae of common snook, C.
Michael Kengo, Itagaki +4 more
openaire +1 more source
Zootaxa, 2013
Early development of fat snook, Centropomus parallelus (Poey 1860), is described based on embryos and larvae obtained from rearing experiments and from specimens caught in the field, in Cananéia, southeastern Brazil, during December 1999–January 2000. Larvae of common snook, C.
MICHAEL KENGO ITAGAKI +4 more
openaire +1 more source
Early development of fat snook, Centropomus parallelus (Poey 1860), is described based on embryos and larvae obtained from rearing experiments and from specimens caught in the field, in Cananéia, southeastern Brazil, during December 1999–January 2000. Larvae of common snook, C.
MICHAEL KENGO ITAGAKI +4 more
openaire +1 more source
Aquaculture, 2004
Fat snook (Centropomus parallelus) is a candidate species for aquaculture, but little work has been done towards commercialization of this species. A major constraint has been the inability to obtain consistent and predictable larval survival to metamorphosis, a consequence of high mortality during the first-feeding stage.
Temple, S, Cerqueira, VR, Brown, JA
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Fat snook (Centropomus parallelus) is a candidate species for aquaculture, but little work has been done towards commercialization of this species. A major constraint has been the inability to obtain consistent and predictable larval survival to metamorphosis, a consequence of high mortality during the first-feeding stage.
Temple, S, Cerqueira, VR, Brown, JA
openaire +3 more sources
Ontogenetic development of the digestive system in reared fat snook (Centropomus parallelus) larvae.
Communications in agricultural and applied biological sciences, 2014A, Teles +5 more
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