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Institution

Cooperative Research Centre

About: Cooperative Research Centre is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Sea ice. The organization has 7633 authors who have published 8607 publications receiving 429721 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, textural derivatives based on bathymetry from multibeam hydroacoustics with underwater video observations were combined to model and map sessile biota between 10- and 60m water depth over 35 km2 in Point Addis Marine National Park (MNP), Vic., Australia.

132 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results imply that the key trait driving maturity was the timing of the onset of reproductive growth and the subsequent development of the demand for dry matter.

132 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of increasing the starch amylose content above normal levels (27-74%) and increasing the percentage of B-type starch granules (11-60%) on durum dough properties and the quality of the spaghetti derived from these doughs was used.
Abstract: To obtain an indication of the effect of increasing the starch amylose content above normal levels (27–74%) and increasing the percentage of B-type starch granules (11–60%) on durum dough properties and the quality of the spaghetti derived from these doughs, the reconstitution approach was used. Reconstituted flours were prepared from a common Wollaroi gluten, solubles and tailings fraction combined with starches containing varying B-granule contents, or with starches from maize with varying amylose content. An increased B-granule content increased farinograph water absorption. Cooked spaghetti firmness was highest with B-type granules at 32–44% (volume percentage basis), which is ≈10–15% higher than normally found in durum starch. Increasing the amylose content in the starch caused the dough to be more extensible, increased spaghetti firmness, and decreased water absorption with optimum quality of amylose at 32–44%. The information indicates there would be benefit in producing durum wheats with ...

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Data needed to prioritize areas for biodiversity protection are records of biodiversity features — species, species assemblages, environmental classes — for each candidate area and methods for treating data to minimize bias are reviewed.
Abstract: The data needed to prioritize areas for biodiversity protection are records of biodiversity features - species, species assemblages, environmental classes - for each candidate area. Prioritizing areas means comparing candidate areas, so the data used to make such comparisons should be comparable in quality and quantity. Potential sources of suitable data include museums, herbariums and natural resource management agencies. Issues of data precision, accuracy and sampling bias in data sets from such sources are discussed and methods for treating data to minimize bias are reviewed.

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented the first continuous, high spatio-temporal resolution time series of landfast sea ice extent along the East Antarctic coast for the period March 2000-December 2008.
Abstract: This study presents the first continuous, high spatiotemporal resolution time series of landfast sea ice extent along the East Antarctic coast for the period March 2000–December 2008. The time series was derived from consecutive 20-day cloud-free Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) composite images. Fast ice extent across the East Antarctic coast shows a statistically significant (1.43% ±0.30% yr−1) increase. Regionally, there is a strong increase in the Indian Ocean sector (20°–90°E, 4.07% ±0.42% yr−1), and a nonsignificant decrease in the western Pacific Ocean sector (90°–160°E, −0.40% ±0.37% yr−1). An apparent shift from a negative to a positive extent trend is observed in the Indian Ocean sector from 2004. This shift also coincides with a greater amount of interannual variability. No such shift in apparent trend is observed in the western Pacific Ocean sector, where fast ice extent is typically higher and variability lower than the Indian Ocean sector. The limit to the maximu...

131 citations


Authors

Showing all 7633 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Eric N. Olson206814144586
Nicholas G. Martin1921770161952
Grant W. Montgomery157926108118
Paul Mitchell146137895659
James Whelan12878689180
Shaobin Wang12687252463
Graham D. Farquhar12436875181
Jie Jin Wang12071954587
Christos Pantelis12072356374
John J. McGrath120791124804
David B. Lindenmayer11995459129
Ashley I. Bush11656057009
Yong-Guan Zhu11568446973
Ary A. Hoffmann11390755354
David A. Hume11357359932
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202211
2021243
2020284
2019300
2018327
2017419