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Fishes of the Gulf of Maine

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TLDR
The first part of the general report, dealing with the fishes was published in 1925, as Bulletin of the United States Bureau of FisherIes, and subsequent parts describing the plankton of the offshore waters of the Gulf and the physical Characteristics of its waters were published in 1926-27, as Part 2. as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
During the summer of 1912 the Bureau of Fisheries with the cooperation of the Museum of Com;arative Zoology of Harvard Un~vers~ty, cOInInenced an oceanographic and bIOlogIcal survey of the Gulf of Maine, with special reference to its fishes to its floating plants and animals (Plankton), to the physical and chemical state of its waters and to the circulation of the latter. Cruises ;ere made on the Fisheries schooner Grampu8 during the summers and autumns of 1912, 1913, 1914, 1915 and 1916, and during the winters and springs of 1913 and 1915. The work Was interrupted by the war, but was resumed with a cruise of the Fisheries steamer Albatross in the late winter and spring of 1920, and was continued by the Fisheries steamer Halcyon during the winter and spring of 1920-21, and the summers of 1921 and 1922. The first part of the general report, dealing with the fishes was published in 1925, as Bulletin ~o (Pt. 1) of the United States Bureau of FisherIes; 1 SUbsequent parts describing the plankton of the offshore waters of the Gulf and the physical Characteristics of its waters were published in 1926-27, as Part 2. The preparation of the section on the fishes was assigned originally to W. W. Welsh, who had gathered a large body of original observations on the growth, reproduction, diet, and other phases of the lives of many of the more important species. The report was far advanced when it was interrupted by his untimely death, and H. B. Bigelow ~dertook to carry it to publication along the Imes originally laid down. The new edition, entailing a general revision and the addition of In'Uch new lnaterial, has been prepared jointly by !: B. Bigelow and by W. C. Schroeder.

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Contrasting patterns of resource utilization between juvenile estuarine predators: the influence of relative prey size and foraging ability on the ontogeny of piscivory

TL;DR: The findings highlight the importance of the availability of appropriately sized forage fishes to the ontogeny of piscivory and provide evidence that predator-prey size relationships and disparate foraging abilities can generate inter- and intra-specific variation in patterns of resource utilization and predator growth.
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The Uptake of Calcium-45 in the Acellular-Boned Toadfish*

TL;DR: Bone growth and calcium metabolism were studied in marine acellular-boned toadfish by tetracycline and by45Ca labeling over a 26-day period, finding differences in45Ca uptake in these tissues appeared to be related to the relative surface areas of bone rather than to differences in mineral content per unit volume of bone.
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Carbohydrate absorption in cestodes from elasmobranch fishes.

TL;DR: Eight species of cestodes from elasmobranch fishes absorbed glucose and galactose and a substance that was presumably lactic acid was excreted by all eight species ofcestodes.
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Adaptation of renal function to hypotonic medium in the winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus)

TL;DR: The comparison of protein patterns obtained from urine and serum samples revealed that high molecular weight protein prevail in the serum whereas low molecular weight proteins dominate in the urine, which may reflect size selectivity of the glomerular filtration barrier for serum proteins also in the winter flounder.
Book ChapterDOI

Biology and fisheries of North-west Atlantic hake (silver hake: M. bilinearis)

TL;DR: The North-eastern continental shelf of North America, which includes the Middle Atlantic Bight, Georges Bank, the Gulf of Maine, and the Scotian Shelf, encompasses habitat for many pelagic and demersal species and some of the most productive fishing grounds in the North-west Atlantic Ocean as discussed by the authors.