Publications in 1996

Aldana-Aranda, D., L. Marín and N. Brito. 1996. Preliminary studies on growth of post larval and juvenile pink conch Strombus gigas (Mollusca: Gastropoda), using a microencapsulated food. (In Spanish: Estudios preliminaires sobre crecimiento de post larvas y juveniles del caracol rosa Strombus gigas (Mollusca: Gastropoda), utilizando un alimento microencapsulado). Proc. Gulf Carib. Fish. Inst. 44: 470-482.

Boettcher, A.A. and N.M. Targett. 1996. Induction of metamorphosis in queen conch, Strombus gigas Linnaeus, larvae by cues associated with red algae from their nursery grounds. J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol. 196: 29-52.

Brooke, S. and R. Mann. 1996. Use of mesocosms for 'in situ' culture of marine invertebrate larvae. J. Shellfish Res. 15(2): 491-492.

Davis, M., G.A. Hodgkins and A.W. Stoner. 1996. A mesocosm system for ecological research with marine invertebrate larvae. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 130: 97-104.

Erlambang, T. 1996. Some biology and ecology aspects of dog conch (Strombus canarium) based on a year round study in Riau province, Indonesia. J. Xiamen Fish. Coll./Xiamen Shuichan Xueyuan Xuebao 18(1): 33-41.

Jones, R.L. 1996. Spatial analysis of biological and physical features associated with the distribution of queen conch, Strombus gigas, nursery habitats. M.S. thesis, Florida Institute of Technology, Melbourne, Florida, 98 pp.

Mackenzie, C.L., Jr and L.L. Stehlik. 1996. The crustacean and molluscan fisheries of Honduras. Mar. Fish. Rev. 58(3): 33-44.

Marshall, L.S., Jr. and R.N. Lipcius. 1996. Abundance and distribution patterns of epibenthic predators relative to juvenile queen conch patch densities. Proc. Gulf Carib. Fish. Inst. 44: 483-484.

Maul, G.A. 1996. Ocean science in relation to sustainable economic development and coastal area management of small islands. Coastal and Esuarine Studies 51: 1-17.

Mulliken, T.A. 1996. Status of the queen conch fishery in the Caribbean. TRAFFIC Bulletin, 16(1): 17-28.

Noyes, K.H. 1996. Ontogeny of settlement behavior in queen conch (Strombus gigas) larvae. M.S. thesis, Florida Institute of Technology, Melbourne, Florida, 56 pp.

Quinn, N.J. and M. Hanrahan. 1996. Status of the queen conch resources in St. Thomas and St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands: is there hope for recovery? Proc. Gulf Carib. Fish. Inst. 44: 439-458.

Ray, M. and A.W. Stoner. 1996. Marine fishery reserves: a metapopulation approach. [Abstract]. In: Lessios, H.A. and I.G. Macintyre (Eds.), Abstracts, 8th International Coral Reef Symposium, June 24-29, 1996, p. 163. 8th International Coral Reef Symposium, Panama City, Panama.

Ray, M. and A.W. Stoner. 1996. Queen conch density, movement patterns, and size distribution in a tidal flow field nursery. Proc. Gulf Carib. Fish. Inst. 44: 464-469.

Reed, S.E. 1996. Reproductive anatomy and biology of the genus Strombus in the Caribbean: I. Females. Proc. Gulf Carib. Fish. Inst. 44: 413-426.

Reed, S.E. 1996. Reproductive anatomy and biology of the genus Strombus in the Caribbean: I. Males. Proc. Gulf Carib. Fish. Inst. 44: 427-438.

Rodriguez Gil, L.A. 1996. Development of intensive larval culture for the milk conch, Strombus costatus Gmelin in the Yucatan Peninsula. (In Spanish: Desarrollo del cultivo larval intensivo del caracol blanco, Strombus costatus Gmelin en la Peninsula de Yucatan). Proc. Gulf Carib. Fish. Inst. 44: 514-532.

Roy, K. 1996. The roles of mass extinction and biotic interaction in large-scale replacements: a reexamination using the fossil record of stromboidean gastropods. Paleobiology 22(3): 436-452.

Sanders, M.J. 1996. Summary review and policy issues for selected fisheries of Jamaica. FAO Technical Coop. Programme, Rome, Italy, 32 pp.

Soekendarsi, E. and S. Santosa. 1996. Algae from Sangrobengi Island, South Sulawesi, including new records and a checklist of gastropods collected with the algae. Spec. Publ. Phuket Mar. Biol. Cent., No. 16, pp. 205-208.

Stoner, A.W., R.A. Glazer and P.J. Barile. 1996. Larval supply to queen conch nurseries: relationships with recruitment process and population size in Florida and the Bahamas. J. Shellfish Res. 15(2): 407-420.

Stoner, A.W., P.A. Pitts and R.A. Armstrong. 1996. Interaction of physical and biological factors in the large-scale distribution of juvenile queen conch in seagrass meadows. Bull. Mar. Sci. 58(1): 217-233.

Stoner, A.W. and M. Ray. 1996. Queen conch, Strombus gigas, in fished and unfished locations of the Bahamas: effects of a marine fishery reserve on adults, juveniles, and larval production. Fish. Bull. 94(3): 551-565.

Stoner, A.W. and M. Ray. 1996. Shell remains provide clues to historical distribution and abundance patterns in a large seagrass-associated gastropod (Strombus gigas). Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 135: 101-108.

Stoner, A.W., M. Ray, R.A. Glazer and K.J. McCarthy. 1996. Metamorphic responses to natural substrata in a gastropod larva: decisions related to postlarval growth and habitat preference. J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol. 205: 229-243.

Stoner, A.W. and K.C. Schwarte. 1996. Source and significance of deep-water conch in the central Bahamas. Proc. Gulf Carib. Fish. Inst. 44: 459-463.

Tewfik, A. 1996. An assessment of the biological characteristics, abundance, and potential yield of the queen conch (Strombus gigas L.) fishery on the Pedro bank off Jamaica. M.S. thesis, Acadia Univ., Wolfville, Nova Scotia, 139 pp.

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