Oceanic Observations of the Pacific, 1958


Book Description

This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1965.




Physical, Chemical, and Biological Observations in the Eastern Tropical Pacific Ocean SCOT Expedition, April-June 1958


Book Description

This report describes the oceanographic methods used, and lists in tabular form the results obtained, on Expedition SCOT in the eastern tropical Pacific. This expedition, conducted in April, May and June, 1958, by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography with the co-operation of the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission, was the first of a series of cruises devoted to the oceanography of the United States tropical tuna fishing region. These cruises are part of a program of investigations carried out by the Scripps Institution under contract to the U.S. Bureau of Commercial Fisheries. The main object of the expedition was to study the distribution of ocean properties in the region as a whole at a different season and with greater coverage than in any former expedition. The survey extended from San Diego, California, to latitude 5°N. Properties measured or computed were: weather conditions, temperature, salinity, density, thermosteric anomaly, dynamic height anomaly, dissolved oxygen concentration, inorganic phosphorus concentration, the attenuation of diffuse submarine daylight, incident solar radiation, chlorophyll a, standing crop of zooplankton, standing crop of small nekton, surface current direction and velocity (by GEK), and primary production rate. Additional information presented includes a summary listing of bathythermograph observations and of organisms captured in night-lighting operations. Some preliminary results of analysis of data, including experiments made aboard ship on the growth of ocean phytoplankton in response to various combinations of added chemicals, are given.



















Microhematocrit as a Tool in Fishery Research and Management


Book Description

Abstract: The micro method of hematocrit is rapidly replacing red cell counts in clinical hematology. Observations were made on the value of this method in routine hematological examination of trouts. Under the conditions of data collection, the normal hematocrit values for brook trout were 45 to 50, for brown trout 39 to 44, and for rainbow trout 45 to 53. There was a close correlation between the hematocrits, red cell counts and hemoglobin. The commercial heparinized capillaries, while excellent for human blood, tend to give somewhat higher readings (7 to 18 percent) with trout, due to incomplete prevention of blood coagulation. The procedure as applied to trout is described in detail.