Surface Currents as Determined by Drift Card Releases on the Continental Shelf Off the Northwestern United States


Book Description

Measurements on surface current drift off Oregon and Washington were made in March 1964 through February 1966 with plastic drift cards dropped from Coast Guard planes at selected points. Results show pronounced surface drift to the north in winter and to the south in spring, each drift associated with a strong wind flow. From April to late in the fall the drift is variable; during this period drift cards were returned showing surface drift opposite to wind flow, indicating that wind direction and intensity are not necessarily indications of surface current flow.










Resource Publication


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Technical Papers


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Rainbow Trout Growth in Circular Tanks


Book Description

Prediction equations correlating density of fingerling rainbow trout with growth, yield, and food use efficiency indicated that ammonia nitrogen resulting from high fish densities wes responsible for reductions in all three factors. These predictable density-dependent responses present fish-culturists with alternatives of density selection for evaluation and attainment of specific goals. In examples, fish-culturists, by manipulating density, could achieve rapid growth, produce the maximum weight possible, balance yield with cost, optimize fish quality, or combine two or more of these goals.