Amanote Research
Register
Sign In
Modelling Sediment Assimilative Capacity and Organic Carbon Degradation Efficiency at Marine Fish Farms
Aquaculture Environment Interactions
- Germany
doi 10.3354/aei00267
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract
Available in
full text
Categories
Management
Monitoring
Aquatic Science
Policy
Water Science
Law
Technology
Date
August 1, 2018
Authors
F Bravo
J Grant
Publisher
Inter-Research Science Center
Related search
Modelling Effluent Assimilative Capacity of Ikpoba River, Benin City, Nigeria
Nigerian Journal of Technology
Predators on Marine Fish Farms in Tasmania
Papers and Proceedings - Royal Society of Tasmania
Multidisciplinary
Degradation of Dead Microbial Biomass in a Marine Sediment
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Applied Microbiology
Biotechnology
Ecology
Food Science
Macrobenthic Invertebrates in Relation to Sediment Properties in Some Fish Farms.
Egyptian Journal of Aquatic Biology and Fisheries
Aquatic Science
Relationship of Bacterial Richness to Organic Degradation Rate and Sediment Age in Subseafloor Sediment
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Applied Microbiology
Biotechnology
Ecology
Food Science
Mineralization of Organic Nitrogen and Carbon (Fish Food) Added to Anoxic Sediment Microcosms: Role of Sulphate Reduction
Marine Ecology - Progress Series
Evolution
Ecology
Systematics
Aquatic Science
Behavior
Ecosystem and Assimilative Capacity of Rivers With Control Structures
WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment
Environmental Science
Organic Carbon to 234Th Ratios of Marine Organic Matter
Marine Chemistry
Environmental Chemistry
Water Science
Chemistry
Oceanography
Technology
Marine Environmental Characteristics in the Coastal Area Surrounding Tongyeong Cage-Fish Farms
Journal of the Korean Society for Marine Environment & Energy