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A Graduate Course in Larval Fish Identification and Ecology
MSCI 657, MEES 698, UNE BIO 580
Early Life History of Marine Fishes
- Dates: 29 July -16 August 2008
- 3 credits
- Application deadline: 1 May 2008
- Costs: $1,510 (tuition) plus $1,030 (room and board)
- Professors John E. Olney (College of William and Mary) and Edward D. Houde (University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science)
- Download brochure (pdf)
This lecture and laboratory course offers a comprehensive view of the biology and taxonomy of early life stages of fishes. These stages, including pelagic eggs, larvae and newly-transformed juveniles, are abundant and diverse components of aquatic ecosystems. Their small size, dynamic growth and mortality rates, and dependence on ambient environmental factors, including ocean physics, make these stages vulnerable to variability in climate and to stresses of anthropogenic origin. Level of reproductive success in teleosts, termed recruitment, is highly variable and largely dependent on variability in survival of these early life stages. Knowledge of their morphological development contributes to studies of phylogenetic relationships. Ontogenetic data serve to clarify the complex systematics of teleost fishes, the most diverse and largest class of vertebrates. Early life stages often have specialized adaptations to insure survival in stressful habitats. In the laboratory, larvae of 145 families of teleostean fishes are examined and characters useful in identification are presented.
This is a graduate-level course for students with an interest in fish ecology, fisheries science, ichthyology and biological oceanography. It is presumed that students will have some experience and background in those disciplines. Prerequisites include an undergraduate degree in a biological discipline; permission of the instructors is required to be admitted to the course. No more than 20 students will be accepted. The lectures and laboratories will be held at the Marine Science Center of the University of New England. For further information, contact Dr. Olney (olney@vims.edu) or Dr. Houde (ehoude@cbl.umces.edu).
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