5,356 results
Industry
People
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-190
DATE START/END: 24 FEB 2018 - 30 MAY 2019

Assessment of gamma irradiation as a feasible method for treating prawns to inactivate White Spot Syndrome Virus

On 1 December 2016 the internationally notifiable pathogen White Spot Syndrome Virus (WSSV) was confirmed in prawn farms on the Logan River in Moreton Bay Queensland. Subsequent investigations by Biosecurity Queensland found that low numbers of wild prawns and crabs caught in the Logan River and...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Agriculture and Fisheries EcoScience Precinct
Adoption
Blank
PUBLISHED:
2015-06-01

Back from the brink

It takes a rare combination of factors for a restocking program to work and be successful including long-term commitment and breeding know-how; popular appeal also helps Matthew McLellan, Narrandera fisheries centre hatchery manager, holds a mature Trout cod ready for egg collection. Photo:...
Blank
Blank
DATE:
2021-06-01

FRDC Research and Innovation Investment Briefing June 2021

Changes are coming The Stakeholder briefing is changing. You may have noticed it now has a new name, the FRDC Research and Innovation Investment Briefing. Over the next few issues, this briefing will re-focus its purpose towards research and development...
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2016-049
DATE START/END: 14 JUL 2016 - 28 FEB 2017

IPA APFA: detection of pesticide impacts on larval prawns in hatcheries and presence in estuarine intake water

New types of pesticides are being used in both agriculture and in “household” applications. The use of organophosphate pesticides is being phased out because they are toxic to a wide range of aquatic life forms and replaced by neonicotinoid pesticides, such as imidacloprid, which are more specific...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Industry
Blank
PUBLISHED:
2019-05-31

Connecting health professionals with sustainable seafood

Combined information on the health benefits and sustainability of Australian fish stocks will help health professionals confidently recommend that clients eat more Australian seafood By Catherine Norwood Photo: Shutterstock Want to protect your brain, heart, eyesight and...
View Quicklinks