Data

Soviet Fishery Data (Australian Waters) - vessel Sutchan July 1968-January 1969

data.gov.au
CSIRO Marlin Data Catalogue (Owned by)
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=http://data.gov.au/data/dataset/e75ebaf3-fc1d-4f5b-b744-2a5624f0b749&rft.title=Soviet Fishery Data (Australian Waters) - vessel Sutchan July 1968-January 1969&rft.identifier=soviet-fishery-data-australian-waters-vessel-sutchan-july-1968-january-19691&rft.publisher=data.gov.au&rft.description=cmar:CATCH_HEADER_AODN_VIEW - Catch data for Sutchan Voyage Sutchan voyage Jul 1968-Jan 1969Data Link - Data available via Data TrawlerDocumentation Link - Dataset description (JEMS only dataset- authorisation required)This dataset comprises catch compositions and trawl locations from a cruise of the Russian fishery research vessel Sutchan carried out in Australian waters between January and June 1966, containing 160 pelagic trawls from the South Australia coast, Great Australian Bight, Western Australia coast and North West Shelf. Most records include catch composition by species (presence/absence but not weight), also some data on length frequency, maturity and diet of commercially important species. The data were obtained by exchange with Soviet scientists in the mid 1990s and has had CSIRO species codes incorporated. The dataset is now in an Oracle database in Hobart, and analyses/summaries of the data are given in the accompanying report (see References). A MS Access version of the dataset has been compiled for use within the North West Shelf-JEMS study. This version is available on-line for researchers in the NWS-JEMS study (see data links). The data are also accessible to authorised users via CMR's Data Trawler application. A username and password is required to access this dataset.&rft.creator=CSIRO Marlin Data Catalogue&rft.date=2025&rft.coverage=113.03472,-36.46667 139.18472,-36.46667 139.18472,-18.08333 113.03472,-18.08333 113.03472,-36.46667&rft.coverage=113.03472,-36.46667 139.18472,-36.46667 139.18472,-18.08333 113.03472,-18.08333 113.03472,-36.46667&rft_rights=notspecified&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Licence & Rights:

Other view details
Notspecified

notspecified

Brief description

This dataset comprises catch compositions and trawl locations from a cruise of the Russian fishery research vessel "Sutchan" carried out in Australian waters between January and June 1966, containing 160 pelagic trawls from the South Australia coast, Great Australian Bight, Western Australia coast and North West Shelf. Most records include catch composition by species (presence/absence but not weight), also some data on length frequency, maturity and diet of commercially important species. The data were obtained by exchange with Soviet scientists in the mid 1990s and has had CSIRO species codes incorporated. The dataset is now in an Oracle database in Hobart, and analyses/summaries of the data are given in the accompanying report (see References). A MS Access version of the dataset has been compiled for use within the North West Shelf-JEMS study. This version is available on-line for researchers in the NWS-JEMS study (see data links). The data are also accessible to authorised users via CMR's "Data Trawler" application. A username and password is required to access this dataset.

Full description

cmar:CATCH_HEADER_AODN_VIEW - Catch data for Sutchan Voyage Sutchan voyage Jul 1968-Jan 1969
Data Link - Data available via Data Trawler
Documentation Link - Dataset description (JEMS only dataset- authorisation required)

This dataset is part of a larger collection

Click to explore relationships graph

113.03472,-36.46667 139.18472,-36.46667 139.18472,-18.08333 113.03472,-18.08333 113.03472,-36.46667

126.10972,-27.275

113.03472,-36.46667 139.18472,-36.46667 139.18472,-18.08333 113.03472,-18.08333 113.03472,-36.46667

126.10972,-27.275

User Contributed Tags    

Login to tag this record with meaningful keywords to make it easier to discover

Identifiers