Browsing Proceedings of the Nova Scotian Institute of Science by Title
Now showing items 202-221 of 1701
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Can We Stop the Atlantic Lobster Fishery Going the Way of Newfoundland's Atlantic Cod? A Perspective
(Nova Scotian Institute of Science, 2011)The cod and lobster fisheries of Atlantic Canada are managed in very different ways. Regulatory policy for Atlantic cod has traditionally been based on population or biomass measurements, something that has never been done ... -
Canada goose hunter profile, success and expenses on Prince Edward Island
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1983) -
Canada goose numbers, daily movements and foraging patterns on Prince Edward Island
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1983) -
The Canada Grouse (Dendragapus canadensis) in captivity; its food, habits, etc.
(McAlpine Publishing Co., Ltd., 1912) -
Canadian weather telegraphy and storm signals
(William Gossip, 1874) -
The carbon dioxide marchine, or plants on the make
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1978) -
Carboniferous flora, with attached spirorbes
(William Gossip, 1888) -
The carboniferous of Cape Breton
(William Gossip, 1888) -
The carboniferous of Cape Breton, with introductory remarks -Part III-
(William Gossip, 1888) -
The carboniferous of Cape Breton. Part I
(William Gossip, 1886) -
Castilleja coccinea (L.) spreng. (Scrophulariaceae), a first record for Nova Scotia
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1983) -
Catalogue of butterflies and moths, mostly collected in the neighborhood of Halifax and Digby, Nova Scotia
(McAlpine Publishing Co., Ltd., 1912) -
Catalogue of Silurian fossils from Arisaig, Nova Scotia
(WM. MacNab, 1892) -
A catalogue of the birds of Nova Scotia
(William Gossip, 1888) -
A catalogue of the birds of Prince Edward Island
(McAlpine Publishing Co. Ltd., 1908) -
CELEBRATING THE CAREER OF DR. JOSEPH J. KEREKES – INTERNATIONALLY RENOWNED, NOVA SCOTIA LIMNOLOGIST
(Nova Scotian Institute of Science, 2019) -
THE CENTENARY OF THE CANADIAN FISHERIES EXPEDITION (1914/15): AN IMPORTANT MILESTONE IN THE HISTORY OF NORTH AMERICAN MARINE RESEARCH
(Nova Scotian Institute of Science, 2017) -
Changes in Populations of Nesting Seabirds on the Bird Islands, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia
(Nova Scotian Institute of Science, 2004)The Bird Islands support the largest colonies of nesting seabirds in Nova Scotia. From a continental perspective the islands host one of the largest Great Cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo) colonies in North America and a ... -
Changes to the Publication of the PNSIS October 2013
(Nova Scotian Institute of Science, 2013)News from the NSIS Librarian