Aaron C. Ballagh
James Cook University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Aaron C. Ballagh.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2013
Leanne M. Currey; Ashley J. Williams; Bruce D. Mapstone; Campbell R. Davies; G. Carlos; David J. Welch; Colin A. Simpfendorfer; Aaron C. Ballagh; Ann Penny; Edwin Mark Grandcourt; Amos Mapleston; A. S. Wiebkin; K. Bean
Life-history characteristics of six tropical Lethrinus species sampled from the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area were compared. Two species groups were identified based on fork length (LF ): large species with maximum LF > 640 mm (longface emperor Lethrinus olivaceus, yellowlip emperor Lethrinus xanthochilus and spangled emperor Lethrinus nebulosus) and small species with maximum LF < 480 mm (Pacific yellowtail emperor Lethrinus atkinsoni, pink ear emperor Lethrinus lentjan and ornate emperor Lethrinus ornatus). Lifespan was not correlated with LF . Early growth for all species was rapid and similar during the first few years of life, but coefficients of the von Bertalanffy growth function varied considerably among species. Growth also differed between sexes for L. atkinsoni. Reproductive characteristics varied among species, with peak periods of spawning occurring in November to December for L. atkinsoni, July to August for L. nebulous, September to October for L. olivaceus and a protracted season for L. lentjan, although fewer samples were available for the last two species. Sex-specific LF and age distributions and gonad histology of L. lentjan were suggestive of a functional protogynous reproductive pattern, as observed in other lethrinids. Gonad histology indicated non-functional protogynous hermaphroditism for L. atkinsoni and L. nebulosus. The diversity of life histories among these closely related species emphasizes the difficulty in devising single management strategies appropriate for multi-species fisheries and illustrates the importance of understanding species-specific life histories to infer responses to exploitation.
Marine and Freshwater Research | 2006
Aaron C. Ballagh; Gavin A. Begg; Amos Mapleston; Andrew J. Tobin
The growth of narrow-barred Spanish mackerel (Scomberomorus commerson) was examined over a broad spatial scale encompassing the east coast of Queensland, Australia. Our aim was to use back-calculation to identify potential biases in growth estimation, and to provide a more recent estimate of growth for Spanish mackerel on the east coast of Queensland. Growth trends were determined using the body proportional hypothesis (BPH) back-calculation model and compared between back-calculated and observed length-at-age data. The back-calculated von Bertalanffy growth function parameters estimated for males and females, respectively, were L∞ = 1047 mm, K = 0.75, t0 = –0.18 and L∞ = 1248 mm, K = 0.51 and t0 = –0.39. Significant differences in growth of Spanish mackerel sampled among different regions along the east coast were observed. A comparison of back-calculated and observed length-at-age data revealed significant biases in the observed length-at-age data for younger aged fish. Our findings contrast with previous estimates of growth for Spanish mackerel from the east coast of Queensland and highlight the use of back-calculation for the first few annuli as a means of avoiding biases in growth estimation arising from gear selectivity associated with fishery-dependent samples of fast-growing fish.
Marine and Freshwater Research | 2010
Ross J. Marriott; Bruce D. Mapstone; Aaron C. Ballagh; Leanne M. Currey; Ann Penny; Ashley J. Williams; Gary Jackson; Dongchun Lou; Amos Mapleston; Nicholas D. C. Jarvis; I. Keay; Stephen J. Newman
Multiple readings of otoliths are often carried out to assess the repeatability and reliability of increment counts for estimating fish age. Various criteria have been used to assign or discard age estimates from repeated counts when discrepancies occur although the reasons for doing so are usually not stated or justified. Trends in relative frequencies (percentage disagreement, PD) and magnitudes (inter-read discrepancy, IRD) of otolith-count discrepancies were explored for 15 species of fish collected from a range of locations around Australia to explore generality in the best explanatory model(s) for otolith-count discrepancies and, hence, the most appropriate criterion for accepting or rejecting age estimates from multiple-count data. Increasing discrepancies with increasing age, according to a constant per-increment probability of error, was the best-approximating model for 9 of the 15 species for PD data but for only two species for IRD data. Our results indicated disproportionately higher rates of rejection of estimates from older age groups if exact agreement between repeated counts was required for age acceptance. Results varied with the reader, region and the method of otolith reading, indicating that multiple criteria for accepting or rejecting counts from multiple readings may be required among or even within species.
Nature Biotechnology | 2018
Osmat Azzam Jefferson; Adam Jaffe; Doug Ashton; Ben Warren; Deniz Koellhofer; Uwe Dulleck; Aaron C. Ballagh; John Moe; Michael DiCuccio; Karl Ward; Geoff Bilder; Kevin Dolby; Richard A Jefferson
Public research is critical to the economy and society. However, tangible economic and social impact only occurs when research outputs are combined, used and reused with other elements and capabilities, to deliver a product, practice, or service. Assessing the context and influence of scholarship during the dynamic process of innovation rather than measuring ex post impact, may improve performance. With this aim, we integrated and interconnected scholarly citations with global patent literature, and here we offer new tools enabling diverse stakeholders to freely evaluate the influence published research has on the generation and potential use of inventions as reflected by the patent system. We outline an evolving toolkit, Lens Influence Mapping, that allows assessment of individual scholarly works and aggregated outputs of authors for influence on industry and enterprise as measured by citations within patents. This performance measure, applied at many levels and normalized by either research disciplines or technology fields of use, may expose and highlight institutional strength and practices, and guide their future partnerships
Fisheries Research | 2009
Michelle R. Heupel; Ashley J. Williams; David J. Welch; Aaron C. Ballagh; Bruce D. Mapstone; Gary Carlos; C. Davies; Colin A. Simpfendorfer
Continental Shelf Research | 2008
Ashley J. Williams; Leanne M. Currey; Gavin A. Begg; Cameron D. Murchie; Aaron C. Ballagh
Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2010
Stephen J. Newman; Ian W. Wright; Ben M. Rome; Michael C. Mackie; Paul D. Lewis; Rik C. Buckworth; Aaron C. Ballagh; Rod N. Garrett; Jason Stapley; Damien Broderick; Jennifer R. Ovenden; David J. Welch
Journal of Fish Biology | 2011
Bradley R. Moore; Jason Stapley; Quentin Allsop; Stephen J. Newman; Aaron C. Ballagh; David J. Welch; R. J. G. Lester
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2010
Stephen J. Newman; Quentin Allsop; Aaron C. Ballagh; Rod N. Garrett; Neil Gribble; Jessica J. Meeuwig; Gabby E.A. Mitsopoulos; Bradley R. Moore; Matthew B. Pember; Ben M. Rome; Thor Saunders; C. Skepper; Jason Stapley; Lynne van Herwerden; David J. Welch
Fisheries Management and Ecology | 2011
Stephen J. Newman; Matthew B. Pember; Ben M. Rome; Gabby E.A. Mitsopoulos; C. Skepper; Quentin Allsop; Thor Saunders; Aaron C. Ballagh; L. van Herwerden; Rod N. Garrett; Neil Gribble; Jason Stapley; Jessica J. Meeuwig; Bradley R. Moore; David J. Welch