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Dive into the research topics where Nancy E. Kohler is active.

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Featured researches published by Nancy E. Kohler.


Marine Biotechnology | 2001

Rapid and simultaneous identification of body parts from the morphologically similar sharks Carcharhinus obscurus and Carcharhinus plumbeus (Carcharhinidae) using multiplex PCR.

Melissa Pank; Michael J. Stanhope; Lisa J. Natanson; Nancy E. Kohler; Mahmood S. Shivji

Abstract: Many commercially exploited carcharhinid sharks are difficult to identify to species owing to extensive morphological similarities. This problem is severely exacerbated when it comes to identifying detached shark fins, and the finless and headless shark carasses typically sold in markets. To assist in the acquisition of urgently needed conservation and management data on shark catch and trade, we have developed a highly streamlined approach based on multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) that uses species-specific primers derived from nuclear ribosomal ITS2 sequences to achieve rapid species identification of shark body parts. Here we demonstrate the utility of this approach for identifying fins and flesh from two globally distributed, morphologically very similar carcharhinid sharks (Carcharhinus obscurus and Carcharhinus plumbeus) intensively targeted in fisheries worldwide, and often confused for each other even as whole animals. The assay is conducted in a 4-primer multiplex format that is structured to simultaneously achieve the following efficiency and cost-reduction objectives: it requires only a single-tube amplification reaction for species diagnosis, it incorporates an internal positive control to allow detection of false-negative results, and it is novel in that it allows species identification even when DNAs from two species are combined in the same tube during the PCR reaction. The latter innovation reduces the required effort for screening a set of unknown samples by 50%. The streamlined approach illustrated here should be amenable for use in a shark conservation and management context where large numbers of samples typically need to be screened; the approach shown may also provide a model for a rapid diagnostic method applicable to species identification in general.


North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2002

Population Dynamics of the Porbeagle in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean

Steven E. Campana; Warren Joyce; Linda Marks; Lisa J. Natanson; Nancy E. Kohler; Christopher F. Jensen; Joseph J. Mello; Harold L. Pratt; Sigmund Myklevoll

Abstract A virgin population of porbeagles Lamna nasus in the northwest Atlantic Ocean supported annual catches of up to 9,000 metric tons (mt) in the early 1960s before the fishery collapsed in 1967. Low and apparently sustainable catches of about 350 mt in the 1970s and 1980s allowed the stock to partially rebuild before a new fishery arose in the early 1990s. The response of the population to this renewed fishing pressure has been unclear until now. However, a new population dynamics analysis suggests that population abundance has once again declined. On the basis of more than 140,000 length measurements, an extensive catch rate index, a confirmed growth model, and a catch-at-age matrix, it appears that at least 90% of the sexually mature population has been lost as fishing mortality has increased. Independent measures of fishing mortality (F) based on Petersen analysis of tag-recaptures, Paloheimo Zs, and a population model all suggest that fishing mortality was about 0.20 in 2000. Biological referenc...


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2009

A spatially structured tagging model to estimate movement and fishing mortality rates for the blue shark (Prionace glauca) in the North Atlantic Ocean

Alexandre M. Aires-da-Silva; Mark N. Maunder; Vincent F. Gallucci; Nancy E. Kohler; John J. Hoey

Large numbers of blue sharks are caught as bycatch, and have even become the target species in pelagic longline fisheries in the North Atlantic Ocean. The status of the stock is ambiguous due to the limitations of the fishery-dependent data. This study presents a spatially structured tagging model to estimate blue shark movement and fishing mortality rates in the North Atlantic Ocean. The model uses the blue shark tag-recovery data collected by the United States National Marine Fisheries Service Cooperative Shark Tagging Program (1965–2004). Four major geographical regions (two on each side of the ocean) are assumed. The blue shark fishing mortality rates (F) were found to be heterogeneous across the four regions. While the estimates of F obtained for the western North Atlantic Ocean were historically lower than 0.1 year–1, the F estimates over the most recent decade (1990s) in the eastern side of the ocean are rapidly approaching 0.2 year–1. Because of the particular life-history of the blue shark, these results suggest careful monitoring of the fishery as the juvenile and pregnant female segments of the stock are highly vulnerable to exploitation in the eastern North Atlantic Ocean.


Environmental Biology of Fishes | 1997

Pugnose eels, Simenchelys parasiticus (Synaphobranchidae) from the heart of a shortfin mako, Isurus oxyrinchus (Lamnidae)

Janine N. Caira; George W. Benz; Joanna D. Borucinska; Nancy E. Kohler

A 395 kg shortfin mako, Isurus oxyrinchus (Lamnidae) landed at Montauk, New York in June of 1992 was found to contain two dead, but otherwise healthy appearing pugnose eels, Simenchelys parasiticus (Synaphobranchidae) within the lumen of its heart. The path along which the eels made their way into the sharks heart was not found. Histological examination of the sharks heart revealed the presence of medial hyperplasia and hypertrophy of small arterioles, multifocal arteriosclerosis, and relatively high numbers of capillaries per unit area. These phenomena were not observed in similar sections taken from hearts of six uninfected mako sharks. The stomachs of both eels were filled with blood, suggesting that they had been within the shark at least long enough to feed. Consideration of this new record along with the literature supports a trophic designation of facultative endoparasite for the species Simenchelys parasiticus.


Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2018

Feeding habits of the tiger shark, Galeocerdo cuvier, in the northwest Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico

Alexandra C. Aines; John K. Carlson; Andre M. Boustany; Alyssa Mathers; Nancy E. Kohler

Tiger sharks, Galeocerdo cuvier, are apex predators that may structure marine communities through predation. Despite a large number of studies in other areas such as the Pacific Ocean, there are no quantitative data on the diet of tiger sharks in the northwest Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico. Diet was assessed from 169 tiger sharks by life stage, area, and environmental factors. Fifteen prey groups were identified, with teleosts, molluscs, birds, cephalopods, and reptiles being the predominant prey categories. There was an ontogenetic shift in diet, prey size and diversity. Molluscs were the most common prey in smaller sharks, while teleosts and reptiles became more important in the diet of larger sharks. Dietary overlap was significant by area (Gulf of Mexico vs Atlantic Ocean) and among all life stages except for young-of-the-year and adult tiger sharks. Juvenile tiger sharks also demonstrated selective feeding by targeting gastropod feet over ingesting the entire animal. While results were similar to feeding studies conducted on tiger sharks in other ocean basins, an understanding of area-specific trophic interactions is necessary to inform decision support tools for ecosystem-based approaches to management.


Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2006

Effects of recreational and commercial fishing on blue sharks (Prionace glauca) in Atlantic Canada, with inferences on the North Atlantic population

Steven E. Campana; Linda Marks; Warren Joyce; Nancy E. Kohler


Journal of Fish Diseases | 2002

Pathology associated with retained fishing hooks in blue sharks, Prionace glauca (L.), with implications for their conservation

J D Borucinska; Nancy E. Kohler; Lisa J. Natanson; G Skomal


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2002

Analysis of stomach contents of the porbeagle shark (Lamna nasus Bonnaterre) in the northwest Atlantic

Warren Joyce; Steven E. Campana; Lisa J. Natanson; Nancy E. Kohler; Harold L. Pratt; Christopher F. Jensen


Archive | 2007

Shark nursery grounds of the Gulf of Mexico and the East Coast waters of the United States

Camilla T. McCandless; Nancy E. Kohler; Harold L. Pratt


Archive | 1996

Length-Length and Length-Weight Relationships for 13 Shark Species from the Western North Atlantic

Nancy E. Kohler; John G. Casey; Patricia A. Turner

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Lisa J. Natanson

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Harold L. Pratt

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Warren Joyce

Bedford Institute of Oceanography

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Christopher F. Jensen

National Marine Fisheries Service

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Linda Marks

Bedford Institute of Oceanography

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Camilla T. McCandless

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Joseph J. Mello

National Marine Fisheries Service

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Mahmood S. Shivji

Nova Southeastern University

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Melissa Pank

Nova Southeastern University

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