RICHARDSON and PEARCY: COASTAL AND OCEANIC FISH LARVAE 



PEARCY, W. G., AND S. S. MYERS. 



1974. Larval fishes of Yaquina Bay, Oregon: A nursery 

 ground for marine fishes? Fish. Bull., U.S. 72:201-213. 



PETERSON, W. T., AND C. B. MILLER. 



1975. Year-to-year variations in the planktology of the 

 Oregon upwelling zone. Fish. Bull., U.S. 73:642-653. 



Porter, p. 



1964. Notes on fecundity, spawning, and early life history 

 of Petrale sole (Eopsetta jordani), with descriptions of 

 flatfish larvae collected in the Pacific Ocean off Humboldt 

 Bay, California. M.S. Thesis, Humboldt State Coll., 

 Areata, Calif, 98 p. 

 RICHARDSON, S. L. 



1973. Abundance and distribution of larval fishes in wa- 

 ters off Oregon, May-October 1969, with special emphasis 

 on the northern anchovy, Engraulis mordax. Fish. Bull., 

 U.S. 71:697-711. 

 ROTHLISBERG, P. C. 



1975. Larval ecology of Pandalus jordani Rathbun. 

 Ph.D. Thesis, Oregon State Univ., Corvallis, 104 p. 



Sanders, H. L. 



I960. Benthic studies in Buzzards Bay. III. The structure 



of the soft-bottom community. Limnol. Oceanogr. 

 5:138-153. 



Smith, R. L. 



1974. A description of current, wind, and sea level vari- 

 ations during coastal upwelling off the Oregon coast, 

 July-August 1972. J. Geophys. Res. 79:435-443. 



Smith, r. l., C. N. K. Mooers, and D. B. Enfield. 



1971. Mesoscale studies of the physical oceanography in 

 two coastal upwelling regions: Oregon and Peru. In J. D. 

 Costlow, Jr. (editor), Fertility of the sea, Vol. 2, p. 513-535. 

 Gordon and Breach, N.Y. 



WALDRON, K. D. 



1972. Fish larvae collected from the northeastern Pacific 

 Ocean and Puget Sound during April and May 

 1967. U.S. Dep. Commer., NOAA Tech. Rep. NMFS 

 SSRF-663, 16 p. 



WYATT, B., W. V. BURT, AND J. B. PATTULLO. 



1972. Surface currents off Oregon as determined from drift 

 bottle returns. J. Phys. Oceanogr. 2:286-293. 

 YAP-CHIONGCO, J. V. 



1941. Hypomesus pretiosus: its development and early life 

 history. Ph.D. Thesis, Univ. Washington, Seattle, 123 p. 



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