. Coast watch. Marine resources; Oceanography; Coastal zone management; Coastal ecology. pears drowned, administer heart mas- sage and mouth-to-mouth resuscita- tion. Transport the victim as soon as possible to a hospital. The idea of air freighting seafood is tak- ing off in North Caro- lina. With new markets opening across the coun- try and overseas, ship- ping by air ensures the product will reach its destination fast and fresh—and still net the dealer a profit. A new Sea Grant Blueprint, "Air Freighting Seafood from Coastal North Carolina," gives detailed sug- gestions for packag
. Coast watch. Marine resources; Oceanography; Coastal zone management; Coastal ecology. pears drowned, administer heart mas- sage and mouth-to-mouth resuscita- tion. Transport the victim as soon as possible to a hospital. The idea of air freighting seafood is tak- ing off in North Caro- lina. With new markets opening across the coun- try and overseas, ship- ping by air ensures the product will reach its destination fast and fresh—and still net the dealer a profit. A new Sea Grant Blueprint, "Air Freighting Seafood from Coastal North Carolina," gives detailed sug- gestions for packaging and shipping fresh fish and shellfish. Written by Gary Van Housen, Sea Grant's seafood marketing specialist, the Blueprint in- cludes information on shipping con- tainers, packaging materials, airline regulations and costs. It also lists cities having airports with refrigeration fa- cilities and companies distributing packaging materials. For a free copy of Van Housen's Blueprint, write UNC Sea Grant, Box 8605, State University, Raleigh, 27695-8605. Ask for UNC-SG- BP-85-4. UnC Sea Grant has been awarded $1,250,000 in federal funds for 1986 by the National Sea Grant College Pro- gram, which is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administra- tion. The funds will support the second year of UNC Sea Grant's three-year approved grant cycle. Why do sport fishermen prefer to catch a grouper rather than a trigger- fish, a snapper rather than a jack cre- valle? It's all in how they perceive the fish, say Jeff Johnson and David Grif- fith, Sea Grant researchers at the Insti- tute for Coastal and Marine Resources at East Carolina University. In a new Sea Grant publication, Per- ceptions and Preferences for Marine Fish: A Study of Recreational Fisher- men in the Southeast, Johnson and. Griffith describe the results of a study that was designed to find out why fishermen favored some species of fish over others. The results are already being used to change recreation
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookcollectionunclibra, booksubjectoceanography