Fisheries - މަސްވެރިކަން
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Item 19 ވަނަ މަސްވެރިންގެ ދުވަހުގެ ރަސްމީ ޖަލްސާ(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީސް, 2000-12-10) ArticleItem 1980 މަސްވެރިކަމުގެ ތަފާސް ހިސާބު(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް, 1981-12-10) މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް; Ministry of Fisheries ArticleItem 1997 ޑިސެމަބަރ ގައި ހުރި ދޯނިފަހަރުގެ އަދަދު(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީސް, 1998-12-10) މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް; Ministry of Fisheries ArticleItem 1998 - ކަނޑުތަކުގެ އަހަރު(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީސް, 1998-12-10) ޙަސަން ޞާބިރު; Sabiru, HassanItem 2000 ވަނަ އަހަރު މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް، އެގްރިކަލްޗަރ އެންޑް މެރިން ރިސޯސަސްއިން ހިންގި ތަމްރީނު ކޯސްތަކުގެ ތެރެއިން ،(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީސް, 2000-12-10) ArticleItem 2000 ވަނަ އަހަރު ތ.ގުރައިދޫގައި ފާހަގަކުރެވުނު ރާއްޖޭގެ 20 ވަނަ މަސްވެރިންގެ ދުވަހުގެ ރަސްމީ ޖަލްސާގައި، މިނިސްޓަރ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒަ، އެގްރިކަލްޗަރ އެންޑް މެރިން ރިސޯސަސް އޮނަރަބަލް އަލްފާޟިލް އަބްދުއް އަލްފާޟިލް ރަޝީދު ޙުސައިން ދެއްކެވި ވާހަކަފުޅު(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް، އެގްރިކަލްޗރ އެންޑް މެރިން ރިސޯސަސް, 2001-12-10) އަބްދުއް ރަޝީދު ޙުސެއިން; Hussain, Abdul Rasheed ArticleItem 2002 ދޮށީގެ މަސްވެރިކަމުގެ މުބާރާތް(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް, 2001-12-10) ArticleItem 3 ކޮށީގައި މަސްގެންގުޅުން(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީސް, 1998-12-10) އިބްރާހީމް ނަޢީމް; Naeem, Ibrahim ArticleItem Aquarium fishery of the Maldives(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް އްންޑް އެގްރިކަލްޗަރ, 1981-11-17) ސިހާމް އާދަމް; Adam, Shihaam ArticleItem Association of yellowfin tuna and dolphins in Maldives waters(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް, 1998-12-10) Andasom, R. C.; އ. ޝާން; Shaan, A.Large yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) are regularly found in association with dolphins in Maldivian waters. The species involved are the spotted dolphin (Stenella attenuata) and the spinner dolphin (Stenella longirostris). Maldivian fishermen tar geting large yellowfin use the presence of dolphin schools to locate the tunas. The yellowfin are caught using simple handlines, and are mostly within the length range 70-160 cm FL. No do_lphins are caught ArticleItem Baseline report on fisheries practices in Laamu atoll(Ministry of Climate Change, Environment, and Energy މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ކްލައިމެޓް ޗޭންޖް އެންވަރޮމެންޓް އެންޑް އެނާޖީ, 2024) Ministry of Climate Change, Environment, and Energy; މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ކްލައިމެޓް ޗޭންޖް އެންވަރޮމެންޓް އެންޑް އެނާޖީ Technical ReportItem Basic fisheries statistics 1985(Ministry of Fisheries, 1986-12-10) ނ.ތ. ޙަސަން ދީދީ; މައިޒާން ޙަސަން މަނިކު; Didi, N. Th. Hassan; Manik, Maizaan Hassan ArticleItem Basic fisheries statistics : Jan - Dec 2009(Ministry of Fisheries and Agriculture, 2010) Ministry of Fisheries and Agriculture; މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް އެންޑް އެގްރިކަލްޗަރ ArticleItem Basic fishery information 1981(Ministry of Fisheries, 1982-12-10) މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީސް; Ministry of Fisheries ArticleItem Basic fishery statistics 2010(Ministry of Fisheries and Agriculture, 2011) Ministry of Fisheries and Agriculture; މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް އެންޑް އެގްރިކަލްޗަރ Technical ReportItem Bay of Bengal programme : reef fish resources survey in the Maldives : phase II(Bay of Bengal programme, 1992) Anderson, R. C.; Waheed, Z.; Rasheed, M.; Arif, A.; އާރ. ސީ. އެންޑަރސަން; ޒެޑް. ވަޙީދު; އެމް. ރަޝީދު; އޭ. އާރިފް ArticleItem Blue economy in small island developing states : status of private sector partnerships and implementation of SDG 14(researchgate.net, 2022-05-21) Manikarachchi, Imali; އިމާލީ މަނިކަރަޗީItem The blue revolution(Ministry of Fisheries, 1987-12-10) Saleem, Bandhu I. ArticleItem Commercial exploitation of reef resources: examples of sustainable and non-sustainable utilization from the Maldives(Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, 1997) Adam, M.S.; Anderson, R.C.; Shakeel, H.Sustainable Maldivian reef fisheries include the tuna livebait 'fishery, the historical money cowry fishery and the export of marine aquarium fish. Non-sustainable export fisheries include those of sea cucumber, giant clam, deepwater shark and grouper. The tuna livebait fishery has been in existence for over one thousand years and mainly targets small pelagics. Money cowries were exported for hundreds of years to Asia and Africa. These fisheries share the characteristics of large resource base, low unit value and wide distribution of low-impact fishing effort. The sea cucumber, giant clam and the deep water shark fisheries share the characteristics of large resource base, low population turn over rates, ease of collection and high unit value. The grouper and aquarium fisheries have intermediate characteristics. The aquarium fishery maybe sustainable because it has a large resource base and limited entry. The grouper fishery may not be sustainable because both fishing effort and unit value are high. ArticleItem Comparative study of skipjack tuna Katsuwonus pelamis (Scombridea) fishery stocks from the South Atlantic and Western Indian Oceans(2019) Dahlet, Lol I.; Downey-Breedt, Nicola; Arce, Gabriel; Sauer, Warwick H. H.; Gasalla, Maria A. ArticleItem Country review : Maldives(Marine Research Centre, 2004-11) Adam, M. Shiham; އެމް. ޝިހާމް އާދަމް ArticleItem Development of fisheries in the Maldives(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް, 1998-12-10) ހަސަން މަނިކު; Manik, Hassan ArticleItem Development of shark fisheries in the Maldives(Ministry of Fisheries, 1987-12-10) Anderson, R. C.; Ahmed, Hudha ArticleItem Economics of shark and ray watching in the Maldives(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް, 1998-12-10) Anderson, Charles; Waheed, Ali; ޗާރލްސް އެންޑާރސަން; އަލީ ވަހީދުItem Editorial(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީސް އެންޑް އެގްރިކަލްޗަރ, 1991-12-10) އަޙްމަދު ޙާފިޒު; Hafiz, Ahmed ArticleItem Editorial(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީސް, 1992-12) Maniku, Maizan HassanItem Editorial(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް އްންޑް އެގްރިކަލްޗަރ, 1993-12-10) މައިޒާން ޙަސަން މަނިކު; Maniku, Maizan Hassan ArticleItem Erosion problems & solutions(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް, 1998-12-18) Alimanikufaanu, M.; މ. އަލިމަނިކުފާނު ArticleItem Estimating tag-shedding rates for Skipjack tuna, Katsuwonus pelamis, off the Maldives(2001) Adam, M. Shiham; އެމް. ޝިހާމް އާދަމްItem Exploratory fishing for large pelagic species in the Maldives(Ministry of Fisheries and Agriculture, Republic of Maldives, 2023) Anderson, R. C.; Waheed, A ArticleItem An extraordinary man Maizan Hassan Maniku (1953-2002)(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް, 2001-12-10) Anderson, R. Charles ArticleItem Field observations of sea cucumbers in the north of Baa atoll, Maldives(2015-03) Ducarme, Frédéric ArticleItem Fisheries and coral reefs : a Jamaican tragedy(Ministry of Fisheries and Agriculture, 1990) Allison, William ArticleItem Fisheries in Maldives .... an historical view(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް, 1981-12-10) ހަސަން އަހުމަދު މަނިކު; Manik, Ahmed Hassan ArticleItem Fisheries in the Maldives and Yemen(World Bank, 1994-10) Technical ReportItem Fisheries resources use and issues in the Republic of Maldives(2016-06) Manabu, Echigo; Masanori, DoiThe Republic of Maldives is an island country composed by atolls in the Indian Ocean. From times immemorial, the islands’ population have been strongly depending on marine resources, as far as food culture, nutrition supply and economic impact are concerned. However, catch amounts of skipjack tuna, which is the most important fisheries resource in Maldives, have decreased drastically in recent years. On the other hand, an increasing fishing pressure on the reef fishes by coastal fisheries is linked to an increasing demand of supplies from the resorts hotels and for export. Relevant governmental organizations and donors have begun exerting efforts to tackle those issues and ensure sustainable fisheries resources use. ArticleItem Fisheries science in the Maldives(މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް, 1998-12-10) މުހައްމަދު ރިޔާޒު ޖައުހަރީ; Jauhary, Mahomaed Riyaz ArticleItem Fisheries sector and development of Maldives: can vocational and technical education help?(2013) Alam, Gazi Mahabubul; Farhath, Aishath; Othman, Abdul Jalil; Al-Amin, Abdul QuasemGlobal experience confirms that ‘family business concept’ was the domain in the establishment of fisheries sector. Apprenticeship of family inheritance was only the training provision available for the fishermen earlier. While fishermen used to receive a little amount of training through family apprenticeship, light of education to become a qualified citizen for modern world was unreachable to them. Things have incredibly or marginally been changed in a few countries where public policy took necessary parameters in order to institutionalize this sector aligning with the long term developmental vision and mission of the state. However, most of the countries still follow the orthodox model since professionals working with this sector are less capable to put forward their voices in the elite podium where public policy of a country is designed and constitutionalized. Maldives is country where more than 80% of the population are directly and indirectly or by hobby are involved with the fisheries sector providing a major local contribution towards Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Despite this contribution, the sector experiences significant amount of shortfalls. The purpose of this study is to map and identify those shortfalls in order to offer an elucidation. ArticleItem Fishermen in Minicoy (Maliku) : the production of Maldive fish as a sustainable economy(2022) Heidemann, Frank; ހައިޑެމަން ފްރޭންކްThe people of Minicoy (Maliku), the southernmost island of the Lakshadweep, produce Maldive fish, a delicacy widely known in India, Sri Lanka and beyond. Maldive fish, locally hikimas, is a cooked and dried tuna fillet that is as hard as wood and can be used for several years after processing. For many centuries it has been an essential part of the diet of seafarers, the pioneers of pre-colonial globalisation in the Indian Ocean. Maliku fishermen catch bait fish in the lagoon and skipjack tuna in the open ocean within a radius of 25 miles. Hikimas is produced by local women in their homes for export and partly for their own consumption. Despite the motorisation of fishing boats and other modernisations, fishing with pole and line and the production of hikimas proved to be a most sustainable form of catching and processing fish. It remained basically unchanged since it was first documented in the fourteenth century. I shall argue that fishing on Maliku is more than an economic activity, as it is a central aspect of producing home and belonging also for other occupational groups, particularly seamen, the largest professional group. Fishing and hikimas production are most inclusive economies with transparent distribution of surplus and wealth, and therefore contribute to a society that is often described as “egalitarian”. ArticleItem Fishermen’s forum 2019 : on the occasion of the 39th fishermen’s day of the Maldives : report(Ministry of Fisheries, Marine Resources and Agriculture, 2019) Raufath Nizar, Hawwa; Ibrahim, Munshidha