100,266 results
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2009-752
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Seafood CRC: overseas market access for shellfish

The oyster, scallop and mussel industries currently export product to the EU. Due to the periodic occurrence of Okadaic Acid (OA) and Saxitoxin (STX) group toxins in Australian shellfish the implementation of reduced regulatory levels would reduce the amount of product eligible for EU export....
ORGANISATION:
SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
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PROJECT NUMBER • 2009-751
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

SCRC: SCRC RTG 3.2: Short term lab placement in Aberdeen, UK (Benita Vincent)

To conduct a short term lab placement at the Marine Laboratories in Aberdeen to gain skills in new techniques including producing and maintaining primary cell cultures from gill explants and tissues. This research travel grant allowed the author to conduct a short term lab placement at the Marine...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart

SCRC: SCRC RTG 3.1: Queensland Institute of Medical Research (QIMR) Flow of Cytometry Methods Course and Workshop (Dr Melony Sellars: Student Andrew Foote)

Project number: 2009-750
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Principal Investigator: Melony J. Sellars
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Project start/end date: 30 Sep 2009 - 29 Nov 2009
Contact:
FRDC

Final report

ISBN: 978-1-925982-22-0
Author: Andrew Foote
Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Final Report • 2009-11-30 • 171.59 KB
2009-750-DLD-RTG.pdf

Summary

Develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of my CRC project; advance my professional development; share my skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

Flow cytometry is a very useful tool which can be used for almost any molecular application where fluorescent stains can be used. It has the advantage of fast and accurate processing of large quantities of data, including the analysis of several different components in each of the tens to hundreds of thousands of cells processed per sample.

The objective of this travel grant was to allow the researcher to develop knowledge and skills in flow cytometry to help advance the progress of his CRC project; advance his professional development; and share his skills and knowledge with relevant CRC participants and projects.

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PROJECT NUMBER • 2009-749
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

SCRC: Improvements in Yellowtail Kingfish larval and juvenile survival and quality

This project consists of nine research projects addressing nine objectives set out in the overarching program of activity described in project 2007/707. The nine projects collectively endeavour to resolve the larval rearing, juvenile development and productivity constraints for propagated Southern...
ORGANISATION:
Clean Seas Seafood Ltd
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PROJECT NUMBER • 2009-748
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

SCRC: Marketing Master Class 2009

The Seafood Marketing Master Class series was developed when the Seafood CRC identified that its industry participants did not have a basic core understanding of the fundamentals of marketing. It was also identified that CRC industry participants demonstrated a lack commitment of towards marketing...
ORGANISATION:
University of South Australia

SCRC: Can they hear me?...Modern and innovative strategies to communicate with the seafood industry

Project number: 2009-747
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Principal Investigator: Jane Ham
Organisation: SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
Project start/end date: 19 Oct 2009 - 30 Aug 2010
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Traditional methods of transferring research results (print copies of newsletters; brochures; meetings; workshops and final reports) can be slow, costly and reach only a limited proportion of stakeholders.

Research providers need to investigate different communication methods to enable them to quickly and easily provide stakeholders with current information.

Existing digital technologies (e-mail; web sites; mobile devices) allow information to be instantly sent to a broad distribution in a cost effective way.

Information provided via mobile devices is also location independent, allowing recipients to receive and view material wherever they like. This is of particular significance to marine researchers as a large percentage of stakeholders are field-based and may be more likely to view information away from the desk at a time that is convenient to them (e.g. on board a boat).

In today’s E-Market of ever-growing e-mail distribution lists, it is necessary to provide a communication point of difference to ensure that extension activities are effective. Using alternatives to receiving e-mails and plain text may improve information retention and follow-up rates by targeted stakeholders, particularly given demographic changes in digital use and awareness.

Successfully transferring non-technical information regularly to a larger percentage of stakeholders will significantly reduce the lag time between producing results and provision of final reports; ensuring more stakeholders are kept up to date and consequently have the opportunity to take advantage of results.

Final report

ISBN: 978-1-921563-39-3
Authors: Jane Ham Stephen Madigan Emily Mantilla Rachel King
Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

Final Report • 1.59 MB
2009-747-DLD.pdf

Summary

This pilot project aimed to apply existing digital technologies in an integrated manner to deliver research information that more effectively targeted stakeholders, focused specifically on industry stakeholders, but included research stakeholders. This was achieved by producing a short 'news-style' video of the latest research result and activities, viewed directly on a mobile phone via weblink from an SMS.

The headlines and web address to access videos and summary articles were provided via SMS for those who did not have web access enabled on their mobile phone, with some participants receiving an email version. A Customer Satisfaction Survey was subsequently used to evaluate the efficacy of presenting research information in a visual format and delivery of research information direct to mobile phones.

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PROJECT NUMBER • 2009-746
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

SCRC: Could harvests from abalone stocks be increased through better management of the size limit / quota interaction?

The aims of this project were to: Quantify density-dependent effects on wild abalone growth and meat quality Develop a statistical tool for classification of shell age Use length-based models to test the adequacy of shell age performance measures Use length-based models to determine...
ORGANISATION:
University of Tasmania (UTAS)
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