It's easy to get started creating your website. Knowing some of the basics will help.A content management system is software that allows you to create and manage webpages easily by separating the creation of your content from the mechanics required to present it on the web.
In this site, the content is stored in a database. The look and feel are created by a template. Joomla! brings together the template and your content to create web pages.
To login to your site use the user name and password that were created as part of the installation process. Once logged-in you will be able to create and edit articles and modify some settings.
Once you are logged-in, a new menu will be visible. To create a new article, click on the "Submit Article" link on that menu.
The new article interface gives you a lot of options, but all you need to do is add a title and put something in the content area. To make it easy to find, set the state to published.
You can edit an existing article by clicking on the edit icon (this only displays to users who have the right to edit).
The look and feel of your site is controlled by a template. You can change the site name, background colour, highlights colour and more by editing the template settings. Click the "Template Settings" in the user menu.
The boxes around the main content of the site are called modules. You can modify modules on the current page by moving your cursor to the module and clicking the edit link. Always be sure to save and close any module you edit.
You can change some site settings such as the site name and description by clicking on the "Site Settings" link.
More advanced options for templates, site settings, modules, and more are available in the site administrator.
Your site actually has two separate sites. The site (also called the front end) is what visitors to your site will see. The administrator (also called the back end) is only used by people managing your site. You can access the administrator by clicking the "Site Administrator" link on the "User Menu" menu (visible once you login) or by adding /administrator to the end of your domain name. The same user name and password are used for both sites.
It's easy to get started creating your website. Knowing some of the basics will help.A content management system is software that allows you to create and manage webpages easily by separating the creation of your content from the mechanics required to present it on the web.
In this site, the content is stored in a database. The look and feel are created by a template. Joomla! brings together the template and your content to create web pages.
To login to your site use the user name and password that were created as part of the installation process. Once logged-in you will be able to create and edit articles and modify some settings.
Once you are logged-in, a new menu will be visible. To create a new article, click on the "Submit Article" link on that menu.
The new article interface gives you a lot of options, but all you need to do is add a title and put something in the content area. To make it easy to find, set the state to published.
You can edit an existing article by clicking on the edit icon (this only displays to users who have the right to edit).
The look and feel of your site is controlled by a template. You can change the site name, background colour, highlights colour and more by editing the template settings. Click the "Template Settings" in the user menu.
The boxes around the main content of the site are called modules. You can modify modules on the current page by moving your cursor to the module and clicking the edit link. Always be sure to save and close any module you edit.
You can change some site settings such as the site name and description by clicking on the "Site Settings" link.
More advanced options for templates, site settings, modules, and more are available in the site administrator.
Your site actually has two separate sites. The site (also called the front end) is what visitors to your site will see. The administrator (also called the back end) is only used by people managing your site. You can access the administrator by clicking the "Site Administrator" link on the "User Menu" menu (visible once you login) or by adding /administrator to the end of your domain name. The same user name and password are used for both sites.
09100, Kyiv Region, Bila Tserkva Phone (263) 4-0545
The station was organized in 1949 to study the ecology and selection of fish, important for the pond fishery of the Ukrainian SSR.
At the beginning of the existence of the hydrobiological station, scientific research was devoted to the creation of new breeds of carp and methods for their artificial reproduction. In the years 1953-1956, Far Eastern herbivorous fishes (Grass Carp, Bighead Carp, Silver Carp ) from the Amur River (the territory of the USSR and China) were introduced in fish ponds. During this period, experimental studies concerned the development of biotechnology for their artificial reproduction and cultivation, which were successfully completed.
From the mid-80s of the last century, selection work with herbivorous fish was carried out. For this purpose, the Krasnodar line of Bighead and Silver Carps and the Moldavian line of Grass Carp were imported. Descendants of these species of fish exist at the station until now. On the basis of carried out research, a high-yielding hybrid of the Silver Carp has been created, which is characterized by high fertility and rapid growth rate.
Today, the Institute of Hydrobiology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine at the Bila Tserkva experimental hydrobiological station uses 23 fish ponds, 4 boxes for fish retention, 2 laboratory buildings, 2 incubatories for scientific work.
It is used for the preparation and preliminary sample analysis of expeditionary materials obtained on the Kyiv Reservoir and its tributaries - Pripyat River, Teterev River, the Upper Dnieper and other water objects of Polissya Region. The station has a special room for burning of biological materials for the subsequent determination in them of chemical, toxic, radioactive and other elements and substances.