Données d'échantillonnage

Raby Coho Salmon Tagging

Dernière version Publié par Ocean Tracking Network le 22 septembre 2023 Ocean Tracking Network
Accueil:
Lien
Date de publication:
22 septembre 2023
Publié par:
Ocean Tracking Network
Licence:
CC-BY 4.0

Téléchargez la dernière version de la ressource en tant qu'Archive Darwin Core (DwC-A), ou les métadonnées de la ressource au format EML ou RTF :

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Description

This is the OBIS extraction of the Ocean Tracking Network and University of British Columbia (UBC) Raby Coho Salmon Tagging, consisting of the release tagging metadata, i.e. the location and date when the tagged animal was released, and summarized detection events of tagged individuals. If readers are interested in the source dataset they may also inquire with the project PIs as listed here or on the OTN web site (https://members.oceantrack.org/project?ccode=NEP.RABY).

Abstract:In August 2012, we conducted a pilot study in the Juan de Fuca strait where we tagged 50 wild adult coho salmon with VEMCO V8 acoustic transmitters (PhD student Raby, technicians Stamplecoskie, Hills, Thompson). This effectively is the first work anywhere on tracking the homeward migration of coho salmon in the marine environment. The fish we tagged were biopsied for DNA and we anticipate that we tagged a mixture of American (Puget Sound) and Canadian (Fraser River) stocks. This project utilized the acoustic receiver lines currently operating in the Juan de Fuca strait, the Fraser River mouth, the lower Fraser River, and likely also an American line operating in Puget Sound (tracking data to be downloaded). The project was a collaboration with industry partners (Area B Seine Society), the Pacific Salmon Foundation, and DFO, with the objective of generating a bycatch mortality estimate for coho salmon captured in purse seine fisheries that target sockeye and pink salmon. As a research platform, we chartered a purse seine vessel and crew, and tagging involved external attachment of V8 tags using Floy Tag "spaghetti" tags. As this was a novel tagging method for migrating adult salmon, we simultaneously conducted a tagging validation study using an on-board net pen with 24-h holding trials. Tagged coho salmon bycatch were also evaluated for injury and reflex impairment in order to link post-release fate with fish condition. Likewise, we were able to compare fish condition with mortality in the on-board 24-h holding study (repeated 4x) in order to bolster our samples sizes for the mortality estimate. In August of 2013, other researchers (PhD students Cook and Drenner, technicians Ward, Hills, Chapman) repeated this study in the same area and with the same crew except with increased sample sizes; 220 coho bycatch were tagged. Unlike in 2012, pink salmon abundances were high and the vessel was chartered to simulate an actual commercial pink salmon fishery. Therefore, mortality estimates from 2013 are likely more realistic than those from 2012. Additionally, longer holding studies (i.e. 3 days and 4 days) were conducted using the same on-board net pen to evaluate progression of disease and stress indices following capture.

Enregistrements de données

Les données de cette ressource données d'échantillonnage ont été publiées sous forme d'une Archive Darwin Core (Darwin Core Archive ou DwC-A), le format standard pour partager des données de biodiversité en tant qu'ensemble d'un ou plusieurs tableurs de données. Le tableur de données du cœur de standard (core) contient 15 939 enregistrements.

2 tableurs de données d'extension existent également. Un enregistrement d'extension fournit des informations supplémentaires sur un enregistrement du cœur de standard (core). Le nombre d'enregistrements dans chaque tableur de données d'extension est illustré ci-dessous.

Event (noyau)
15939
Occurrence 
15324
ExtendedMeasurementOrFact 
1480

Cet IPT archive les données et sert donc de dépôt de données. Les données et métadonnées de la ressource sont disponibles pour téléchargement dans la section téléchargements. Le tableau des versions liste les autres versions de chaque ressource rendues disponibles de façon publique et permet de tracer les modifications apportées à la ressource au fil du temps.

Versions

Le tableau ci-dessous n'affiche que les versions publiées de la ressource accessibles publiquement.

Comment citer

Les chercheurs doivent citer cette ressource comme suit:

Cook, K., Raby, G., Drenner, M., Hinch, S. 2012. Bycatch of coho salmon in a purse seine fishery: do reflex impairment, injury, and physiology predict post-release behaviour and survival?. Accessed via the Ocean Tracking Network OBIS IPT on INSERT DATE

Droits

Les chercheurs doivent respecter la déclaration de droits suivante:

L’éditeur et détenteur des droits de cette ressource est Ocean Tracking Network. Ce travail est sous licence Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0.

Enregistrement GBIF

Cette ressource n'a pas été enregistrée sur le portail GBIF

Mots-clé

ACOUSTIC TAGS; EARTH SCIENCE > BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION > ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES > FISH; Occurrence; Observation; Samplingevent

Données externes

Les données de la ressource sont disponibles dans d'autres formats

Raby Coho Salmon Tagging https://members.oceantrack.org/project?ccode=NEP.RABY ASCII HTM

Contacts

Katrina Cook
  • Fournisseur De Contenu
University of British Columbia
CANADA
David Welch
  • Fournisseur De Contenu
Kintama Research Services
CANADA
Ocean Tracking Network Data Centre
  • Créateur
  • Personne De Contact
Data Manager
Ocean Tracking Network
Dalhousie University
B3H 4J1 Halifax
Nova Scotia
CA
+1 (902) 494-4101
Kim Juniper
  • Fournisseur De Contenu
University of Victoria
CANADA
Jonathan Pye
  • Fournisseur Des Métadonnées
Data Manager
Ocean Tracking Network
CANADA
Scott Hinch
  • Fournisseur De Contenu
  • Chercheur Principal
University of British Columbia
CANADA
Kelly Andrews
  • Fournisseur De Contenu
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
USA
Fred Whoriskey
  • Fournisseur De Contenu
Dalhousie University
CANADA
Anna Kagley
  • Fournisseur De Contenu
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
USA
Graham Raby
  • Fournisseur De Contenu
Carleton University
CANADA
Glenn Crossin
  • Fournisseur De Contenu
Dalhousie University
CANADA

Couverture géographique

BC

Enveloppe géographique Sud Ouest [48,28, -124,67], Nord Est [49,2, -122,91]

Couverture taxonomique

Species included below are tagged by this project and have left any embargo. Other individuals or species may later be appended to this dataset.

Species Oncorhynchus nerka (sockeye, kokanee), Oncorhynchus kisutch (Coho salmon)

Couverture temporelle

Date de début / Date de fin 2012-08-21 / 2013-09-11

Données sur le projet

In August 2012, we conducted a pilot study in the Juan de Fuca strait where we tagged 50 wild adult coho salmon with VEMCO V8 acoustic transmitters (PhD student Raby, technicians Stamplecoskie, Hills, Thompson). This effectively is the first work anywhere on tracking the homeward migration of coho salmon in the marine environment. The fish we tagged were biopsied for DNA and we anticipate that we tagged a mixture of American (Puget Sound) and Canadian (Fraser River) stocks. This project utilized the acoustic receiver lines currently operating in the Juan de Fuca strait, the Fraser River mouth, the lower Fraser River, and likely also an American line operating in Puget Sound (tracking data to be downloaded). The project was a collaboration with industry partners (Area B Seine Society), the Pacific Salmon Foundation, and DFO, with the objective of generating a bycatch mortality estimate for coho salmon captured in purse seine fisheries that target sockeye and pink salmon. As a research platform, we chartered a purse seine vessel and crew, and tagging involved external attachment of V8 tags using Floy Tag "spaghetti" tags. As this was a novel tagging method for migrating adult salmon, we simultaneously conducted a tagging validation study using an on-board net pen with 24-h holding trials. Tagged coho salmon bycatch were also evaluated for injury and reflex impairment in order to link post-release fate with fish condition. Likewise, we were able to compare fish condition with mortality in the on-board 24-h holding study (repeated 4x) in order to bolster our samples sizes for the mortality estimate. In August of 2013, other researchers (PhD students Cook and Drenner, technicians Ward, Hills, Chapman) repeated this study in the same area and with the same crew except with increased sample sizes; 220 coho bycatch were tagged. Unlike in 2012, pink salmon abundances were high and the vessel was chartered to simulate an actual commercial pink salmon fishery. Therefore, mortality estimates from 2013 are likely more realistic than those from 2012. Additionally, longer holding studies (i.e. 3 days and 4 days) were conducted using the same on-board net pen to evaluate progression of disease and stress indices following capture.

Titre OTN Canada Coho Salmon Bycatch Tracking
Identifiant OTN Canada
Financement OTN is a research and technology development initiative headquartered at Dalhousie University, in Halifax Nova Scotia. OTN is funded by the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) and is grateful to have once received funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and the Social Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (SSHRC). OTN is also grateful for the continued support from Research Nova Scotia, and OTN's host institution, Dalhousie University.
Description du domaine d'étude / de recherche No study area description for this project was provided to OTN for publication.
Description du design A wide range of aquatic species are tagged with small electronic transmitters, surgically implanted or attached externally, which can operate for up to 20 years. Acoustic receivers arranged in line on the ocean floor as well as attached to buoys, gliders and large animals (e.g. grey seals) pick up the coded acoustic signals from these tags identifying each tagged sea creature that passes within half a kilometer of the receiver. Data collected by these listening stations are subsequently uploaded to one of many compatible data nodes, adding to the reach of an intercompatible network of networks designed and maintained by the Ocean Tracking Network, producing current and reliable records for every part of the globe. Certain classes of electronic tags and listening equipment (receivers) may also be outfitted or co-located with sensors to measure the ocean's temperature, depth, salinity, currents, chemistry, and other properties.

Les personnes impliquées dans le projet:

Scott Hinch
  • Chercheur Principal

Méthodes d'échantillonnage

Acoustic tags released.

Etendue de l'étude Program started 2012-08-21 and ran until 2013-09-11
Contrôle qualité OTN species names are verified using the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS). If species names on new data cannot be verified against (a) known valid names in OTN, and/or (b) WoRMs the Data Provider will be notified so they can check they are correct. Names that cannot be placed after checking with WoRMS are, where possible, placed on the basis of other authoritative sources, such as the Fishbase or ITIS; and once completely verified a request will be sent to WoRMS for addition of the verified species name. http://members.oceantrack.org/data/discovery/byspecies

Description des étapes de la méthode:

  1. This resource was created by the Ocean Tracking Network Data Centre as a summarized representation of animal presence determined by electronic tagging efforts. Darwin Core (DwC) records were extracted from the OTN database and filtered and summarized according to international agreed-upon standards.

Citations bibliographiques

  1. Cook, K., Raby, G., Drenner, M., Hinch, S. 2012. Bycatch of coho salmon in a purse seine fishery: do reflex impairment, injury, and physiology predict post-release behaviour and survival? In: Ocean Tracking Network Data Centre, Halifax Canada / otndc@dal.ca Retrieved: 2014-10-10 from db.load.oceantrack.org

Métadonnées additionnelles

Access Constraints: none Use Constraints: Acknowledge the use of specific records from contributing databases in the form appearing in the 'Citation' field thereof (if any); and acknowledge the use of the OBIS facility. For information purposes, email to info@obis.org the full citation of any publication made (printed or electronic) that cites OBIS or any constituent part. Recognize the limitations of data in OBIS. See https://manual.obis.org/policy.html#disclaimer for more details

Objet These data are for display on the OBIS portal and associated mapping programs and for download to personal computers for ad-hoc end-user analysis.
Identifiants alternatifs 10.14286/duc6mu
https://members.oceantrack.org/ipt/resource?r=otnubcrabycohosalmontaggi