IMIS - Marine Research Groups | ||||
CESB: Centre for Marine and Renewable Energy European Sea Bass Tracking
Citation
Doyle, T. 2013. Coastal & Marine Research Centre European Sea Bass Tracking. https://marineinfo.org/id/dataset/7873
Contact:
Doyle, Thomas ;
Availability: This dataset is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Description
We used acoustic telemetry to track the summer movements and seasonal migrations of individual sea bass in a large tidally and estuarine influenced coastal environment. We found that the vast majority of tagged sea bass displayed long-term residency (mean, 167 days) and inter-annual fidelity (93 percent return rate) to specific areas. We describe individual fish home ranges of 3km or less, and while fish clearly had core resident areas, there was movement of fish between closely located receivers. The combination of inter-annual fidelity to localised foraging areas makes sea bass very susceptible to local depletion; however, the designation of protected areas for sea bass may go a long way to ensuring the sustainability of this species. more
For many marine migratory fish, comparatively little is known about the movement of individuals rather than the population. Yet, such individual-based movement data is vitally important to understand variability in migratory strategies and fidelity to foraging locations. A case in point is the economically important European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax L.) that inhabits coastal waters during the summer months before migrating offshore to spawn and overwinter. Beyond this broad generalisation we have very limited information on the movements of individuals at coastal foraging grounds. We used acoustic telemetry to track the summer movements and seasonal migrations of individual sea bass in a large tidally and estuarine influenced coastal environment. We found that the vast majority of tagged sea bass displayed long-term residency (mean, 167 days) and inter-annual fidelity (93 percent return rate) to specific areas. We describe individual fish home ranges of 3km or less, and while fish clearly had core resident areas, there was movement of fish between closely located receivers. The combination of inter-annual fidelity to localised foraging areas makes sea bass very susceptible to local depletion; however, the designation of protected areas for sea bass may go a long way to ensuring the sustainability of this species. Scope Themes: Biology, Biology > Ecology - biodiversity, Biology > Fish, Fisheries > Fish stocks/catches/taggings Keywords: Marine/Coastal, Brackish water, Acoustic data, Acoustic telemetry, Acoustic Telemetry, Brackishwater environment, Estuarine pollution, Feeding migrations, Fish migration, Foraging habitats, Migration, seasonal, Migrations, Migratory species, Overwintering, Site fidelity, Spawning migrations, ANE, Ireland, Cork, Dicentrarchus labrax (Linnaeus, 1758), Moronidae Jordan & Evermann, 1896, Pisces Geographical coverage ANE, Ireland, Cork [Marine Regions] Temporal coverage
2013 - 2015 Taxonomic coverage
Parameter
Fish detections Methodology
Fish detections: Acoustic telemetry Contributors
University College Cork; Coastal and Marine Research Centre (CMRC), more, data creator
Related datasets
Parent dataset: European Tracking Network (ETN) data, more
Publication
Based on this dataset
Doyle, T.K. et al. (2017). Localised residency and inter-annual fidelity to coastal foraging areas may place sea bass at risk to local depletion. NPG Scientific Reports 7(1): 45841. https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep45841, more
URLs
Dataset information: Institute home page: Dataset status: Completed
Data type: Data
Data origin: Research: field survey
Metadatarecord created: 2021-09-10
Information last updated: 2024-01-30
|