Application of three-dimensional acoustic telemetry to assess the effects of rapid recompression on reef fish discard mortality

Author:

Bohaboy Erin Collings1ORCID,Guttridge Tristan L23,Hammerschlag Neil4,Van Zinnicq Bergmann Maurits P M25ORCID,Patterson William F1

Affiliation:

1. School of Forest Resources and Conservation, Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, University of Florida, 7922 Northwest 71st Street, Gainesville, FL 32653, USA

2. Bimini Biological Field Station Foundation, South Bimini, The Bahamas

3. Saving the Blue, Miami, FL, 33186, USA

4. Department of Marine Ecosystems and Society, Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, Miami, FL 33149, USA

5. Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University, North Miami, FL 33181, USA

Abstract

Abstract Geopositioning underwater acoustic telemetry was used to test whether rapid recompression with weighted return-to-depth (descender) devices reduced discard mortality of red snapper (n = 141) and gray triggerfish (n = 26) captured and released at 30–60 m depths at two 15 km2 study sites in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Cox proportional hazards modelling indicated red snapper released with descender devices had significantly lower discard mortality within the first 2 d (95% CI = 18.8–41.8% for descender-released vs. 44.0–72.4% for surface-released, unvented fish), while there was no significant effect of descender devices on discard mortality of gray triggerfish. Predation by large pelagic predators was estimated to account 83% of red snapper and 100% of gray triggerfish discard mortality. Discard mortality due to predation has likely been overlooked in previous mark-recapture, laboratory, and enclosure studies, suggesting cryptic population losses due to predation on discards may be underestimated for red snapper and gray triggerfish. Large-area three-dimensional positioning acoustic telemetry arrays combined with collaboration and data sharing among acoustic telemetry researchers have the potential to advance our knowledge of the processes affecting discard mortality in reef fishes and other taxa.

Funder

National Marine Fisheries Service Cooperative Research Program

National Marine Fisheries Service/Sea Grant Population and Ecosystem Dynamics Graduate Research Fellowship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

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