Preliminary estimate of post-release survival of immature porbeagles caught with rod-and-reel in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean

Author:

Anderson BN12,Bowlby HD3,Natanson LJ4,Coelho R56,Cortés E7,Domingo A8,Sulikowski JA2

Affiliation:

1. Marine Science Department, University of New England, Biddeford, ME 04005, USA

2. School of Mathematical and Natural Sciences, Arizona State University-West, Glendale, AZ 85306, USA

3. Fisheries and Oceans Canada Maritimes Region, Dartmouth, NS B2Y 4A2, Canada

4. National Marine Fisheries Service, Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Narragansett Laboratory, Narragansett, RI 02882, USA

5. Portuguese Institute for the Ocean and Atmosphere (IPMA, I.P.), 8700-305 Olhão, Portugal

6. Centre of Marine Sciences (CCMAR), University of the Algarve, 8005-139 Faro, Portugal

7. National Marine Fisheries Service, Southeast Fisheries Science Center, Panama City Laboratory, Panama City, FL 32408, USA

8. Dirección Nacional de Recursos Acuáticos, Laboratorio de Recursos Pelágicos, 11200 Montevideo, Uruguay

Abstract

The Northwest Atlantic (NWA) population of porbeagles Lamna nasus is susceptible to capture in rod-and-reel fisheries and most individuals are discarded alive due to catch and size limits. To estimate post-release survival, pop-off satellite archival tags were attached to porbeagles captured with rod-and-reel. Fourteen tags were deployed, of which 13 transmitted. All sharks for which we had data survived, giving a post-release survival rate of 100%. Following release, 6 individuals remained in surface waters for several hours to days, while 2 individuals immediately resumed normal diving behaviors. For the remaining sharks (n = 5), low tag transmission resolution precluded the detection of fine scale post-release behavior. The duration of initial depth-holding behavior was characterized using a break-point analysis of dive track variance, which suggests porbeagles exhibited a median post-release recovery period of 116 h (10th and 90th percentiles = 68.8 and 280.1 h) following capture and handling. Our preliminary study suggests immature porbeagles are resilient to capture and handling, although more data would provide stronger support for management recommendations.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

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

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