Showing posts with label marine reserves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marine reserves. Show all posts

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Fishtracker detects visitors to Redfish Rocks


The Fishtracker Project is my thesis research into the movement behaviors of fish at Redfish Rocks, located on the southern coast of Oregon, near the town of Port Orford. The area will become a no-take marine reserve on January 1, 2012, and one of my goals is to collect baseline data prior to closure.

I am using acoustic telemetry to track the movement behaviors of six valuable species of fish; Black, Canary, China, Copper, and Quillback Rockfish, and the Cabezon. My goal is to quantify the degree of protection provided by the no-take reserve to different s
pecies, based on the proportion of time they spend within the protected area. To accomplish this, I surgically implant acoustic transmitter tags in fish of each species, and maintain an array of acoustic receivers. Coded transmissions from the tags are recorded when a tagged fish swims within range of a receiver. Periodically, I retrieve data from the receivers in the field, and analyze these data to reveal the movement behaviors of the tagged fish. Please visit fishtracker.org to learn more.

One unexpected result of my work is that the receiver array has recorded many transmissions from fish that have been tagged by other researchers. At least sixteen green sturgeon tagged in the upper Sacramento and Klamath Rivers have migrated northward through the array, and three white sharks have also been detected in the area.

This video depicts one week of the movement behavior of one of these sharks. This shark was tagged by Dr. Mauric
io Hoyas, who leads the white shark tagging project at Guadalupe Island in Mexico.



You can watch this video in larger format on and watch more video and learn all about the Fishtracker Project, including how you can help support this work by adopting a tagged fish at fishtracker.org.

Visit this blog and fishtracker.org, and "like" fishtracker on facebook, to keep up-to-date about the movement behaviors of tagged fish, and to learn the identities of our other visitors!



Thanks for reading my post!


Thursday, November 19, 2009

Introduction to the Heppell Lab

We are a diverse group of ecologists and physiologists working on a variety of topics!  We hope this blog gives you a way to get to know us better.  Current research topics include work on:
  • larval quality in Pacific Ocean Perch
  • science and education surrounding marine reserves in Oregon
  • methods for improving stock assessment
  • rockfish recruitment in Oregon estuaries
  • rockfish conservation through cooperation with fishers
  • trophic ecology and ecosystem modelling of the Bering Sea
  • heat shock proteins as indicators of thermal stress in eastern Oregon streams
  • reproduction of lake trout in the Great Lakes
  • interactions between redband trout and mountain whitefish in the Crooked River
  • behavior and population trends of grouper in the Cayman Islands
  • using vertebral chemical composition to distinguishing natal origins of sharks and rays
  • nesting behavior and movements of sea turtles
  • understanding the consequences of invasion of Humbolt squid
In addition, members of the lab have been to interesting national and international meetings, have received a number of awards, and often find themselves on trips to new and exciting places associated with their research.