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The fate of intracoelomic acoustic transmitters in Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) post-smolts and wider considerations for causal factors driving tag retention and mortality in fishes
Acoustic telemetry is a widely used method in assaying behavioural dynamics in fishes. Telemetry tags are often surgically implanted in the coelom of the animal and are assumed to have minimal rates of post-release mortality and tag shedding. However, fish are capable expelling tags and mortalities do occur following release, with the mechanism(s) underlying these effects not well understood. The purpose of this research was to address causal factors underlying tagging mortality and tag expulsion in fishes. We conducted an empirical assessment of tag retention and post-surgical mortality rates in post-smolt Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) fitted with a dummy acoustic tag over a 92 day monitoring period. This was complimented with a meta-analysis of factors affecting tag retention and post-surgical mortality rates in the wider literature. Post-smolt salmon exhibited low rates of mortality following tag implantation (≤ 5.1%) but had high rates of tag expulsion (54.8%) and impaired growth and a foreign body response was evident. The meta-analysis showed that mortality was generally low across all studies (12.4%) and was largely unaffected by model cofactors. Tag retention rates were high among the studies investigated here (86.7%) and had a weak negative relationship with tag: body mass ratios. Our results suggest that while mortality is often low among tagging studies, including this one, caution must be exercised in assessing stationary tags as they may represent an expelled tag rather than a mortality event. Our results also indicate that tag dimensions are not nearly important as the tag: body mass ratio. Lawrence, M.J., Wilson, B.M., Reid, G.K. et al. The fate of intracoelomic acoustic transmitters in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) post-smolts and wider considerations for causal factors driving tag retention and mortality in fishes. Anim Biotelemetry 11, 40 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40317-023-00351-0 Cite this data as: Lawrence, M.J., Wilson, B.M., Reid, G.K., Hawthorn, C., English. G, Black, M, Leadbeater, S., McKindsey, C.W., Trudel, M. The fate of intracoelomic acoustic transmitters in Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) post-smolts and wider considerations for casual factors driving tag retention and mortality in fishes. Published October 2023. Coastal Ecosystem Science Division, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, St Andrews, NB.
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Acoustic detection and biological data for Lake Trout, Salvelinus namaycush, in Lake Ontario
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Acoustic Telemetry is gaining popularity for use in fisheries research as a method to estimate survival and observe behaviors of native fish species. Methodology for capture and tagging of fish is typically context and species-specific, requiring a case by case basis for best practices to maximize survival of tagged individuals. This dataset includes acoustic detection data from 320 adult Lake Trout, Salvelinus namaycush, captured and acoustic-tagged in Lake Ontario during April-June of 2023. Biological data (total length), capture data (surface water temperature, capture depth), capture location, and capture gear (angling, bottom trawls, gillnets) are also included in the dataset as covariates that can be analyzed to determine if any of these factors affect post-release survival of tagged Lake Trout. Acoustic detection data is available from April 2023 to November 2024. Survival of acoustic-tagged Lake Trout was estimated through acoustic telemetry detections indicating the status of the Lake Trout (alive vs. dead).
Impacts of bird predation on the detection of acoustic telemetry tags in fish (ver. 2.0, September 2025)
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This data release contains the methodology and results of three field experiments performed in 2024 and 2025 to better understand how predation impacts detection efficiency of acoustic tags. The first experiment was a static approach focusing on how different tag types, tag power, depth, distance to passive receivers, and predation would affect detection efficiency and utilized both tagged yellow perch (Perca flavescens) as well as double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) that had "consumed" a tagged yellow perch and indicated that proximity to the surface as well as range from passive receivers were significant factors. The second experiment was designed to simulate cormorant diving activity and determine how that behavior and tags with different nominal signal delays affects detection efficiency. The third experiment was a static approach similar to the first experiment and was designed to fill in data gaps of the first experiment utilizing both tagged yellow perch and double-crested cormorants.
Impacts of bird predation on the detection of acoustic telemetry tags in fish
공공데이터포털
This data release contains the methodology and results of two field experiments performed in 2024 to better understand how predation impacts detection efficiency of acoustic tags. The first experiment was a static approach focusing on how different tag types, tag power, depth distance to passive receivers, and predation would affect detection efficiency. It utilized both tagged yellow perch (Perca flavescens) as well as double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) that had "consumed" a tagged yellow perch. The second experiment was designed to simulate cormorant diving activity and determined how that behavior and tags with different nominal signal delays affected detection efficiency.
Mobile acoustic telemetry data - Lingcod Stock Enhancement: ecological interactions, fishery contributions, and life history
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Lingcod (Ophiodon elongatus) populations along the West Coast of North America have recovered from overfishing, but the status of genetically distinct lingcod in Puget Sound, Washington is less clear. This project will use small-scale lingcod releases to learn about the benefits and risks of using stock enhancement as a tool to help rebuild marine fish populations. We have conducted experiments to improve rearing methods, improve release methods, and learn about lingcod life history, and are proceeding with a before-after-control-impact study that will quantify ecological impacts on wild fishes. WDFW collaborates on this project by conducting creel surveys. This project has been or is currently supported by the Science Consortium for Ocean Replenishment, the Puget Sound Recreational Fisheries Enhancement Fund, and NOAA Aquaculture. Previous or present partners include the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission, the Nisqually Tribe, WDFW, and the Washington SCUBA Alliance. Data from mobile Vemco VR28 acoustic hydrophone array towed behind a boat in South Puget Sound. Contains detections of hatchery lingcod.
Atlantic Salmon Telemetry Monitoring
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Annual telemetry data are collected as part of specific projects (assessments within watersheds) or as opportunistic efforts to characterize Atlantic salmon smolt migration dynamics. Telemtry projects have since expanded to include the tracking of a variety of non-Atlantic salmon species.
Determine movement patterns and survival rates of Central Valley Chinook salmon, steelhead and their predators using acoustic tags.
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The project’s objective is to document movement patterns and survival rates of Chinook salmon, steelhead, green sturgeon, and other fish from several sources in the Central Valley of California. Juvenile salmonids from hatcheries or wild caught are implanted with small acoustic transmitters and the location of the fish are recorded on receivers that are placed throughout the watershed from Redding to the Golden Gate. Over 70 receiver locations with over 150 receivers monitor the movement of these fish. These receivers record the date, time, and unique identification number of transmitters that pass within listening range of the receivers. The first acoustic tagging studies began in 2006 and continue today.
Evaluation of fish behaviors in response to driven and undriven entanglement nets with emphasis on invasive Silver Carp, Central Missouri, 2015-2016
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We used Adaptive Resolution Imaging Sonar (ARIS), which is based on Dual-Frequency Identification Sonar (DIDSON) technology to observe net encounter behaviors of bigheaded carps. Gill nets with four different mesh types (8.9 cm bar mesh) and trammel nets with five different mesh sizes (range 5.1-8.9 cm bar mesh) were evaluated. Net sets were undisturbed, or fish were driven with the noise of the outboard boat motor. We sampled field sites in tributaries and the mainstem Missouri River in central Missouri from June 2015 to October 2016. Specific sampling sites were determined based on previously documented Silver Carp abundance with anticipated densities sufficient for testing behavioral responses to entanglement gears. Specific tributaries sampled consisted of the Lamine River, Blackwater River, Moniteau Creek, and Cedar Creek. Habitat within these low gradient tributaries consists of minimal current if present and shallow depths (less than 4 m). Nets set in the mainstem Missouri River were downstream of channel training structures, where flow diversion resulted in minimal to no current and similar depths. Eighty net sets for 40 hours of total ARIS video were collected. Catch was used to identify length and species present in videos, with Silver Carp and Smallmouth Buffalo the predominate species caught. Within ARIS videos, body morphology was used to categorize and enumerate responses of fish.
Tag effect data - Lingcod Stock Enhancement: ecological interactions, fishery contributions, and life history
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Lingcod (Ophiodon elongatus) populations along the West Coast of North America have recovered from overfishing, but the status of genetically distinct lingcod in Puget Sound, Washington is less clear. This project will use small-scale lingcod releases to learn about the benefits and risks of using stock enhancement as a tool to help rebuild marine fish populations. We have conducted experiments to improve rearing methods, improve release methods, and learn about lingcod life history, and are proceeding with a before-after-control-impact study that will quantify ecological impacts on wild fishes. WDFW collaborates on this project by conducting creel surveys. This project has been or is currently supported by the Science Consortium for Ocean Replenishment, the Puget Sound Recreational Fisheries Enhancement Fund, and NOAA Aquaculture. Previous or present partners include the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission, the Nisqually Tribe, WDFW, and the Washington SCUBA Alliance. Data on effects of acoustic tags on hatchery lingcod feeding and movement.
Fish Observations During Delta Smelt Experimental Releases Inferred from ARIS Sonar
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This dataset includes post-processed data for underwater fish observations by using Acoustic Resolution Imaging Sonar technology in Montezuma Slough, Sacramento River, and in the Sacramento Deep Water Shipping Channel in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, California, USA. This data release includes sample data associated with each video file collected, swimming behavior of groups of released cultured Delta Smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus) that is associated with all three release types, and tracking data on both released cultured Delta Smelt and ambient fish that were observed underwater using sonar technology. This data release includes data from years one to three of the Delta Smelt Experimental Releases, in water years 2022 to 2024.
Biological data - Integrated acoustic and trawl survey of Pacific hake off the Pacific Coast
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Integrated acoustic and trawl surveys are used to assess the distribution, biomass, and biology of Pacific hake along the Pacific coasts of the United States and Canada. Scientists from the Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC) and Department of Fisheries and Oceans-Canada are responsible for conducting the survey. The survey consists of a series of transects that are oriented generally east-west, and are spaced at a nominal 10-nautical mile interval. Sea depth at the nearshore end of individual transects is typically 50 m; offshore extents are typically at a depth of 1,500 m. Geographical coverage extends from near Morro Bay, CA north to Dixon Entrance. Acoustic data are collected during daylight hours with a Simrad EK60 scientific echo sounder coupled with the ER60 software system. Trawl samples from pelagic and bottom trawls are used to classify the observed backscatter layers to species and size composition and to collect specimens of Pacific hake and other organisms. Analysis of acoustic data involves identification and delineation of backscatter layers that are attributed to Pacific hake. The biomass estimate and length-at-age composition of Pacific hake generated from this survey are used in analysis and management of the stock. This survey is conducted on a biennial basis. There is a firm deadline for producing the biomass estimate in the middle of the December following the survey. Biological data collected from FSCS during catch processing.