Summary: | EIFAAC Symposium on Inland Fisheries and Aquaculture: Advances in Technology, Stock Assessment and Citizen Science in an Era of Climate Change, 20- 21 June 2022, Killarney, Ireland Coordinated systems composed by fixed and mobile robotic platforms are used for the ecological monitoring of megafauna across ecological gradients (oceanographic, geomorphological and substrate characteristics across the bathymetry of the slope and through water column layers) continuously at a high temporal frequency. None of these platforms is branching into estuarine and river areas, providing the coupling of ecological gradients that encompass marine and inland waters. Here, we propose a conceptual scheme to bring forward that integration, by establishing the principles of a network of fixed platforms working not only with HD imaging but also with advanced optoacoustic tools that works in turbid waters. This sensor dotation may be expanded by tools for augmented species presence detection beyond the HD and optoacoustic imaging, such as Passive Acoustic Monitoring and omics approaches (eDNA). Detection by acoustic and molecular markers can be cross-validated against libraries of images. The use of land-docked crawlers may allow stepping-stone observations between patches to spatially scale local data, extending the ecological representativeness of local observations. Those infrastructures may be of a special relevance for legally prescribed monitoring of endangered European eel (Anguilla anguilla), but also for other species, including anadromous Salmo salar in increasingly impacted coastal-river areas Peer reviewed
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