The BRUVs workshop – An Australia-wide synthesis of baited remote underwater video data to answer broad-scale ecological questions about fish, sharks and rays

Many marine fish populations have declined due to the individual or cumulative impacts of increasing water temperatures, ocean acidification, overfishing and other human-induced impacts such as land run-off, dredging and habitat alteration. Some solutions may be offered by ecosystem-based fisheries...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Policy
Main Authors: Harvey, Euan S, McLean, Dianne, Goetze, Jordan, Saunders, Benjamin J, Langlois, Tim, Monk, Jacquomo, Barrett, Neville, Wilson, Shaun K, Holmes, Thomas H, Ierodiaconou, Daniel, Jordan, Alan R, Meekan, Mark G, Malcolm, Hamish A, Heupel, Michelle R, Harasti, David, Huveneers, Charlie, Knott, Nathan A, Fairclough, David, Currey-Randall, Leanne M, Travers, Michael J, Radford, Ben, Rees, Matthew J, Speed, Conrad W, Wakefield, Corey, Cappo, Mike, Newman, Stephen J
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital Library 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://library.dpird.wa.gov.au/fr_fja/226
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104430
id ftdafwa:oai:library.dpird.wa.gov.au:fr_fja-1236
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdafwa:oai:library.dpird.wa.gov.au:fr_fja-1236 2024-09-09T20:01:42+00:00 The BRUVs workshop – An Australia-wide synthesis of baited remote underwater video data to answer broad-scale ecological questions about fish, sharks and rays Harvey, Euan S McLean, Dianne Goetze, Jordan Saunders, Benjamin J Langlois, Tim Monk, Jacquomo Barrett, Neville Wilson, Shaun K Holmes, Thomas H Ierodiaconou, Daniel Jordan, Alan R Meekan, Mark G Malcolm, Hamish A Heupel, Michelle R Harasti, David Huveneers, Charlie Knott, Nathan A Fairclough, David Currey-Randall, Leanne M Travers, Michael J Radford, Ben Rees, Matthew J Speed, Conrad W Wakefield, Corey Cappo, Mike Newman, Stephen J 2021-02-15T08:00:00Z https://library.dpird.wa.gov.au/fr_fja/226 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104430 unknown Digital Library https://library.dpird.wa.gov.au/fr_fja/226 doi:10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104430 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104430 Fisheries Research Articles Sampling Monitoring Population ecology Management GlobalArchive Aquaculture and Fisheries Marine Biology text 2021 ftdafwa https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104430 2024-07-22T03:12:30Z Many marine fish populations have declined due to the individual or cumulative impacts of increasing water temperatures, ocean acidification, overfishing and other human-induced impacts such as land run-off, dredging and habitat alteration. Some solutions may be offered by ecosystem-based fisheries and conservation management. However, understanding their effectiveness relies on the availability of good quality data on the size distributions and abundance of fish populations and assemblages, collected at appropriate temporal and spatial scales. Since the early 2000s, baited remote underwater video systems (BRUVs) have become a popular tool for collecting data on fish assemblages across a range of depths and habitats. In Australia, this technique has been adopted by many different agencies and institutions, creating a unique opportunity to compile a continental-scale synthesis of fish data using a standardised sampling technique. Key Australian researchers and managers were invited to contribute to a synthesis workshop on baited underwater video in Albany, Western Australia between the 4th and 8th of February 2018. Data from 19,939 BRUVs deployments, collected between 2000 and 2017 around Australia, were compiled using GlobalArchive (globalarchive.org). The workshop identified and prioritised several key research themes that would contribute to the conservation and sustainable management of focal species and broad assemblages. Our goal is to describe where and when the data were collected, the type of equipment used and how the imagery was analysed. We also discuss the types of questions that can be addressed by analysing these standardised datasets and the potential benefits to conservation and fisheries management. Text Ocean acidification Department of Agriculture and Food, Western Australia (DAFWA): Research Library Marine Policy 127 104430
institution Open Polar
collection Department of Agriculture and Food, Western Australia (DAFWA): Research Library
op_collection_id ftdafwa
language unknown
topic Sampling
Monitoring
Population ecology
Management
GlobalArchive
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Marine Biology
spellingShingle Sampling
Monitoring
Population ecology
Management
GlobalArchive
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Marine Biology
Harvey, Euan S
McLean, Dianne
Goetze, Jordan
Saunders, Benjamin J
Langlois, Tim
Monk, Jacquomo
Barrett, Neville
Wilson, Shaun K
Holmes, Thomas H
Ierodiaconou, Daniel
Jordan, Alan R
Meekan, Mark G
Malcolm, Hamish A
Heupel, Michelle R
Harasti, David
Huveneers, Charlie
Knott, Nathan A
Fairclough, David
Currey-Randall, Leanne M
Travers, Michael J
Radford, Ben
Rees, Matthew J
Speed, Conrad W
Wakefield, Corey
Cappo, Mike
Newman, Stephen J
The BRUVs workshop – An Australia-wide synthesis of baited remote underwater video data to answer broad-scale ecological questions about fish, sharks and rays
topic_facet Sampling
Monitoring
Population ecology
Management
GlobalArchive
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Marine Biology
description Many marine fish populations have declined due to the individual or cumulative impacts of increasing water temperatures, ocean acidification, overfishing and other human-induced impacts such as land run-off, dredging and habitat alteration. Some solutions may be offered by ecosystem-based fisheries and conservation management. However, understanding their effectiveness relies on the availability of good quality data on the size distributions and abundance of fish populations and assemblages, collected at appropriate temporal and spatial scales. Since the early 2000s, baited remote underwater video systems (BRUVs) have become a popular tool for collecting data on fish assemblages across a range of depths and habitats. In Australia, this technique has been adopted by many different agencies and institutions, creating a unique opportunity to compile a continental-scale synthesis of fish data using a standardised sampling technique. Key Australian researchers and managers were invited to contribute to a synthesis workshop on baited underwater video in Albany, Western Australia between the 4th and 8th of February 2018. Data from 19,939 BRUVs deployments, collected between 2000 and 2017 around Australia, were compiled using GlobalArchive (globalarchive.org). The workshop identified and prioritised several key research themes that would contribute to the conservation and sustainable management of focal species and broad assemblages. Our goal is to describe where and when the data were collected, the type of equipment used and how the imagery was analysed. We also discuss the types of questions that can be addressed by analysing these standardised datasets and the potential benefits to conservation and fisheries management.
format Text
author Harvey, Euan S
McLean, Dianne
Goetze, Jordan
Saunders, Benjamin J
Langlois, Tim
Monk, Jacquomo
Barrett, Neville
Wilson, Shaun K
Holmes, Thomas H
Ierodiaconou, Daniel
Jordan, Alan R
Meekan, Mark G
Malcolm, Hamish A
Heupel, Michelle R
Harasti, David
Huveneers, Charlie
Knott, Nathan A
Fairclough, David
Currey-Randall, Leanne M
Travers, Michael J
Radford, Ben
Rees, Matthew J
Speed, Conrad W
Wakefield, Corey
Cappo, Mike
Newman, Stephen J
author_facet Harvey, Euan S
McLean, Dianne
Goetze, Jordan
Saunders, Benjamin J
Langlois, Tim
Monk, Jacquomo
Barrett, Neville
Wilson, Shaun K
Holmes, Thomas H
Ierodiaconou, Daniel
Jordan, Alan R
Meekan, Mark G
Malcolm, Hamish A
Heupel, Michelle R
Harasti, David
Huveneers, Charlie
Knott, Nathan A
Fairclough, David
Currey-Randall, Leanne M
Travers, Michael J
Radford, Ben
Rees, Matthew J
Speed, Conrad W
Wakefield, Corey
Cappo, Mike
Newman, Stephen J
author_sort Harvey, Euan S
title The BRUVs workshop – An Australia-wide synthesis of baited remote underwater video data to answer broad-scale ecological questions about fish, sharks and rays
title_short The BRUVs workshop – An Australia-wide synthesis of baited remote underwater video data to answer broad-scale ecological questions about fish, sharks and rays
title_full The BRUVs workshop – An Australia-wide synthesis of baited remote underwater video data to answer broad-scale ecological questions about fish, sharks and rays
title_fullStr The BRUVs workshop – An Australia-wide synthesis of baited remote underwater video data to answer broad-scale ecological questions about fish, sharks and rays
title_full_unstemmed The BRUVs workshop – An Australia-wide synthesis of baited remote underwater video data to answer broad-scale ecological questions about fish, sharks and rays
title_sort bruvs workshop – an australia-wide synthesis of baited remote underwater video data to answer broad-scale ecological questions about fish, sharks and rays
publisher Digital Library
publishDate 2021
url https://library.dpird.wa.gov.au/fr_fja/226
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104430
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Fisheries Research Articles
op_relation https://library.dpird.wa.gov.au/fr_fja/226
doi:10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104430
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104430
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104430
container_title Marine Policy
container_volume 127
container_start_page 104430
_version_ 1809933581440516096