Movement Patterns and Site Utilization of Fishes as Determined by Acoustic Telemetry: Implications for the Design of Marine Reserves

Marine reserves (MRs), also known as no-take reserves, represent one of the primary tools for conservation and management of the marine environment currently available to managers. While the theoretical justification for MRs is extensive (see National Research Council 2001), and mounting evidence de...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lindholm, James, Auster, Peter, Kaufman, Les, Miller, Steven, Stone, Greg
Other Authors: NOAAS STELLWAGEN BANK NATIONAL MARINE SANCTUARY SCITUATE MA
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA499166
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA499166
Description
Summary:Marine reserves (MRs), also known as no-take reserves, represent one of the primary tools for conservation and management of the marine environment currently available to managers. While the theoretical justification for MRs is extensive (see National Research Council 2001), and mounting evidence demonstrates the effectiveness of MRs as a management tool (Halpern, 2003), empirical data on the utility of MRs for mobile taxa such as fishes is still needed (Lindholm and Auster, 2002). Information on the movement of individual fish relative to landscape features, in both tropical and temperate seas, is critical for the design of successful MRs. A number of studies have demonstrated that many fish species exhibit statistically significant but facultative associations at various life history stages with specific microtopographic structures (=microhabitats) in low topography environments (e.g., Auster et al. 2003; Auster et al. In Press). Less is known, however, about the movement patterns and site utilization of individual fish relative to these features of the landscape. Whether the goal of an MR is the protection of the diversity of fishes overall (Bohnsack and Ault, 1996; Agardy, 1999; Hastings and Botsford, 2003) or the management of particular exploited fish populations (Bohnsack, 1993; Dayton et al., 2000; Gell and Roberts, 2003), the siting and design of MRs will be improved by data on the movement of fishes of different species relative to landscape features and patterns. Results are presented for two on-going telemetry studies in the western North Atlantic: Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary (SBNMS) in the Gulf of Maine and in the northern Florida Keys. See also ADM002146. Presented at the Oceans 2003 MTS/IEEE Conference, held in San Diego, CA on September 22-26, 2003. Published in the Proceedings of the Oceans 2003 MTS/IEEE Conference p1235-1237, 2003.