Egress of Adult Sport Fish from an Estuarine Reserve within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Florida

A tag-recapture study was conducted within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge in the waters surrounding Kennedy Space Center, Florida (where public access has been restricted since 1962), to document egress of adult sport fish from an estuarine reserve. A total of 3,358 sport fish were tagged w...

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Published in:Gulf of Mexico Science
Main Authors: Stevens, Philip W., Sulak, Kenneth J.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: The Aquila Digital Community 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol19/iss2/1
https://doi.org/10.18785/goms.1902.01
https://aquila.usm.edu/context/goms/article/1358/viewcontent/Vol19No2P77_89.pdf
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spelling ftsouthmissispun:oai:aquila.usm.edu:goms-1358 2023-07-30T04:06:32+02:00 Egress of Adult Sport Fish from an Estuarine Reserve within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Florida Stevens, Philip W. Sulak, Kenneth J. 2001-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol19/iss2/1 https://doi.org/10.18785/goms.1902.01 https://aquila.usm.edu/context/goms/article/1358/viewcontent/Vol19No2P77_89.pdf unknown The Aquila Digital Community https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol19/iss2/1 doi:10.18785/goms.1902.01 https://aquila.usm.edu/context/goms/article/1358/viewcontent/Vol19No2P77_89.pdf Gulf of Mexico Science text 2001 ftsouthmissispun https://doi.org/10.18785/goms.1902.01 2023-07-15T18:37:40Z A tag-recapture study was conducted within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge in the waters surrounding Kennedy Space Center, Florida (where public access has been restricted since 1962), to document egress of adult sport fish from an estuarine reserve. A total of 3,358 sport fish were tagged within the restricted areas. The species tagged were red drum Sciaenops ocellatus (n = 1,366), spotted seatrout Cynoscion nebulosus (n = 927), black drum Pogonias cromis (n = 760), and common snook Centropomis undecimalis (n = 305). Results showed that adult sport fish moved from the restricted areas within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge to surrounding areas open to fishing. The recapture rates, based on angler responses outside of the restricted areas, were 3.1%, 0.8%, 2.9%, and 16.1% for red drum, spotted seatrout, black drum, and common snook, respectively. In general, red drum, spotted seatrout, and black drum were recaptured in waters adjacent to the restricted areas. Common snook, however, migrated from the restricted areas south to inlets. Tag recaptures for red drum, spotted seatrout, and black drum, together with a previous study that found greater abundance and size of sport fish in the restricted areas than in adjacent areas open to fishing, substantiate the fish replenishment zone function of the restricted areas. The restricted areas within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge protect fish populations and large adult sport fish egress to surrounding waters open to fishing. Text Red drum Sciaenops ocellatus The University of Southern Mississippi: The Aquila Digital Community Gulf of Mexico Science 19 2
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Southern Mississippi: The Aquila Digital Community
op_collection_id ftsouthmissispun
language unknown
description A tag-recapture study was conducted within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge in the waters surrounding Kennedy Space Center, Florida (where public access has been restricted since 1962), to document egress of adult sport fish from an estuarine reserve. A total of 3,358 sport fish were tagged within the restricted areas. The species tagged were red drum Sciaenops ocellatus (n = 1,366), spotted seatrout Cynoscion nebulosus (n = 927), black drum Pogonias cromis (n = 760), and common snook Centropomis undecimalis (n = 305). Results showed that adult sport fish moved from the restricted areas within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge to surrounding areas open to fishing. The recapture rates, based on angler responses outside of the restricted areas, were 3.1%, 0.8%, 2.9%, and 16.1% for red drum, spotted seatrout, black drum, and common snook, respectively. In general, red drum, spotted seatrout, and black drum were recaptured in waters adjacent to the restricted areas. Common snook, however, migrated from the restricted areas south to inlets. Tag recaptures for red drum, spotted seatrout, and black drum, together with a previous study that found greater abundance and size of sport fish in the restricted areas than in adjacent areas open to fishing, substantiate the fish replenishment zone function of the restricted areas. The restricted areas within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge protect fish populations and large adult sport fish egress to surrounding waters open to fishing.
format Text
author Stevens, Philip W.
Sulak, Kenneth J.
spellingShingle Stevens, Philip W.
Sulak, Kenneth J.
Egress of Adult Sport Fish from an Estuarine Reserve within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Florida
author_facet Stevens, Philip W.
Sulak, Kenneth J.
author_sort Stevens, Philip W.
title Egress of Adult Sport Fish from an Estuarine Reserve within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Florida
title_short Egress of Adult Sport Fish from an Estuarine Reserve within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Florida
title_full Egress of Adult Sport Fish from an Estuarine Reserve within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Florida
title_fullStr Egress of Adult Sport Fish from an Estuarine Reserve within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Florida
title_full_unstemmed Egress of Adult Sport Fish from an Estuarine Reserve within Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Florida
title_sort egress of adult sport fish from an estuarine reserve within merritt island national wildlife refuge, florida
publisher The Aquila Digital Community
publishDate 2001
url https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol19/iss2/1
https://doi.org/10.18785/goms.1902.01
https://aquila.usm.edu/context/goms/article/1358/viewcontent/Vol19No2P77_89.pdf
genre Red drum
Sciaenops ocellatus
genre_facet Red drum
Sciaenops ocellatus
op_source Gulf of Mexico Science
op_relation https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol19/iss2/1
doi:10.18785/goms.1902.01
https://aquila.usm.edu/context/goms/article/1358/viewcontent/Vol19No2P77_89.pdf
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18785/goms.1902.01
container_title Gulf of Mexico Science
container_volume 19
container_issue 2
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