Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video

Baited remote underwater videos (BRUV) are popular marine monitoring techniques used for the assessment of motile fauna. Currently, most published studies evaluating BRUV methods stem from environments in the Southern Hemisphere. This has led to stricter and more defined guidelines for the use of th...

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Main Authors: Jones, R., Griffin, R., Herbert, Roger J.H., Unsworth, R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/35390/
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/35390/1/Jones%20et%20al.%202021.pdf
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spelling ftunivbournem:oai:eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk:35390 2023-06-11T04:14:53+02:00 Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video Jones, R. Griffin, R. Herbert, Roger J.H. Unsworth, R. 2021-03-03 application/pdf http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/35390/ https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/35390/1/Jones%20et%20al.%202021.pdf en eng https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/35390/1/Jones%20et%20al.%202021.pdf Jones, R., Griffin, R., Herbert, R. J.H. and Unsworth, R., 2021. Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video. Oceans, 2 (1), 215 - 232. cc_by_4 Article PeerReviewed 2021 ftunivbournem 2023-05-28T05:45:17Z Baited remote underwater videos (BRUV) are popular marine monitoring techniques used for the assessment of motile fauna. Currently, most published studies evaluating BRUV methods stem from environments in the Southern Hemisphere. This has led to stricter and more defined guidelines for the use of these techniques in these areas in comparison to the North Atlantic, where little or no specific guidance exists. This study explores metadata taken from BRUV deployments collected around the UK to understand the influence of methodological and environmental factors on the information gathered during BRUV deployments including species richness, relative abundance and faunal composition. In total, 39 BRUV surveys accumulating in 457 BRUV deployments across South/South-West England andWales were used in this analysis. This study identified 88 different taxa from 43 families across the 457 deployments. Whilst taxonomic groups such as Labridae, Gadidae and Gobiidae were represented by a high number of species, species diversity for the Clupeidae, Scombridae, Sparidae, Gasterosteidae and Rajidae groups were low and many families were absent altogether. Bait type was consistently identified as one of the most influential factors over species richness, relative abundance and faunal assemblage composition. Image quality and deployment duration were also identified as significant influential factors over relative abundance. As expected, habitat observed was identified as an influential factor over faunal assemblage composition in addition to its significant interaction with image quality, time of deployment, bait type and tide type (spring/neap). Our findings suggest that methodological and environmental factors should be taken into account when designing and implementing monitoring surveys using BRUV techniques. Standardising factors where possible remains key. Fluctuations and variations in data may be attributed to methodological inconsistencies and/or environment factors as well as over time and therefore must be considered ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Bournemouth University Research Online (BURO)
institution Open Polar
collection Bournemouth University Research Online (BURO)
op_collection_id ftunivbournem
language English
description Baited remote underwater videos (BRUV) are popular marine monitoring techniques used for the assessment of motile fauna. Currently, most published studies evaluating BRUV methods stem from environments in the Southern Hemisphere. This has led to stricter and more defined guidelines for the use of these techniques in these areas in comparison to the North Atlantic, where little or no specific guidance exists. This study explores metadata taken from BRUV deployments collected around the UK to understand the influence of methodological and environmental factors on the information gathered during BRUV deployments including species richness, relative abundance and faunal composition. In total, 39 BRUV surveys accumulating in 457 BRUV deployments across South/South-West England andWales were used in this analysis. This study identified 88 different taxa from 43 families across the 457 deployments. Whilst taxonomic groups such as Labridae, Gadidae and Gobiidae were represented by a high number of species, species diversity for the Clupeidae, Scombridae, Sparidae, Gasterosteidae and Rajidae groups were low and many families were absent altogether. Bait type was consistently identified as one of the most influential factors over species richness, relative abundance and faunal assemblage composition. Image quality and deployment duration were also identified as significant influential factors over relative abundance. As expected, habitat observed was identified as an influential factor over faunal assemblage composition in addition to its significant interaction with image quality, time of deployment, bait type and tide type (spring/neap). Our findings suggest that methodological and environmental factors should be taken into account when designing and implementing monitoring surveys using BRUV techniques. Standardising factors where possible remains key. Fluctuations and variations in data may be attributed to methodological inconsistencies and/or environment factors as well as over time and therefore must be considered ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jones, R.
Griffin, R.
Herbert, Roger J.H.
Unsworth, R.
spellingShingle Jones, R.
Griffin, R.
Herbert, Roger J.H.
Unsworth, R.
Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video
author_facet Jones, R.
Griffin, R.
Herbert, Roger J.H.
Unsworth, R.
author_sort Jones, R.
title Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video
title_short Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video
title_full Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video
title_fullStr Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video
title_full_unstemmed Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video
title_sort consistency is critical for the effective use of baited remote video
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/35390/
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/35390/1/Jones%20et%20al.%202021.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/35390/1/Jones%20et%20al.%202021.pdf
Jones, R., Griffin, R., Herbert, R. J.H. and Unsworth, R., 2021. Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video. Oceans, 2 (1), 215 - 232.
op_rights cc_by_4
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