What acoustic telemetry can and cannot tell us about fish biology

被引:7
作者
Jacoby, David M. P. [1 ,2 ]
Piper, Adam T. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lancaster, Lancaster Environm Ctr, Lancaster LA1 4YQ, England
[2] Zool Soc London, Inst Zool, London, England
关键词
biotelemetry; conservation; fish behavior; fisheries; movement ecology; tracking; JUVENILE CHINOOK SALMON; CATCH-AND-RELEASE; TROUT ONCORHYNCHUS-MYKISS; ATLANTIC COD; SPAWNING AGGREGATIONS; NETWORK ANALYSIS; LANDSCAPE CONNECTIVITY; MIGRATION PATTERNS; SEXUAL SEGREGATION; ANGUILLA-ANGUILLA;
D O I
10.1111/jfb.15588
中图分类号
S9 [水产、渔业];
学科分类号
0908 ;
摘要
Acoustic telemetry (AT) has become ubiquitous in aquatic monitoring and fish biology, conservation, and management. Since the early use of active ultrasonic tracking that required researchers to follow at a distance their species of interest, the field has diversified considerably, with exciting advances in both hydrophone and transmitter technology. Once a highly specialized methodology, however, AT is fast becoming a generalist tool for those wishing to study or conserve fishes, leading to diversifying application by non-specialists. With this transition in mind, we evaluate exactly what AT has become useful for, discussing how the technological and analytical advances around AT can address important questions within fish biology. In doing so, we highlight the key ecological and applied research areas where AT continues to reveal crucial new insights and, in particular, when combined with complimentary research approaches. We provide a comprehensive breakdown of the state of the art for applications of AT, discussing the ongoing challenges, where its strengths lie, and how future developments may revolutionize fisheries management, behavioral ecology and species protection. Through selected papers we illustrate specific applications across the broad spectrum of fish biology. By bringing together the recent and future developments in this field under categories designed to broadly capture many aspects of fish biology, we hope to offer a useful guide for the non-specialist practitioner as they attempt to navigate the dizzying array of considerations and ongoing developments within this diverse toolkit.
引用
收藏
页数:25
相关论文
共 49 条
  • [31] Mistaking the Map for the Territory: What Does the History of Bannerghatta National Park, India, Tell us about the Study of Institutions?
    Jayaprakash, Lingaraj G.
    Hickey, Gordon M.
    SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES, 2019, 32 (12) : 1433 - 1450
  • [32] What fishers' local ecological knowledge can reveal about the changes in exploited fish catches
    Martins, Ivan Machado
    Medeiros, Rodrigo Pereira
    Di Domenico, Maikon
    Hanazaki, Natalia
    FISHERIES RESEARCH, 2018, 198 : 109 - 116
  • [33] What Do the First 597 Global Fungal Red List Assessments Tell Us about the Threat Status of Fungi?
    Mueller, Gregory M.
    Cunha, Kelmer Martins
    May, Tom W.
    Allen, Jessica L.
    Westrip, James R. S.
    Canteiro, Catia
    Costa-Rezende, Diogo Henrique
    Drechsler-Santos, Elisandro Ricardo
    Vasco-Palacios, Aida M.
    Ainsworth, Antony Martyn
    Alves-Silva, Genivaldo
    Bungartz, Frank
    Chandler, Amanda
    Goncalves, Susana C.
    Krisai-Greilhuber, Irmgard
    Irsenaite, Reda
    Jordal, John Bjarne
    Kosmann, Thiago
    Lendemer, James
    McMullin, Richard Troy
    Mesic, Armin
    Motato-Vasquez, Viviana
    Ohmura, Yoshihito
    Naesborg, Rikke Reese
    FerMi, Claudia
    Saar, Irja
    Simijaca, Diego
    Yahr, Rebecca
    Dahlberg, Anders
    DIVERSITY-BASEL, 2022, 14 (09):
  • [34] What Can Frogs Teach Us about Resilience? Adaptive Renewal in Amphibian and Academic Ecosystems
    Byrne, Allison Q.
    INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY, 2024, 64 (03) : 795 - 806
  • [35] A Year of Discursive Struggle Over Freedom of Speech on Twitter: What Can a Mixed-Methods Approach Tell Us?
    Dehghan, Ehsan
    SMSOCIETY'18: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 9TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SOCIAL MEDIA AND SOCIETY, 2018, : 266 - 270
  • [36] What do tree-related microhabitats tell us about the abundance of forest-dwelling bats, birds, and insects?
    Basile, Marco
    Asbeck, Thomas
    Jonker, Marlotte
    Knuff, Anna K.
    Bauhus, Juergen
    Braunisch, Veronika
    Mikusinski, Grzegorz
    Storch, Ilse
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2020, 264
  • [37] What can cetacean stranding records tell us? A study of UK and Irish cetacean diversity over the past 100 years
    Coombs, Ellen J.
    Deaville, Rob
    Sabin, Richard C.
    Allan, Louise
    O'Connell, Mick
    Berrow, Simon
    Smith, Brian
    Brownlow, Andrew
    Doeschate, Mariel Ten
    Penrose, Rod
    Williams, Ruth
    Perkins, Matthew W.
    Jepson, Paul D.
    Cooper, Natalie
    MARINE MAMMAL SCIENCE, 2019, 35 (04) : 1527 - 1555
  • [39] 3D visualisations for communicative urban and landscape planning: What systematic mapping of academic literature can tell us of their potential?
    Eilola, Salla
    Jaalama, Kaisa
    Kangassalo, Petri
    Nummi, Pilvi
    Staffans, Aija
    Fagerholm, Nora
    LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING, 2023, 234
  • [40] What chasing birds can teach us about predation risk effects: past insights and future directions
    Blumstein, Daniel T.
    JOURNAL OF ORNITHOLOGY, 2019, 160 (02) : 587 - 592