POST–the Pacific Ocean salmon tracking project

David W. Welch , George W. Boehlert , Bruce R. Ward
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引用次数: 129

Abstract

For most of history, the ocean has remained nearly opaque to study, and it has been difficult to understand where salmon or other marine animals go or how they use the ocean. This greatly limits the ability of oceanographers and fisheries biologists to improve the management of many marine resources. The technical and scientific basis now exists to track the ocean movements of individual marine fish for months or years at a time. In this article, we review how new technologies might be applied to salmon in particular. Our conclusion is that animals as small as juvenile Pacific salmon can be followed for months to years at sea, and thus over great distances. By identifying the migration pathways for individual salmon and specific populations of Pacific salmon, we can establish their ocean foraging grounds. We outline the approaches and initial results from the Census of Marine Life program pacific ocean salmon tracking (POST). The research program involves two distinct aspects: (1) the development of an acoustic array for tracking the movements of Pacific salmon during their shelf-resident phase of the life history and (2) the use of archival (data storage) tags to measure aspects of their local environment and to delineate their open ocean migration pathways off the shelf. We report on some of the preliminary findings from the first year of the field project using acoustic tags.

post -太平洋鲑鱼追踪项目
在历史的大部分时间里,海洋的研究几乎是不透明的,人们很难了解鲑鱼或其他海洋动物去了哪里,也很难了解它们如何利用海洋。这极大地限制了海洋学家和渔业生物学家改善许多海洋资源管理的能力。现在已经有了技术和科学基础,可以对单个海鱼的海洋活动进行数月或数年的跟踪。在这篇文章中,我们特别回顾了新技术如何应用于鲑鱼。我们的结论是,像太平洋鲑鱼这样小的动物可以在海上被跟踪数月至数年,因此可以跨越很远的距离。通过确定单个鲑鱼和特定太平洋鲑鱼种群的迁徙路径,我们可以建立它们的海洋觅食地。我们概述了海洋生物普查项目太平洋鲑鱼追踪(POST)的方法和初步结果。该研究项目涉及两个不同的方面:(1)开发一种声学阵列,用于跟踪太平洋鲑鱼在其生活史的大陆架居住阶段的运动;(2)使用档案(数据存储)标签来测量其当地环境的各个方面,并描绘其离开大陆架的开放海洋迁徙路径。我们报告了使用声学标签的现场项目第一年的一些初步发现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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