Publication Abstract

Title
Use of data storage tags to quantify vertical movements of cod: effects on acoustic measures
Publication Abstract

Use of data storage tags to quantify vertical movements of cod: effects on acoustic measures

O. Heffernan, D. Righton and K. Michalsen

Depth data from archival tagging studies of cod (Gadus morhua) were used in three different analyses with the aim of testing basic assumptions of cod behaviour. Examination of post-release depth profiles from cod tagged in the Barents, North, and Irish Seas revealed that some cod underwent a post-release period of adaptation to increasing depth as they readjusted their buoyancy to its pre-tagging level. This depth adaptation behaviour was characterized by gradually increasing mean depth, and enabled the calculation of neutralbuoyancy compliant descent rates, which were less than 1 m h-1. Estimated rates of vertical movement were shown to be highly dependent upon the frequency at which depth was sampled. Maximum estimated rates of ascent and descent from sampling intervals of 10 or 15 min were inconsistent with the maintenance of neutral buoyancy, but estimates from sampling intervals greater than 1 h were not. Calculation of tilt angles using depth data sampled at 10-s intervals showed that cod were often tilted more than 5( relative to the horizontal, and that this effect was more pronounced at night. These findings suggest that basic assumptions regarding cod physiology and behaviour require revision if the accuracy and precision of acoustic methods are to be improved.

Reference:

O. Heffernan, D. Righton and K. Michalsen (2004) Use of data storage tags to quantify vertical movements of cod: effects on acoustic measures. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 61(7): 1062-1070

Publication Internet Address of the Data
Publication Authors
O. Heffernan, D. Righton* and K. Michalsen
Publication Date
November 2004
Publication Reference
ICES Journal of Marine Science, 61(7): 1062-1070
Publication DOI: https://doi.org/