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OTN Canada Pacific Sockeye Salmon Tagging Project 2 - Tag Release Metadata
Citatie
Clark, T., Jeffries, K., Lotto, A., Hinch, S., Farrell, T., Cooke, S., Patterson, D., Welch, D., Riddell, B. 2010. Ocean Tracking Network Canada Pacific Sockeye Salmon Tagging Project 2 Metadata and Data Set. In: Iverson, S.J., McKenzie, K., Jonsen, I. 2011. OTN Canada Acoustic Telemetry Data Collection. Retrieved: January 26, 2015 from oceantrackingnetwork.org. Version 1 In OBIS Canada Digital Collections. Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Dartmouth, NS, Canada. Published by OBIS, Digital http://www.iobis.org/. Accessed on -INSERT DATE. https://marineinfo.org/id/dataset/4965
Contact: Welch, David ; Ocean Tracking Network (OTN), meer

Toegang tot data
Gearchiveerde data
Beschikbaarheid: Creative Commons License Deze dataset valt onder een Creative Commons Naamsvermelding 4.0 Internationaal-licentie.

Beschrijving
This is the OBIS extraction of the OTN Canada Pacific Sockeye Salmon Tagging Project 2 project, consisting only of the release tagging metadata. i.e. the locations and dates of tagged animal release. If readers are interested in the full source dataset they should refer to the OTN web site (members.oceantrack.org).
The objective is to assess the speed of outmigration, and location and level of mortality in freshwater and coastal areas, for individual smolts from Chilko Lake, a population situated 750 km inland from the ocean and is the highest elevation rearing lake for sockeye salmon in Canada. meer

In spring 2010, 200 2-yr old juveniles were captured as they initiated their smolt outmigration and surgically implanted with acoustic transmitters. Sentinel acoustic receivers situated near the release site and in the lower Fraser River, and acoustic curtains associated with POST were used to determine travel rates and locales and levels of mortality. Preliminary results indicate that smolts travelled at ~ 1-2 km/h during the initial sections of their migration through turbulent and clear water environments, and final sections, which were turbid and tidally influenced, of the freshwater migration. But they travelled ~ 5 km/h through the expansive fast flowing sections in between. Diel patterns were evident. On average fish reached the ocean in ~ 8 days with a range of 5-17 days among fish. Survival to reach the estuary is estimated at 20-30% and 15-20% to reach the first POST acoustic curtain situated in Northern Strait of Georgia about 180 km from the Fraser River mouth. We await the downloads of the other POST acoustic curtains to assess survival beyond this first acoustic receiver curtain. Of concern is that at present, POST does not have the funding available to download all of its Canadian curtains (e.g. the Queen Charlotte Strait line) and it is unclear when or if this will happen.

Scope
Thema's:
Biologie > Vis
Kernwoorden:
Zoet water, ANW, Canada, East, Oncorhynchus nerka (Walbaum, 1792)

Geografische spreiding
ANW, Canada, East [Marine Regions]

Spreiding in de tijd
2 Mei 2010 - 8 Mei 2013

Taxonomic coverage
Oncorhynchus nerka (Walbaum, 1792) [WoRMS]

Parameter
Voorkomen van soorten

Bijdrage door
University of British Columbia, meerdata creatordata leverancier
Kintama Research Services, meer
Dalhousie University; Ocean Tracking Network (OTN), meer

Gerelateerde datasets
Gepubliceerd in:
OBIS-Canada: Canadian Ocean Biodiversity Information System, meer


Dataset status: Afgelopen
Metadatarecord aangemaakt: 2015-04-24
Informatie laatst gewijzigd: 2015-04-24
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