A big shoutout to INNOVASEA for supporting ICYMARE 2025! As one of our valued sponsors we thank you for supporting early career marine researchers!
Innovasea is a pioneer in acoustic telemetry, helping researchers worldwide conduct behaviour, migration, and positioning studies of aquatic animals in fresh- and saltwater environments.
https://www.innovasea.com/fish-tracking/
#telemetry #ICYMARE2025 #acoustictelemetry #aquaticscience #marinescience #fisheries #fishtracking #marineacoustics #ECOP
New paper in #JFB assesses the performance of Innovasea new miniaturized V3D predation-sensing acoustic transmitters #fish #predatorpreyinteractions #acoustictelemetry
http://doi.org/10.1111/jfb.15827

New contribution to the #JFB Special Issue on telemetry: Advances in telemetry approaches and technologies applied to fish ecology and management #AcousticTelemetry #FishTracking #MarineResearch doi.org/10.1111/jfb.15790

http://doi.org/10.1111/jfb.15790

Treated to more #EuropeanEels! Michael Williamson is interested in landlocked waterbodies which contain large populations of silver eels, but they are unable to escape to the broader system. In a drinking water reservoir, Michael tagged 205 eels, and using #AcousticTelemetry and GAMs was able to see where there were eels hotspots for catch and transport. Aggregations were flound at dawn and dusk, higher temperatures, higher flow and extraction points. Lunar cycles also played a part #FSBI2025

Cable management is my passion... 😬

Well at least it powered https://sturg-alert.obrien.page for two months. Check out https://github.com/mhpob/biotelemetry-dash-gha for the skeleton to create your own #rstats and GitHub-Actions-powered live telemetry dashboard.

#acoustictelemetry #trackingnotslacking

Pilot sturgeon alert system

New NIOO publication: #Multispecies fish tracking across newly created shallow and deep habitats in a forward-restored lake. #forwardlookingrestoration #acoustictelemetry #fishnursery #shallowlake #MarkerWadden #excavation
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40462-023-00405-1
Multispecies fish tracking across newly created shallow and deep habitats in a forward-restored lake - Movement Ecology

Background Freshwater fish communities typically thrive in heterogenous ecosystems that offer various abiotic conditions. However, human impact increasingly leads to loss of this natural heterogeneity and its associated rich fish communities. To reverse this trend, we need guidelines on how to effectively restore or recreate habitats for multiple fish species. Lake Markermeer in the Netherlands is a human-created 70,000-ha lake with a uniform 4 m-water depth, steep shorelines, high wind-induced turbidity, and a declining fish community. In 2016, a forward-looking restoration project newly created a 1000-ha five-island archipelago in this degrading lake, which offered new sheltered shallow waters and deep sand excavations to the fish community. Methods In 2020, we assessed how omnivorous and piscivorous fish species used these new habitats by tracking 78 adult fish of five key species across local and lake-scales. We monitored spring arrival of adult fish and assessed local macro-invertebrate and young-of-the-year fish densities. Results Adult omnivorous Cyprinidae and piscivorous Percidae arrived at the archipelago in early spring, corresponding with expected spawning movements. During the productive summer season, 12 species of young-of-the-year fish appeared along the sheltered shorelines, with particularly high densities of common roach (Rutilus rutilus) and European perch (Perca fluviatilis). This suggests the sheltered, shallow, vegetated waters formed new suitable spawning and recruitment habitat for the fish community. Despite highest food densities for adult fish in the shallowest habitats (< 2-m), adult fish preferred minimally 2-m deep water. After spawning most Cyprinidae left the archipelago and moved long distances through the lake system, while most Percidae remained resident. This may be related to (1) high densities of young-of-the-year fish as food for piscivores, (2) medium food densities for omnivores compared to elsewhere in the lake-system, or (3) the attractiveness of 30-m deep sand excavations that were newly created and frequently used by one-third of all tracked fish. Conclusions New littoral zones and a deep sand excavation constructed in a uniform shallow lake that lacked these habitat types attracted omnivorous and piscivorous fish species within four years. Both feeding guilds used the littoral zones for reproduction and nursery, and notably piscivorous fish became residents year-round.

BioMed Central

See our recent paper describing a prototype Wireless Autonomous Real-Time Underwater Acoustic Positioning System.

It is capable of locating in real time organisms equipped with coded & continuous tags and it is self sufficient in energy.
#AcousticTelemetry #tracking

https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/22/21/8208

A Wireless Autonomous Real-Time Underwater Acoustic Positioning System

Recent acoustic telemetry positioning systems are able to reconstruct the positions and trajectories of organisms at a scale of a few centimeters to a few meters. However, they present several logistical constraints including receiver maintenance, calibration procedures and limited access to real-time data. We present here a novel, easy-to-deploy, energy self-sufficient underwater positioning system based on the time difference of arrival (TDOA) algorithm and the Global System for Mobile (GSM) communication technology, capable of locating tagged marine organisms in real time. We provide an illustration of the application of this system with empirical examples using continuous and coded tags in fish and benthic invertebrates. In situ experimental tests of the operational system demonstrated similar performances to currently available acoustic positioning systems, with a global positioning error of 7.13 ± 5.80 m (mean ± SD) and one-third of the pings can be localized within 278 m of the farthest buoy. Despite some required improvements, this prototype is designed to be autonomous and can be deployed from the surface in various environments (rivers, lakes, and oceans). It was proven to be useful to monitor a wide variety of species (benthic and pelagic) in real time. Its real-time property can be used to rapidly detect system failure, optimize deployment design, or for ecological or conservation applications.

MDPI
#introduction I’m a research scientist at #fisheries and #oceans Canada. I’m interested in the movement and behaviour of #benthic #invertebrates, their distributions and the impacts of #climatechange My research focuses on #fisheriesmanagement and #aquaculture I use #acoustictelemetry lab experiments and #rstats Originally Scottish now an aspiring Québécois.
#introduction I’m a research scientist at #fisheries and #oceans Canada. I’m interested in the movement and behaviour of #benthic #invertebrates, their distributions and the impacts of #climatechange My research focuses on #fisheriesmanagement and #aquaculture I use #acoustictelemetry lab experiments and #rstats Originally Scottish now an aspiring Québécois.