Assessment of attraction and avoidance behaviors of fish in response to the proximity of transiting underwater vehicles

dc.contributor.author Campbell, Matthew D
dc.contributor.author Huddleston, Ariane
dc.contributor.author Somerton, David
dc.contributor.author Clarke, M. Elizabeth
dc.contributor.author Wakefield, Waldo
dc.contributor.author Murawski, Steve
dc.contributor.author Taylor, Chris
dc.contributor.author Singh, Hanumant
dc.contributor.author Girdhar, Yogesh
dc.contributor.author Yoklavich, Mary
dc.date.accessioned 2023-03-30T19:23:59Z
dc.date.available 2023-03-30T19:23:59Z
dc.date.issued 2021-11-01
dc.description This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Campbell, M. D., Huddleston, A., Somerton, D., Clarke, M. E., Wakefield, W., Murawski, S. A., Taylor, C., Singh, H., Girdhar, Y., & Yoklavich, M. Assessment of attraction and avoidance behaviors of fish in response to the proximity of transiting underwater vehicles. Fishery Bulletin, 119(4), (2021): 216–230, https://doi.org/10.7755/fb.119.4.2.
dc.description.abstract Underwater vehicles have many advantages for sampling fish; however, estimates can be biased by behavioral responses to sampling gear. To evaluate avoidance and attraction bias we assessed changes in fish abundance relative to a variety of sampling vehicles during transit through a test bed. Fish species were classified into five attraction and avoidance categories according to the behavioral responses exhibited. We observed that the rigor of behavioral responses varied by vehicle, vehicle range and altitude, transect number, and habitat complexity. The effect of each variable is dependent on behavioral guild, but vehicle range was the most consistent predictor of changes in abundance regardless of vehicle. Vehicles that surveyed the environment at higher relative altitudes off the seafloor and at slower speeds elicited weaker behavioral responses regardless of whether those reactions were attraction or avoidance. The test-bed approach allowed assessment of responses that cannot be observed from the perspective of a sampling vehicle but was restricted by the number of species-specific interactions observed. Despite success in estimating behavioral responses, calibrating the effect against known densities of fish was not possible. However, the method used is a robust way for future investigations to quantify species-specific responses for gear calibration and to provide information that aids in the calculation of fish abundance.
dc.description.sponsorship The authors would like to acknowledge the NMFS Office of Science and Technology for continued support through-out this 5-year strategic initiative. We would like to thank the Mississippi Laboratories of the NMFS Southeast Fisheries Science Center, the University of South Florida, and the Florida Institute of Oceanography for providing personnel and dockside support to stage and conduct this complicated experiment. We would also like to thank the crews of RV Pelican (LUMCON, Cocodrie, LA) and RV Weatherbird II (FIO, St. Petersburg, FL).
dc.identifier.citation Campbell, M. D., Huddleston, A., Somerton, D., Clarke, M. E., Wakefield, W., Murawski, S. A., Taylor, C., Singh, H., Girdhar, Y., & Yoklavich, M. (2021). Assessment of attraction and avoidance behaviors of fish in response to the proximity of transiting underwater vehicles. Fishery Bulletin, 119(4), 216–230.
dc.identifier.doi 10.7755/fb.119.4.2
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/1912/65875
dc.publisher National Marine Fisheries Service
dc.relation.uri https://doi.org/10.7755/fb.119.4.2
dc.title Assessment of attraction and avoidance behaviors of fish in response to the proximity of transiting underwater vehicles
dc.type Article
dspace.entity.type Publication
relation.isAuthorOfPublication 1bc09b39-e4eb-47b7-b840-a5be92c9f18a
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery 1bc09b39-e4eb-47b7-b840-a5be92c9f18a
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