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Estuarine
and Coastal Processes
Fisheries and Aquaculture
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- 1994-1996 Projects
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Fisheries and Aquaculture
1996-1998 Projects
School Structure
and Individual Feeding Behavior of Bluefin Tuna, Thunnus thynnus
Francis Juanes, University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Bluefin tuna are an important commercial and recreational fish species
from Labrador to Brazil. Unfortunately, tuna behavior is difficult
to study in the field, and traditional stock assessment techniques
are inaccurate. To help remedy these problems, researchers, in collaboration
with The New England Aquarium, will study tuna schooling and feeding
behavior by analyzing video of captive bluefin. Exploring bluefin
behavior will aid in developing new stock assessment techniques,
such as aerial photographic assessment. Investigators hope that,
ultimately, this study will help with long-term management of this
important but poorly understood species. (R/B-138)
Development of Phenotypic
Markers for Identification of Seeded Scallops
Alan Kuzirian and H. Chikarmane, Marine Biological Laboratory
The bay scallop Argopecten irradians is an important commercial
shellfish in Massachusetts, particularly on the islands of Nantucket
and Martha's Vineyard. Recent years of overfishing have resulted
in low populations. As such, it has become imperative to implement
alternative harvesting methods such as aquaculture. Before large-scale
enhancement projects begin, it is important to determine whether
planted scallops contribute to the population or whether they are
being consumed or "farmed" before they are able to reproduce.
To find out, researchers in collaboration with The Nantucket Research
and Education Foundation (NREF) will develop visible and DNA-based
phenotypic markers for scallop identification. The markers will
provide information for direct estimates of seeded scallop survival
in their natural habitat. Through this project, investigators hope
to demonstrate both the success of hatchery-bred scallops set in
the wild as well as the viability of focused aquaculture programs
in fisheries enhancement. (R/A-34)
The following four
projects are part of a multi-institutional initiative titled "Regional
Fisheries Issues," made possible by a special National Sea
Grant College Program award.
Reproductive Strategies
and their Contribution to Genetic Diversity and Life Cycle Flexibility
in the Commercially Important Squid, Loligo pealei
Roger T. Hanlon, Marine Biological Laboratory
In the northeastern U.S., fisheries resources (especially in the
Georges Bank ecosystem) have been altered drastically by human fishing
pressure. The northeast squid fishery for Loligo pealei has increased
in value to approximately $32 million (23,000 metric tons), partly
due to increased fishing effort that is in some degree related to
reduced groundfish resources. Unfortunately, our knowledge of the
life history of this squid is poor and fishery managers believe
the fishery is maximally exploited. Two recent developments in the
fishery are of great concern to the local squid fishery managers:
(1) the rapidly developing winter offshore fishery that concentrates
on pre-spawning adults and now produces 90% of the total landings,
and (2) a new export market that has developed for juvenile pre-recruits.
This Sea Grant-supported study will permit us to acquire baseline
information on reproductive strategies that affect gene distribution
before this heavily fished resource suffers the same fate as groundfishes.
Field observations and sampling plus laboratory behavioral experiments
will be assayed by DNA fingerprinting to determine details of the
mating system. The results will give us better predictive information
about the effect of targeted fishing on reproductively active squids.
(R/B-141)
Predatory Impact of
Lobate Ctenophores on Commercially Important Fishes and their Prey
Laurence P. Madin, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Ctenophores are voracious macroplanktonic carnivores that use their
tentacles or filmy oral lobes to catch their food. Because they
grow and reproduce rapidly, populations of ctenophores can dramatically
alter the structure of marine communities by predation on smaller
zooplankton. For example, the lobate ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi
was accidentally introduced into the Black Sea in 1982 from ship's
ballast water. Its predation on zooplankton and larval fish there
has caused severe damage to commercially important fish stocks and
led to the complete loss of regional anchovy fisheries in the Black
Sea and neighboring Sea of Azov. On our shores, Mnemiopsis exerts
a strong influence on copepod populations in estuaries and coastal
waters. Its close relative Bolinopsis infundibulum may significantly
impact prey populations that support cod and haddock fisheries on
Georges Bank. This Sea Grant-supported study will use field and
laboratory studies to examine the mechanisms these ctenophores use
to catch their prey; this information may enable us to predict what
kinds of prey will be vulnerable. This study benefits from ongoing
research investigations by the researcher and his colleagues in
the NSF and NOAA-sponsored Global Oceans Ecosystems Dynamics (GLOBEC)
program, which is investigating the deterioration of northeastern
U.S. cod and haddock stocks on Georges Bank. This comparative study
of both Mnemiopsis and Bolinopsis will provide a better understanding
of how introduced predators can impact existing species and monopolize
new habitats. The results will help in the development of management
strategies for these predators in the Black Sea, recently-invaded
Mediterranean Sea, and potentially endangered Georges Bank ecosystems.
(R/B-134)
Behavioral and Hydrodynamic
Components of Postlarval Bivalve Transport within Coastal Embayments
Lauren S. Mullineaux, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
This Sea Grant-supported study, a combination of manipulative field
investigations and laboratory flume experiments, will yield valuable
information about soft shell clam (Mya arenaria) recruitment and
its influence on population dynamics and distributions. Commercial
harvesting of these clams contributes tens of millions of dollars
annually to the New England economy. The recruitment of soft-shell
clams is, however, notoriously variable, both in time and space:
while some years see virtually no clams settling in a particular
bay, other years see clams settling at very high densities. Recruitment
within a bay can be highly localized. Because recruitment has a
strong influence on soft-shell clam population dynamics and productivity,
variations can make the fishery difficult to manage. The present
study focuses on spatial variation by investigating the interactions
between burrowing behavior and hydrodynamic transport of clam larvae.
The results will facilitate our ability to predict the locations
of sustained recruitment, thereby providing valuable information
for those utilizing the soft shell clam fishery and fishery managers.
Another component of the study will provide specific information
on the mechanisms by which covering the sediment with mesh netting
affects the transport and recruitment of soft-shell clam postlarvaeÑinformation
of direct relevance to the aquaculture industry and fisheries management.
(R/B-142)
Statistical Modelling
of Environmental Effects on Recruitment in Georges Bank Haddock
Andrew R. Solow and John H. Steele, Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution
Achieving sustainability in commercial fisheries is perhaps the
most difficult problem facing the managers of marine resources.
Sustainability is achieved when recruitment balances removal. The
"recruitment" to a fishery refers to the addition of fish
to the exploitable stocks each year. It also determines the prospects
for recovery in a depleted fishery in which fishing mortality has
been reduced. Understanding the sources of variability in recruitment
is therefore critical for managing a fishery. This Sea Grant study
will detect and model physical environmental effects on recruitment
to the Georges Bank haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus) stock. For
both scientific reasons and reasons connected to fisheries management,
there is great interest in understanding--and ultimately modeling--the
way in which the physical environment influences recruitment. While
earlier attempts to model the physical environmental effects into
the stock-assessment relationship have been made, this approach
represents an improvement because it explicitly accounts for the
stock-size effect on recruitment. Focusing on the Georges Bank haddock
is ideal for three main reasons:
(1) they are economically
important and currently depleted;
(2) they are, apparently,
highly sensitive to variations in the physical environment; and
(3) there is relatively long
time series data available. In addition, the methodology developed
during the course of this project will be more widely applicable
to stocks other than haddock. (R/O-31)
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