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Comparison of Reef Fish Survey Data Gathered by Open and Closed Circuit SCUBA Divers Reveals Differences in Areas With Higher Fishing Pressure

Visual survey by divers using open-circuit (OC) SCUBA is the most widely used approach to survey coral reef fishes. Therefore, it is important to quantify sources of bias in OC surveys, such as the possibility that avoidance of OC divers by fishes can lead to undercounting in areas where targeted sp...

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Autores principales: Gray, Andrew E., Williams, Ivor D., Stamoulis, Kostantinos A., Boland, Raymond C., Lino, Kevin C., Hauk, Brian B., Leonard, Jason C., Rooney, John J., Asher, Jacob M., Lopes, Keolohilani H., Kosaki, Randall K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5147984/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27936044
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167724
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author Gray, Andrew E.
Williams, Ivor D.
Stamoulis, Kostantinos A.
Boland, Raymond C.
Lino, Kevin C.
Hauk, Brian B.
Leonard, Jason C.
Rooney, John J.
Asher, Jacob M.
Lopes, Keolohilani H.
Kosaki, Randall K.
author_facet Gray, Andrew E.
Williams, Ivor D.
Stamoulis, Kostantinos A.
Boland, Raymond C.
Lino, Kevin C.
Hauk, Brian B.
Leonard, Jason C.
Rooney, John J.
Asher, Jacob M.
Lopes, Keolohilani H.
Kosaki, Randall K.
author_sort Gray, Andrew E.
collection PubMed
description Visual survey by divers using open-circuit (OC) SCUBA is the most widely used approach to survey coral reef fishes. Therefore, it is important to quantify sources of bias in OC surveys, such as the possibility that avoidance of OC divers by fishes can lead to undercounting in areas where targeted species have come to associate divers with a risk of being speared. One potential way to reduce diver avoidance is to utilize closed circuit rebreathers (CCRs), which do not produce the noise and bubbles that are a major source of disturbance associated with OC diving. For this study, we conducted 66 paired OC and CCR fish surveys in the Main Hawaiian Islands at locations with relatively high, moderate, and light fishing pressure. We found no significant differences in biomass estimates between OC and CCR surveys when data were pooled across all sites, however there were differences at the most heavily fished location, Oahu. There, biomass estimates from OC divers were significantly lower for several targeted fish groups, including surgeonfishes, targeted wrasses, and snappers, as well as for all targeted fishes combined, with mean OC biomass between 32 and 68% of mean CCR biomass. There were no clear differences between OC and CCR biomass estimates for these groups at sites with moderate or low fishing pressure, or at any location for other targeted fish groups, including groupers, parrotfishes, and goatfishes. Bias associated with avoidance of OC divers at heavily fished locations could be substantially reduced, or at least calibrated for, by utilization of CCR. In addition to being affected by fishing pressure, the extent to which avoidance of OC divers is problematic for visual surveys varies greatly among taxa, and is likely to be highly influenced by the survey methodology and dimensions used.
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spelling pubmed-51479842016-12-28 Comparison of Reef Fish Survey Data Gathered by Open and Closed Circuit SCUBA Divers Reveals Differences in Areas With Higher Fishing Pressure Gray, Andrew E. Williams, Ivor D. Stamoulis, Kostantinos A. Boland, Raymond C. Lino, Kevin C. Hauk, Brian B. Leonard, Jason C. Rooney, John J. Asher, Jacob M. Lopes, Keolohilani H. Kosaki, Randall K. PLoS One Research Article Visual survey by divers using open-circuit (OC) SCUBA is the most widely used approach to survey coral reef fishes. Therefore, it is important to quantify sources of bias in OC surveys, such as the possibility that avoidance of OC divers by fishes can lead to undercounting in areas where targeted species have come to associate divers with a risk of being speared. One potential way to reduce diver avoidance is to utilize closed circuit rebreathers (CCRs), which do not produce the noise and bubbles that are a major source of disturbance associated with OC diving. For this study, we conducted 66 paired OC and CCR fish surveys in the Main Hawaiian Islands at locations with relatively high, moderate, and light fishing pressure. We found no significant differences in biomass estimates between OC and CCR surveys when data were pooled across all sites, however there were differences at the most heavily fished location, Oahu. There, biomass estimates from OC divers were significantly lower for several targeted fish groups, including surgeonfishes, targeted wrasses, and snappers, as well as for all targeted fishes combined, with mean OC biomass between 32 and 68% of mean CCR biomass. There were no clear differences between OC and CCR biomass estimates for these groups at sites with moderate or low fishing pressure, or at any location for other targeted fish groups, including groupers, parrotfishes, and goatfishes. Bias associated with avoidance of OC divers at heavily fished locations could be substantially reduced, or at least calibrated for, by utilization of CCR. In addition to being affected by fishing pressure, the extent to which avoidance of OC divers is problematic for visual surveys varies greatly among taxa, and is likely to be highly influenced by the survey methodology and dimensions used. Public Library of Science 2016-12-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5147984/ /pubmed/27936044 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167724 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gray, Andrew E.
Williams, Ivor D.
Stamoulis, Kostantinos A.
Boland, Raymond C.
Lino, Kevin C.
Hauk, Brian B.
Leonard, Jason C.
Rooney, John J.
Asher, Jacob M.
Lopes, Keolohilani H.
Kosaki, Randall K.
Comparison of Reef Fish Survey Data Gathered by Open and Closed Circuit SCUBA Divers Reveals Differences in Areas With Higher Fishing Pressure
title Comparison of Reef Fish Survey Data Gathered by Open and Closed Circuit SCUBA Divers Reveals Differences in Areas With Higher Fishing Pressure
title_full Comparison of Reef Fish Survey Data Gathered by Open and Closed Circuit SCUBA Divers Reveals Differences in Areas With Higher Fishing Pressure
title_fullStr Comparison of Reef Fish Survey Data Gathered by Open and Closed Circuit SCUBA Divers Reveals Differences in Areas With Higher Fishing Pressure
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Reef Fish Survey Data Gathered by Open and Closed Circuit SCUBA Divers Reveals Differences in Areas With Higher Fishing Pressure
title_short Comparison of Reef Fish Survey Data Gathered by Open and Closed Circuit SCUBA Divers Reveals Differences in Areas With Higher Fishing Pressure
title_sort comparison of reef fish survey data gathered by open and closed circuit scuba divers reveals differences in areas with higher fishing pressure
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5147984/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27936044
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167724
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