Now i call this working!
Now i call this working!
One of my projects at Ningaloo is to use an array of listening stations and acoustic pinger tags to track fish around the reef and see how much territory they use, changes in habitat that occur in different seasons (spawning etc). We hope this is going to tell us more about the way fish use the reef and what parts are important for them and why. This in turn will hopefully help managers design better more effective marine parks. So we have to catch and tag the fish as part of this, which can be pretty tedious; fishing, day after day after day.....
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- These tags last for 12-18 months and have a coded acousting ping that lets us know which fish is where. this one is going into a spangled emperor, one of the main species caught on the reef. One of the Spangled Emperor we tagged in November last year was caught by someone in May, very close to where we tagged it, in a protected area. Amazingly they returned the tag!
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- Here is the shark, on its way home. This species seems to move a lot up and down the reef, but possibly this is due to the majority of the sharks being tagged in "nursery" areas. This one was not in a nursery so it will be interesting to see whether such sharks also move long distances from the point of capture.
- Michael
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Re: Now i call this working!
Chris was telling me about these microchip they are putting in the trout to track em on the river. They are similar to the chips they put in pets or in James Bond.
- Chris
- #2 Son
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Re: Now i call this working!
Russ, nice fish and great project. Our partners need to deploy detector antennae arrays (swim through) thoughout the river to monitor their tagged fish (they put a tag starting at 55mm)
A couple of questions: what kind of dry fly are you using to hook the black-tipped reef sharks? Or is it a caddis nymph? The reason I ask is that Ada and I are trying to set up an exchange in January with the TNC outpost on Palmyra, and I need to know salt water techniques. Can you come up and guide us?
I caught a 16-18" rainbow last night on a salmonfly pattern, and let it go too.
C
A couple of questions: what kind of dry fly are you using to hook the black-tipped reef sharks? Or is it a caddis nymph? The reason I ask is that Ada and I are trying to set up an exchange in January with the TNC outpost on Palmyra, and I need to know salt water techniques. Can you come up and guide us?
I caught a 16-18" rainbow last night on a salmonfly pattern, and let it go too.
C
- judith
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Re: Now i call this working!
Russ,
Thanks for the info of what you're doing at Ningaloo! I really need a science lesson about this and I'm sure I'm not alone. Can't imagine fishing all the day and catching too. M0M Mom
Thanks for the info of what you're doing at Ningaloo! I really need a science lesson about this and I'm sure I'm not alone. Can't imagine fishing all the day and catching too. M0M Mom