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Surveys of the ecological use of epibenthic habitat by fish in the central Great Barrier Reef using baited remote underwater video stations (BRUVS (TM)) (FRDC Project No. 97/205)

BRUVS (TM) were deployed at spatial coordinates known, from previous major studies using fish traps, to be "hot-spots" for the families Lutjanidae (sea perches), Lethrinidae (sweetlip emperors) and Serranidae (coral trout and cod).BRUVS (TM) were deployed at depths between 30 and 70 m in three mid-shelf locations (Davies Reef (9), Kelso Shoals (18), Rib Reef (9)) and in both shallow and deep inshore locations (Calliope Channel (14), Curacoa Channel (27), and Robbery Shoals (3)).Replicate BRUVS (TM), were deployed in daylight hours and the time, depth, latitude and longitude was recorded for each set.Interrogation of each tape provided:- a classification of the habitat at each set, based on estimated sediment composition and/or the nature of epibenthos- the time the BRUVS (TM) settle on the seabed (TOB)- the time of first sighting of a taxa (TFS)- a coarse classification of 'Adult' or 'Juvenile' for these taxa based on size and shape- the time of first feeding of taxa (TFF) in the field of view,- the maximum number of each taxa seen together, or readily identifiable, in any one time on the whole tape (MaxN),- the time at which this maxima occurred (TMaxN)- the behaviour of each taxa toward the bait (passing, scavenging, or feeding), and- the time at which all bait was exhausted if such an event occurred.The habitat categories recognised were: megabenthos, Sargassum, Halimeda, low algae, mud, fine sand, coarse sand, rubble, and 'near benthos'. The 'near benthos' category covered sets where video units landed on sand, but in the far field of view, or during the deployment or retrieval, significant patches of rock or megabenthos were seen.Image grabs also allowed size estimates of fish directly above the scale grid on the bait canister.

Baited remote underwater video station (BRUVS (TM)) surveys were undertaken to investigate the relationship between fish requirements for food and shelter and the distribution of sponge, gorgonian and algal 'megabenthos'.The specific questions addressed were:1. what is the nature of fish communities inside and outside megabenthos patches?2. what benthos and sediments characterise some known 'hotspots' for inter-reef lutjanids?The results of the BRUVS (TM) surveys were compared with concurrent RUVS (unbaited) surveys, trapping and underwater visual census (UVC) as methods to census demersal fish.

This research was a component of subproject 8, "The ecological usage of epibenthic habitat by key commercial finfish species", of the Fisheries Research and Development Corporation Project No. 97/205, "Dynamics of large sessile seabed fauna, important for structural fisheries habitat and biodiversity of marine ecosystems - and use of these habitats by key finfish species"

Simple

Identification info

Date (Revision)
2024-10-17T00:00:00

Publisher

Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) - ()
PRIVATE MAIL BAG 3, TOWNSVILLE MAIL CENTRE
TOWNSVILLE
Queensland
4810
Australia
+61 7 4753 4444
AIMS Web Site >

Owner

Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) - ()
PRIVATE MAIL BAG 3, TOWNSVILLE MAIL CENTRE
TOWNSVILLE
Queensland
4810
Australia
+61 7 4753 4444
AIMS Web Site >

Website
AIMS Web Site

Website
AIMS Web Site

Status
Completed

Point of contact

Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) - Data Manager, AIMS Data Centre ()
PRIVATE MAIL BAG 3, TOWNSVILLE MAIL CENTRE
TOWNSVILLE
Queensland
4810
Australia
+61 7 4753 4444
AIMS Web Site >

Temporal resolution
P1Y0M0DT0H0M0S
Topic category
  • Oceans

Extent

Description
Region 1
N
S
E
W


Extent

Description
Collective resources start and end dates

Temporal extent

Time position
1999-04-02
Time position
2000-10-05
Maintenance and update frequency
Not planned

Resource constraints

Use limitation
All AIMS data, products and services are provided "as is" and AIMS does not warrant their fitness for a particular purpose or non-infringement. While AIMS has made every reasonable effort to ensure high quality of the data, products and services, to the extent permitted by law the data, products and services are provided without any warranties of any kind, either expressed or implied, including without limitation any implied warranties of title, merchantability, and fitness for a particular purpose or non-infringement. AIMS make no representation or warranty that the data, products and services are accurate, complete, reliable or current. To the extent permitted by law, AIMS exclude all liability to any person arising directly or indirectly from the use of the data, products and services.
Access constraints
Restricted
Other constraints
The data was collected under contract between AIMS and another party(s). Specific agreements for access and use of the data shall be negotiated separately. Contact the AIMS Data Centre (adc@aims.gov.au) for further information

Resource constraints

Classification
Unclassified
Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Content Information

Content type
Physical measurement

Distribution Information

Distributor

Distributor

Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) - AIMS Data Centre ()
PRIVATE MAIL BAG 3, TOWNSVILLE MAIL CENTRE
TOWNSVILLE
Queensland
4810
Australia
+61 7 4753 4444
AIMS Home Page >

OnLine resource
Development of a baited video technique and spatial models to explain patterns of fish biodiversity in inter-reef waters: Cappo MC Development of a baited video technique and spatial models to explain patterns of fish biodiversity in inter-reef waters. James Cook University.

Development of a baited video technique and spatial models to explain patterns of fish biodiversity in inter-reef waters: Cappo MC Development of a baited video technique and spatial models to explain patterns of fish biodiversity in inter-reef waters. James Cook University.

OnLine resource
Dynamics of large sessile seabed fauna, important for structural fisheries habitat and biodiversity of marine ecosystems - and use of these habitats by key finfish species: Pitcher CR, Wassenberg T, Cappo MC, Smith GP, Austin M, Gordon S, Bustamante RH, Moeseneder CH, Speare PJ, Kennedy JA, Doherty PJ and Hooper JNA (2004) Dynamics of large sessile seabed fauna, important for structural fisheries habitat and biodiversity of marine ecosystems - and use of these habitats by key finfish species. CSIRO Marine Research and Fisheries Research and Development Corporation. 302 p.

Dynamics of large sessile seabed fauna, important for structural fisheries habitat and biodiversity of marine ecosystems - and use of these habitats by key finfish species: Pitcher CR, Wassenberg T, Cappo MC, Smith GP, Austin M, Gordon S, Bustamante RH, Moeseneder CH, Speare PJ, Kennedy JA, Doherty PJ and Hooper JNA (2004) Dynamics of large sessile seabed fauna, important for structural fisheries habitat and biodiversity of marine ecosystems - and use of these habitats by key finfish species. CSIRO Marine Research and Fisheries Research and Development Corporation. 302 p.

Resource lineage

Statement
Statement: The BRUVS (TM) had clear, acrylic dome ports housing Sony Hi-8 Handycams (model TR516E) with wide-angle lenses (Hama 0.5). The Hama wide-angle lens had a factor of 0.5, reducing the set focal length by 50%. Each housing (made from 12mm UPVC 'blue brute' sewer pipe) was clamped into a galvanised 'roll-bar' frame with lugs for ballasting and lifting, and a pipe mount for pinning bait arms. Bait arms were 1500 mm long electrical conduit of 20 mm diameter. The flexible conduit sustained vigorous attacks by predators on the bait bag and broke away at the pin-holes when snagging occurred during retrieval or when sharks attacked. A 300 mm × 200 mm plastic mesh bait bag was sewn along the arm immediately between 2 'scale grids' of 50 mm × 52 mm. This alignment was intended to allow measurement of fish feeding on the bait bag between the scale grids. The bait consisted of 750 grams of crushed pilchard which was set in the middle field of view and produced a visible oily plume around the station.Exposure was set to 'Auto', focus was set to infinity/manual, short-play (90 minutes) or longplay mode (180 minutes) was selected, and date/time codes were overlaid on footage.The housings and frames were designed and fabricated by the AIMS mechanical workshops and were pressure tested to the equivalent of 80 m depth (the maximum available at the AIMS testing facility).Each BRUVS (TM) was deployed with a polypropylene rope attached to a marker buoy to aid recovery.
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Maintenance and update frequency
As needed

Metadata

Metadata identifier
2b160fd0-50b9-4ba1-96bc-437eb908d76b

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Point of contact

Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) - AIMS Data Centre
PRIVATE MAIL BAG 3
TOWNSVILLE MAIL CENTRE
Queensland
4810
Australia
+61 7 4753 4444
+61 7 4772 5852 (facsimile)
>

Hours of service
0800 to 1640 UTC+10: Monday to Friday
Parent metadata

Type of resource

Resource scope
Dataset
Metadata linkage
Point of truth URL of this metadata record

Point of truth URL of this metadata record

Date info (Creation)
2014-08-04T00:00:00
Date info (Revision)
2017-11-20T00:00:00

Metadata standard

Title
ISO 19115-3:2018
 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

N
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E
W


Keywords


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