1. Evidence of artificial habitat use by a recovering marine predator in southern California.
- Author
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Burns ES, Clevenstine AJ, Logan RK, and Lowe CG
- Subjects
- Acoustics instrumentation, Animal Distribution, Animals, California, Pacific Ocean, Predatory Behavior physiology, Remote Sensing Technology instrumentation, Ecosystem, Perciformes physiology
- Abstract
The giant sea bass Stereolepis gigas Ayres 1859 (GSB) is a critically endangered top marine predator in California. Since protection in 1982 and 1994, the population has appeared to increase, and individuals within a growing population may expand their ranges to new habitats to reduce intraspecific competition and increase foraging opportunities. In 2016-2018, two GSB tagged with acoustic transmitters were detected at artificial reefs for periods of up to 3 months during October-March, and one individual travelled 53 km from an offshore island to mainland California in 56 h. Artificial reefs may provide important foraging opportunities for these protected marine predators as they recover from exploitation., (© 2020 Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)
- Published
- 2020
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