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Characteristics of the fish faunas of artificial reefs in Geographe Bay determined from video footage collected by recreational fishers

Authors :
Chaplin, Jennifer
Tweedley, James
Walker, Timothy Hugh Elliot
Chaplin, Jennifer
Tweedley, James
Walker, Timothy Hugh Elliot
Source :
Walker, Timothy Hugh Elliot <
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The number of artificial reef deployments around Australia has increased in recent years due to their popularity amongst recreational fishers. As these reefs modify the environment and its associated fauna, monitoring is required to ensure that any negative impacts to the surrounding area are assessed and minimised. Given this and the high cost of purpose-built artificial reefs, there is a need to develop cost-effective monitoring methods to determine their faunal composition. To address this need, this thesis reviewed methods for monitoring the faunas of artificial reefs and utilised the Baited Remote Underwater Video (BRUV) method to survey the fish faunas of two artificial reefs in Geographe Bay. Fourteen fauna monitoring methods, in their application to artificial reefs, were critically evaluated against five criteria, i.e. deployment, accuracy, precision, time and cost. Not all methods were found to be applicable to the different types of artificial reefs, with the accuracy of each technique depending upon the scale at which monitoring occurs and the type of fauna being targeted. The fastest and cheapest techniques were those that either utilised only minimal equipment and/or did not require observers. Remotely operated underwater video, particularly BRUVs, were found to provide a relatively inexpensive and effective tool for monitoring fish communities of artificial reefs. This finding supported the choice of the BRUV method, which was deployed through citizen science, to monitor the fish communities of the Bunbury and Dunsborough artificial reefs in Geographe Bay, south-western Australia, between October 2015 and July 2016. The resultant videos were analysed, using two-way ANOVA, to determine if the number of taxa, total MaxN, Simpson’s Index, as well as the MaxN of several key recreational species, differed between reefs and over time, whilst PERMANOVA was utilised to identify whether the composition of the fish communities differed spatially and temporally.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Walker, Timothy Hugh Elliot <
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1323451145
Document Type :
Electronic Resource