First results with a new estuarine fish tracking system

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Abstract

A ‘sonar buoy’ tracking system has been developed at the MAFF Fisheries Laboratory based upon acoustic transmitting tags and relay units which retransmit the pulsed acoustic signal as a radio signal. The output from several such ‘sonar buoys’ is monitored by a single automatic recording station on the shore. The system has been used on salmon in the estuary of the River Fowey in Cornwall, providing useful data on the behaviour of returning adults before they enter the river. The tags also transmit a radio frequency signal to allow tracking in the river itself. Of fourteen fish tagged in 1985, six were recorded entering the river between 12 h and 41 days after being released. Another fish was recaptured in a coastal net 160 km to the east. These few preliminary results indicated two distinct patterns of behaviour: one fish remained in deep water in the lower estuary for several days, often lying near moored ships or jetties; at other times fish made extensive excursions up the estuary with the tide, usually returning with the ebb. Copyright © 1988, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved

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Solomon, D. J., & Potter, E. C. E. (1988). First results with a new estuarine fish tracking system. Journal of Fish Biology, 33, 127–132. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.1988.tb05566.x

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