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05/06/2015: The secret lives of fish revealed by the digital age

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http://www.umces.edu/
New book shows how the last four decades of technological advances have uncovered hidden migration behaviors of fish

"Imagine the clandestine lives of marine fishes,” begins Migration Ecology of Marine Fishes, a new book by Dr David Secor, one of the most respected voices in marine fish migration studies. Their movements, social interactions, and favorite spots are all obscured beneath the surface. However, an explosion of technological advances in data gathering and analysis has allowed fisheries scientists to observe the secret lives of fish in a whole new way.

A pioneer of digital-age discoveries on the migration ecology of coastal fishes, Secor explains in his book how the last four decades of digital‐age technologies have revealed the previously hidden migration behaviors of fish.

“The digital age has given us millions of paths and turns and spins of behaviors,” says Secor, a professor at the University of Maryland Centre for Environmental Science. These include microchips that communicate with satellites to tell us where fish are going, space age chemistry that reveals where fish have been, and computer simulations to model how fish react to each other and the environment; methods undreamt of 30 years ago.

Emerging from this deluge of data is an appreciation of the individual fish. Members of the same populations may stay put, explore, move out of their home territory early or late, or change their minds all together as they respond to their marine environment. However, rather than a morass of individual behaviors, Secor shows that populations are collectively organised through a new concept of partial migration: the propensity of groups within populations to make different migration decisions.
       

http://www.umces.edu/
Image: Alex Bennett
Migration Ecology of Marine Fishes, published by Johns Hopkins University Press, is a follow up to legendary fisheries scientist Harden Jones’ classic Fish Migration, which presented the general concept of fish migration for the first time nearly 50 years ago.

Secor’s research brings together the history of ideas on fish migration, as well as an analysis of the new technologies that have provided remarkable observations on movements of fish in the global oceans to address why fish go where they do, and why an understanding is critical to the management of ocean uses.

“We can’t wait around to find everything out in an environment that’s constantly changing,” says Secor. 


“But we can integrate these simulation approaches so we can ask ‘what if’ questions so fisheries managers can make risk-based decisions.”

David Secor
Dr David Secor, one of the most respected voices in marine fish migration studies, is a pioneer of digital-age discoveries on the migration ecology of coastal fishes.  His research has taken him from the Chesapeake Bay to the Mediterranean to Japan to study fishes ranging from rockfish to bluefin tuna to sturgeon. A professor at the University of Maryland Centre for Environmental Science, he also teaches graduate students and provides scientific advice on ecosystem-based fisheries management to state and national leaders and mentors.
     

University of Maryland Centre for Environmental Science
The University of Maryland Centre for Environmental Science is celebrating 90 years of informing how we protect our environment and sustain our natural resources, in the Chesapeake Bay and around the world. Scientists at a network of laboratories across the state investigate and respond to today’s most pressing environmental challenges, provide unbiased research to inform public policy, and train the next generation of environmental stewards. 


Visit Dr Secor's site HERE.


Visit the UMCES site HERE.

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