Eel migration
study reveals that most of them are eaten!
March 2013. A tagging study has revealed that porbeagle sharks in the Gulf of St. Lawrence could severely impact the number of
migrating American eels in the region.
Eight eels
tagged
Canadian researchers tagged eight adult eels in the St. Lawrence River as part of the Ocean Tracking Network's investigation to uncover the eels' pathway through the Gulf to spawning grounds in theSargasso Sea-
a journey that has mystified scientists for over a century.
Canadian researchers tagged eight adult eels in the St. Lawrence River as part of the Ocean Tracking Network's investigation to uncover the eels' pathway through the Gulf to spawning grounds in the
Adult eels
have never been seen in the Sargasso Sea . The
researchers hoped to track their eels right into the Sea to precisely document
spawning areas. Eight eels from the St. Lawrence River in Quebec were tagged with satellite
"pop-up tags." All eight tags detached from the eels and surfaced
prematurely, suggesting the eels' untimely death.
Tags swallowed
Seven tags transmitted data which included swimming depths, times, dates, and sea temperatures. Six tags recorded a sharp and sustained spike in temperature. Water temperatures in theGulf of St. Lawrence
in October range between 0 - 10°C. Tags recorded temperatures of 22 -
28°C-stomach temperatures of warm-bodied pelagic fishes.
Seven tags transmitted data which included swimming depths, times, dates, and sea temperatures. Six tags recorded a sharp and sustained spike in temperature. Water temperatures in the
Porbeagle
predators
The ingested tags continued to record data on the dive patterns and depths of the animal. By comparing the known diving and depth patterns of porbeagle sharks and bluefin tuna to those recorded by the tags, investigators identified porbeagle sharks as the predators.
The ingested tags continued to record data on the dive patterns and depths of the animal. By comparing the known diving and depth patterns of porbeagle sharks and bluefin tuna to those recorded by the tags, investigators identified porbeagle sharks as the predators.
On March 11,
the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species voted for greater
protection of five shark species including porbeagle sharks.
Julian Dodson,
professor at Laval
University and OTN
principal investigator, co-authored the study. "Both species are in
trouble, and measures to conserve one may well be at odds with efforts to
protect the other. What we really need now are studies to quantify just how
important eels are in the diets of sharks and just what impact shark predation
has on eel abundance."
113 acoustic
tags fitted - 4 survive
In addition to pop-up tags, investigators also fitted an additional 113 eels with acoustic tags. These simpler tags broadcast only their identity and are detected by receivers moored in the ocean. Only four of the 113 eels leaving the Gulf of St. Lawrence for the Atlantic Ocean were detected on the OTN acoustic array in theCabot Strait . The
information suggests that the porbeagle sharks are taking a heavy toll on the
migrating eels.
In addition to pop-up tags, investigators also fitted an additional 113 eels with acoustic tags. These simpler tags broadcast only their identity and are detected by receivers moored in the ocean. Only four of the 113 eels leaving the Gulf of St. Lawrence for the Atlantic Ocean were detected on the OTN acoustic array in the
"We could
hope that there will be increased pressure to protect eels in fresh water,
particularly during downstream migration through power dams," says Mélanie
Beguer-Pon, OTN researcher at Laval
University . "We
can't do anything about shark predation, but we can limit mortality in
turbines."
The study was
conducted by Mélanie Beguer-Pon, José Benchetrit and Julian Dodson (OTN, Laval
University), with Martin Castonguay (OTN, DFO-IML), Kim Aarestrup (OTN,
NIAR-Denmark), Steven Campana (DFO-BIO) and Michael Stokesbury (OTN, Acadia
University). Read the full paper here
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