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SEMINAR: MAF Seminar
MAF
Seminar
Friday, September 23, 2011
10:30 am - 11:30 am
SLAB 103
Speaker: Austin J.
Gallagher
Ph.D. Student, Research Assistant,
Abess Center for Ecosystem Science and
Policy
R.J. Dunlap Marine Conservation Program
Title: "Stressed
out: Consequences of fisheries capture and release on
the physiology, behavior, and survival of sharks in the
subtropical Atlantic"
Abstract:
Commercial fishing activities
have been repeatedly identified as a major contributor
to the global decline of predatory fish populations
including sharks, and there is a growing effort to
understand the effects of bycatch and minimize mortality
of discarded individuals. The recreational sector also
encounters sharks both incidentally and as targeted
fisheries with some harvested, and others released
(voluntarily or as a result of regulations), facing an
uncertain fate. While there have been a wide
range of studies covering the issue of release
survival and physiology in various game fishes,
similar studies on elasmobranchs-particularly
threatened species of shark-are lacking. To
address the paucity of knowledge on the sublethal
consequences and delayed mortality associated with
shark-fishery interactions, we conducted an integrative
study that employed physiological (blood chemistry),
behavioral (reflex tests), and survival assessments
(satellite tagging) across 5 coastal species of shark
found in the subtropical Atlantic. Results suggest
significant species differences, with tiger and lemon
sharks showing a high tolerance for stress as a result
of fishing pressure, whereby other species such as the
great hammerhead and bull displayed extreme acid-base
disruption and reflex inhibition across fight times, as
well as increased post-release mortality. Results are
framed within the context of varying exercise regimes
and inter-specific stress responses/capacities, while
providing a basis for future ecological risk assessment.
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