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Use of passive acoustic monitoring to fill knowledge gaps of fish global conservation status
Bolgan, M.; Parmentier, E.; Picciulin, M.; Hadjioannou, L.; Di Iorio, L. (2023). Use of passive acoustic monitoring to fill knowledge gaps of fish global conservation status. Aquat. Conserv. 33(12): 1580-1589. https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/aqc.4020
In: Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems. Wiley: Chichester; New York . ISSN 1052-7613; e-ISSN 1099-0755, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Ophidiidae Rafinesque, 1810 [WoRMS]
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    bioacoustics; cusk-eel; ecoacoustics; Ophidiidae; remote sensing;species distribution

Authors  Top 
  • Bolgan, M., more
  • Parmentier, E., more
  • Picciulin, M.
  • Hadjioannou, L.
  • Di Iorio, L.

Abstract
    1. Knowledge of the ecology, spatial distribution and conservation status of fish populations is achieved by fishery-dependent techniques, and by more recently developed non-invasive fishery-independent techniques. Passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) is a fishery-independent method that provides remote sensing of soniferous species, populations, communities and ecosystems by recording soundscapes and their components.
    2. A case study is presented to demonstrate how PAM can contribute to a dynamic understanding of fish distribution, ecological preferences and conservation status. This case study refers to the cusk-eel Ophidion rochei (Ophidiiformes), a nocturnal, behaviourally cryptic, soniferous fish species, described as uncommon and rare in the scientific literature, and listed as Data Deficient in the IUCN Red List.
    3. A systematized literature review was carried out using Ophidion+rochei as the search term, and by grouping records into two main categories: (i) traditional techniques (including all fishery-dependent techniques and underwater visual census); and (ii) PAM.
    4. This review highlights how PAM has provided new sightings of O. rochei at a rate three times higher than all other monitoring techniques combined. In contrast with the knowledge achieved to date by fishery-dependent techniques, the reported acoustic mass phenomena indicate that this species can be very abundant. Ophidion rochei was found to inhabit a wide range of depths and ecosystems, at least throughout the Mediterranean basin.
    5. This paper supports the urgency and the importance of relying on the integration of different fishery-independent techniques for multidisciplinary monitoring, in line with the Goal 14 requirements of the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development.

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