Mixing and migration of overwintering Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) stocks near the mouth of the Gulf of St. Lawrence

1999 ◽  
Vol 56 (10) ◽  
pp. 1873-1881 ◽  
Author(s):  
S E Campana ◽  
G A Chouinard ◽  
J M Hanson ◽  
A Fréchet

Millions of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) migrate distances of up to 500 km each fall to aggregate together in a small overwintering area off eastern Canada. Synoptic research vessel surveys carried out each January between 1994 and 1997 documented dense aggregations of cod along both flanks of the Laurentian Channel in each year, with estimated biomasses exceeding 100 000 metric tons. Using the trace element composition of the otolith ("otolith elemental fingerprint") as a natural tag, we found members of four populations to be present on the overwintering grounds in significant numbers, yet large-scale mixing among the populations was minimal. Individual trawl samples were often composed of a single population, suggesting that population integrity was maintained at a scale of <20 km. Cod from the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence dominated the population composition along the southern flank of the Channel, while cod from the northern Gulf dominated the northern flank; the distributions of both of these populations extended well to the east of their summer habitats and were remarkably similar across years. There was no evidence of large-scale mixing across the Channel. In light of the substantive migration of northern Gulf cod into the management area for the southern Newfoundland population, fishing effort off southern Newfoundland has the potential to reduce the size of the northern Gulf population.

2002 ◽  
Vol 59 (12) ◽  
pp. 1845-1850 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luc A Comeau ◽  
Steven E Campana ◽  
Martin Castonguay

The migration patterns of marine fishes are poorly known, in part owing to the technical limitations associated with tracking the movements of animals in deep water. Here we document a large-scale, directed, migration of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) off eastern Canada. Our approach was based on the acoustic tagging of 126 fish and the deployment of 69 subsurface receivers, stretching over a 160-km distance along the edge of the Laurentian Channel. After 1 year of automated recording, we found that 65% of the fish migrated out of coastal waters in two distinct runs during the summer–autumn period. The offshore-migrating fish overwintered in deep Laurentian Channel waters, returning inshore in April. Individual migration routes and migration timing were variable, indicating that the cod did not aggregate in large schools during the seasonal migration events.


1993 ◽  
Vol 50 (10) ◽  
pp. 2129-2136 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. A. Rose ◽  
W.C. Leggett

Vessels fishing with gill nets for Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence in 1985 and 1986 concentrated their fishing effort in shallow waters (<50 m) where cod densities were highest (to 0.5/m3). In both years, seasonal trends (June–August) in mean daily deployment depths of gill nets were positively correlated with mean depths at which cod were surveyed (1985, r = 0.71; 1986, r = 0.51, Ps < 0.05). Daily catch rate variability of individual vessels was accounted for by fish "flux" adjacent to nets (44%), vessel operator skill (19%), and "flux"–skill interaction (8%; total R2 = 0.71). A guided vessel directed to fish at sites predicted to have high fish flux (located down-current from high-density cod aggregations identified by echosounding within depth ranges forecast to be favorable to cod by "rule of thumb" wind-based oceanographic models) had higher catch rates (mean 1.3 t/d) than the fleet average and its own average fishing without guidance (means 0.4 t/d, P's < 0.05). Directed searches were of shorter duration (mean 0.5 h) than searches conducted at random (1.5 h). Combined use of echosounders and air–sea-based forecasts of cod distribution could help stabilize catch rates, especially at times of poor fish availability inshore.


1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (7) ◽  
pp. 1793-1800 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. L. Poynton ◽  
J. Lom

Trichodina murmanica Polyanskiy, 1955 (= Trichodina domerguei subsp. saintjohnsi Lom and Laird, 1969) and Trichodina cooperi n.sp. were commonly encountered on skin and fins of Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua L., near Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. A third species of Trichodina, probably new, was recorded from the skin of one fish. This is believed to be the first report of the genus Trichodina from the body surface of gadoid fish from eastern Canada, and the known geographic range of T. murmanica is extended. Trichodina cooperi n.sp. has an adoral ciliary spiral of 370–380° and is relatively large, the mean diameter of the body is 110 μm, of the adhesive disc (with dark center), 95 μm, and of the denticulate ring, 59 μm. The denticulate ring consists of 24–29 denticles (usually 27), with 7–9 radial pins per denticle. Each denticle has a broad blade, a large central part, and a slightly curved thorn of moderate to broad width, with a central rib when mature. The thorn is approximately twice the length of the blade. The horseshoe-shaped macronucleus has a diameter of 80.0 μm and the micronucleus is in the +y position. Trichodina spp. infected 26% of 39 wild fish 20 to < 60 cm long. Most wild fish yielded less than five ciliates per 24 × 50 mm smear.


2006 ◽  
Vol 63 (8) ◽  
pp. 1830-1839 ◽  
Author(s):  
David C Hardie ◽  
Roxanne M Gillett ◽  
Jeffrey A Hutchings

The genetic consequences of extended periods at low population size are fundamental to the conservation of depleted species such as the Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua). We compared microsatellite genetic variability among cod populations in Canadian Arctic lakes with that of Gilbert Bay resident and inshore cod from eastern Canada. The Arctic populations had the lowest genetic diversity and were the most strongly genetically structured and distinct. By contrast, eastern Canadian samples expressed high allelic diversity and were not significantly genetically structured or distinct relative to each other, whereas Gilbert Bay resident cod were intermediate to the Arctic and eastern Canadian groups. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that the Arctic populations were colonized between 8000 and 5000 years ago and have experienced little or no gene flow since that time. Despite isolation at the extreme of the species' range, the Arctic populations have retained relatively high heterozygosities and high genetic effective population sizes relative to census sizes (Ne–Nc ratios). Potential explanations for this include the absence of fishing pressure, allowing for the persistence of large, highly fecund individuals, as well as biotic (e.g., absence of planktivores) and abiotic (e.g., low environmental stochasticity) factors in the Arctic lakes that minimize individual variance in reproductive success.


1987 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 26-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Anthony Koslow ◽  
Keith R. Thompson ◽  
William Silvert

Year-class success of both Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) and haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus) stocks in the northwest Atlantic exhibits large-scale coherence and low-frequency variability with apparent periodicities of 10–20 yr. Several physical and biological variables in the region exhibit similar large-scale coherence and apparent periodicity. Multiple regression analysis indicates that year-class success in northwest Atlantic cod stocks tends to be associated with large-scale meteorological patterns and offshore winds. Recruitment to most haddock stocks from the Scotian Shelf to Georges Bank is negatively associated with abundance of 0-group mackerel, which may be due to predation over winter and/or to a combination of environmental features including sea-surface temperature, large-scale atmospheric pressure systems, and freshwater outflows. Statistical analyses often did not define a unique set of variables that best predicted fishery recruitment due to widespread intercorrelations among environmental processes and the likelihood that not all relevant processes entered directly into the analyses. There is little evidence that stock reproductive output during the study period was significantly related to year-class success.


<i>Abstract</i>.—In the Gulf of Maine region, Atlantic cod <i>Gadus morhua</i>, are managed as three separate stocks: in U.S. waters, the Gulf of Maine (5Y) and Georges Bank (5Z) stocks and in Canadian waters, the Bay of Fundy stock (4X). The Northeast Regional Cod Tagging Program (NRCTP), a large-scale, international collaborative tagging program, was initiated in 2003 and provides the first region-wide, international snapshot of cod movements, mixing, and growth across all three management areas. As the 2008 stock assessment of Atlantic cod was approaching, these mark–recapture data (114,473 tag releases and >6,500 recaptures) were being analyzed for stock identification purposes. Analysis of raw and weighted data indicate exchanges between different areas which are likely related to spawning behavior, maturation, and environmental conditions. Two core assumptions when defining a stock are that (1) the stock is self-sustaining and that (2) neighboring stocks exist in isolation; the migration patterns observed in the current study may substantially violate both assumptions. With additional ongoing assessments into spatial variation in key life history characteristics of growth and natural mortality, the NRCTP exemplifies the role of conventional mark–recapture data in the complex process of stock identification. The geographic scale and quality of data collected during the NRCTP also confirm the value of international, industry-science collaborative research initiatives; involving this data in both stock assessments and future management initiatives is rewarding to the ~250 commercial and recreational fishermen who tagged cod for this program.


2015 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 252-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keno Ferter ◽  
Klaas Hartmann ◽  
Alf Ring Kleiven ◽  
Even Moland ◽  
Esben Moland Olsen

Studying the sublethal effects of catch-and-release (C&R) is challenging, as there are several potential sources of bias. For example, if behavioural alterations immediately after the release event are to be studied, separation of tagging effects from actual C&R effects is required, which is a challenge in the wild, particularly in marine environments. To investigate the effects of C&R on Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in their natural environment, 80 cod were caught in fyke nets, fitted with acoustic transmitters, and released. After recovery from tagging and handling for at least 14 days, nine individuals were recaptured and released at least once during experimental angling, following best release practice. All cod survived the C&R event and did not show any large-scale behavioural changes (i.e., changes in diel vertical migrations). However, analysis of small-scale vertical movements showed that three individuals underwent short-term alterations (e.g., reduced or increased swimming activity). This study showed that pretagging fish with acoustic transmitters before experimental angling is an option when investigating fish behaviour immediately after the release event in marine environments. Moreover, release guidelines for cod should be developed, as cod can recover quickly if caught in shallow waters (<20 m) and properly handled and released.


1997 ◽  
Vol 352 (1353) ◽  
pp. 633-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
John K. Horne ◽  
David C. Schneider

Spatial variance in the distribution of aquatic mobile organisms differs from that of passive tracers such as phytoplankton or water temperature. On average, spatial variance of phytoplankton scales with sample unit as L 2 or equivalently with frequency as f −2 . Limited evidence suggests that spatial variance in the distribution of mobile organisms is concentrated at relatively small scales, with little increase over larger scales: spatial variance scales as f −1 or less. We investigated whether spatial variance in distributions of a mobile predator, Atlantic cod ( Gadus morhua ), and a schooling prey, capelin ( Mallotus villosus ), also scale with frequency as f −1 . Acoustic surveys showed that at short time scales spatial variance in cod and capelin densities, as measured by spectral density, peaked at various scales ranging from 20 m to 10 km. At longer time scales, spatial variance of cod scaled as f −1.08 at resolutions finer than 90 m, while scaling as f −0.18 at coarser scales. Spatial variance of capelin scaled as f −1.1 at resolutions finer than 400 m, while scaling as f −0.20 at coarser scales. Spatial variance plots of krill and marine birds showed similar transitions from shallow to steep scaling. Shoaling, schooling and the aggregative response by predators to concentrations of prey were three processes hypothesized to influence spatial variance in distributions of mobile organisms. Numerical experiments showed that shoaling injects variance at large to intermediate scales, resulting in scalings flatter than f −1 . Additional experiments showed that schooling produces a transition from shallow to steep scaling as frequency increases. Spatial variance patterns in cod density were not due to aggregative responses by the predator to concentrations of capelin— there was no association, on average, at resolution scales from 20 m to 10 km. Exponent values for aquatic or terrestrial mobile organisms are predicted to be approximately two at the scale of an individual organism, 0.2 at scales that contain aggregations, and two at scales larger than that of populations. These findings suggest that relations between mobile organisms and large scale habitat variables will be difficult to detect, that stratified survey designs used to estimate commercial population sizes will be inefficient, and that rates of interaction between predator and prey will be underestimated if local observations are averaged over the spatial scale of the population.


2020 ◽  
Vol 77 (3) ◽  
pp. 625-635
Author(s):  
Fan Zhang ◽  
Rick M. Rideout ◽  
Noel G. Cadigan

Juvenile mortality is an important factor affecting the spatiotemporal dynamics of fish recruitment, but estimation of the spatiotemporal variations in juvenile mortality rates remains challenging. We developed a state-space metapopulation dynamics model to simultaneously estimate spatiotemporal variations in juvenile mortality rates and cohort strength and applied this general modelling framework to data from multiple surveys for juvenile (ages 2–5) Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) stocks off Newfoundland and Labrador (NL). We found large-scale synchronized dynamics of decreasing juvenile mortality rates and increasing cohort strength from offshore surveys off eastern and southeastern NL, suggesting improving reproduction and survival rates for juvenile cod. No synchronized patterns of juvenile mortality rates and cohort strength were detected for cod stocks off southern and western NL, indicating more complex cod population spatial structures in those areas. Our study demonstrates the potential of juvenile mortality to cause temporally variable and spatially synchronized dynamics of fish recruitment, and the spatial patterns of juvenile mortality and cohort strength indicate some potential mismatch between cod population structure and current management units off NL.


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