Dataset

Investigation of Dredged Sediment Deposition Events on Dungeness Crab at the Mouth of the Columbia River

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This is the OBIS extraction of the Ocean Tracking Network and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Investigation of Dredged Sediment Deposition Events on Dungeness Crab at the Mouth of the Columbia River, consisting of the release tagging metadata, i.e. the location and date when the tagged animal was released, and summarized detection events of tagged individuals. If readers are interested in the source dataset they may also inquire with the project PIs as listed here or on the OTN web site (https://members.oceantrack.org/project?ccode=NEP.MCR). Abstract:This research is an experiment to investigate dredged sediment deposition events on Dungeness crab, Cancer magister. Our main site is in the nearshore ocean just south of the mouth of the Columbia River, with other receivers located north of the river mouth and inside the estuary. We have three years of data (2014-2016) conducted in late August through October, which is when sediment deposition is allowed. The first two years we used a similar design. There were 2 arrays (control and impact, separated by ~1.8 km) of 4 receivers each arranged in a square formation. Receiver moorings in an array were ~300 meters apart. Each mooring had a V2RW or VR2Tx receiver located 7 m above the bottom and a synch tag 8 m above the bottom (for V2RW units). A subsurface float kept the mooring line near-vertical. We used this arrangement with the Vemco VPS to compare trajectories of crabs at impact and control treatments. In 2015 we also had 2 receivers along the South Jetty for a portion of the study (SJ.1 and SJ.2) to act as a “gateway”. In 2016 we expanded and re-arranged the receivers into 13 receivers in a 3 x 5 node rectangle formation (minus 2 interior nodes). The array was divided into impact (north) and control (south) sub-arrays. We also deployed 2 moorings as a gateway near the South Jetty, as in 2015. Synch tag signals from these moorings (which were in contact with each other) may be detected by some of the moorings in the main array. A third mooring was positioned several kilometers away as a lone sentinel. It recorded presence of some our tagged crabs but was outside the range of the other receivers. Two additional nodes were deployed inside the Columbia River Estuary (ETI and TS), also out of range of other receivers. During an experiment, we released batches of 10 crabs in the center of each subarray. In the impact array, a large hopper dredge deposited a plume of sediment on the crabs\; the control array received no sediment. We repeated the experiment three time in 2014 and 2015 and twice in 2016. In 2016, we also released 20 tagged crabs in the estuary. There were reference tags deployed in each array as well. Tags on the Dungeness crab had > 200 d battery life, and the crabs are capable of significant movements in that period.

Citation: Roegner, G. 2014. Investigation of Dredged Sediment Deposition Events on Dungeness Crab at the Mouth of the Columbia River. Accessed via the Ocean Tracking Network OBIS IPT on INSERT DATE

Published: September 22, 2023 at 19:58

License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 License

URL: https://members.oceantrack.org/ipt/resource?r=otnnoaainvestigationofdre

Contacts:

Ocean Tracking Network Data Centre
Ocean Tracking Network

Jonathan Pye
Ocean Tracking Network

G Curtis Roegner
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

17,851
occurrence records
1
taxa
1
species

Taxa

Missing and invalid fields

Field Missing Invalid
coordinateUncertaintyInMeters 176
1.0%
maximumDepthInMeters 17,851
100.0%
minimumDepthInMeters 17,851
100.0%

Quality flags

The OBIS data quality flags are documented at https://github.com/iobis/obis-qc.

Flag Dropped Records
NO_DEPTH 17,851
100.0%

Measurement types

DNA derived data