Occurrence

OTN Canada Sable Island Grey Seal Bioprobes - Tag Release Metadata

Latest version published by Ocean Tracking Network on 20 February 2019 Ocean Tracking Network
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Publication date:
20 February 2019
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Download the latest version of this resource data as a Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A) or the resource metadata as EML or RTF:

Data as a DwC-A file download 883 records in English (30 KB) - Update frequency: irregular
Metadata as an EML file download in English (14 KB)
Metadata as an RTF file download in English (12 KB)

Description

This is the OBIS extraction of the OTN Canada Sable Island Grey Seal Bioprobes project, consisting only of the release tagging metadata. i.e. the locations and dates of tagged animal release. If readers are interested in the full source dataset they should refer to the OTN web site (members.oceantrack.org). Abstract: Objectives are to better understand the ecological function of large marine carnivores in continental-shelf ecosystems, using grey seals as our model species and novel acoustic technology developed for OTN. There are two components: 1) spatial and temporal patterns of prey encounters by a mobile, large marine predator, and 2) predator movements and foraging distribution in relation to fine- and meso- scale seasonal oceanography in eastern Canada. The first study will contribute to science advice on the impact of pinniped predation on the dynamics of prey populations of commercial or conservation importance. The second study seeks to understand the oceanographic features that grey seals may use to condition the way they search the environment for food and in turn predict how climate variability and long-term change may affect upper-trophic level predators and alter their impact on continental shelf ecosystems.

Data Records

The data in this occurrence resource has been published as a Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A), which is a standardized format for sharing biodiversity data as a set of one or more data tables. The core data table contains 883 records.

This IPT archives the data and thus serves as the data repository. The data and resource metadata are available for download in the downloads section. The versions table lists other versions of the resource that have been made publicly available and allows tracking changes made to the resource over time.

Versions

The table below shows only published versions of the resource that are publicly accessible.

How to cite

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

Iverson, S.J., Bowen, W.D., Jonsen, I. and Lidgard, D. 2012. Sable Island Grey Seal Bioprobes. Version # In OBIS Digital Collections. Published by OBIS, Digital http://www.obis.org/. Accessed on - INSERT DATE

Rights

Researchers should respect the following rights statement:

The publisher and rights holder of this work is Ocean Tracking Network. This [DATA(BASE)-NAME] is made available under the Open Data Commons Attribution License: http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/by/1.0/.

GBIF Registration

This resource has not been registered with GBIF

Keywords

Occurrence; Observation

Contacts

OTN Portal Manager
  • Metadata Provider
  • Originator
  • Point Of Contact
OTN Portal Manager
Ocean Tracking Network
1355 Oxford St
B3H 3Z1 Halifax
Nova Scotia
CA
+1 (902) 494-4101
Ian Jonsen
  • collaborator
Dalhousie and DFO, Bedford Institute of Oceanography Collaboration
Don Bowen
  • Principal Investigator
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Damian Lidgard
  • collaborator
Dalhousie University
Sara Iverson
  • Principal Investigator
Dalhousie University

Geographic Coverage

No Description available

Bounding Coordinates South West [43.92, -64.93], North East [47.8, -59.01]

Taxonomic Coverage

All tagged specimens were identified to species. Each grey seal was weighed, was measured, had age determined, had sex and life stage recorded. Average measurements for grey seal: Average weight:173.383 kg Average length (STANDARD):1.900 m Average age: 22.788 year Life stage:ADULT Each Atlantic cod was measured, had life stage recorded. Average measurements for Atlantic cod: Average length (FORK):0.492 m Life stage:ADULT

Species Halichoerus grypus (grey seal), Gadus morhua (Atlantic cod)

Temporal Coverage

Start Date / End Date 2009-10-15 / 2016-09-24

Project Data

No Description available

Title Ocean Tracking Network (OTN)
Funding OTN is a $168-million research and technology development initiative headquartered at Dalhousie University, in Halifax Nova Scotia. Starting in 2008, OTN began deploying Canadian state of the art acoustic receivers and oceanographic monitoring equipment in key ocean locations. These are being used to document the movements and survival of marine animals carrying acoustic tags and to document how both are influenced by oceanographic conditions. OTN is funded by the 'Canada Foundation for Innovation' and the 'Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada' with additional support from 'Dalhousie University' and the 'Social Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada'.
Study Area Description OTN is a project of the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS) providing infrastructure to collect comprehensive data on sea animals in relation to the ocean's changing physical properties at strategic locations along the sea floor in 14 ocean regions off all seven continents. OTN data are in the process of being routinely copied to International Oceanographic Data Exchange (IODE) recognized facilities at the Department of Fisheries and Ocean Canada for long term sustainability and to the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (www.obis.org) for public accessibility.
Design Description A wide range of aquatic species - salmon, tuna, whales, sharks, penguins, crabs, and seals, to name a few, are tagged with small electronic transmitters, surgically implanted or attached externally, and can operate for up to 20 years. Acoustic receivers arranged in line on the ocean floor as well as attached to buoys, gliders and large animals (e.g. grey seals) pick up the coded acoustic signals from these tags identifying each tagged sea creature that passes within half a kilometer of the receiver. Data are subsequently uploaded to a central database, resulting in current and reliable global records that can be analyzed and applied to many different environmental research efforts. Tags and receivers are also be outfitted with sensors to measure the ocean's temperature, depth, salinity, currents, chemistry, and other properties.

The personnel involved in the project:

Sara Iverson
  • Principal Investigator

Sampling Methods

Acoustic receivers were deployed and acoustic tags were released.

Study Extent Tagging program started in 2009 and is ongoing.
Quality Control OTN species names are verified using the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS). If species names on new data cannot be verified against (a) known valid names in OTN, and/or (b) WoRMs the Data Provider will be notified so they can check they are correct. Names that cannot be placed after checking with WoRMS are, where possible, placed on the basis of other authoritative sources, such as the Fishbase or ITIS; and once completely verified a request will be sent to WoRMS for addition of the verified species name. http://members.oceantrack.org/data/discovery/byspecies.

Method step description:

  1. This resource was created by OTN data management for publication at OBIS. Darwin Core (DwC) records were extracted from the core OTN database in the required IPT format.

Bibliographic Citations

  1. Iverson, S.J., Bowen, W.D., Jonsen, I. and Lidgard, D. 2012. Sable Island Grey Seal Bioprobes. In: Iverson, S.J., Bowen, W.D., Jonsen, I. and Lidgard, D. 2012. Sable Island Grey Seal Bioprobes.

Additional Metadata

Access Constraints: none Use Constraints: Acknowledge the use of specific records from contributing databases in the form appearing in the 'Citation' field thereof (if any); and acknowledge the use of the OBIS facility. marine, harvested by OBIS

Purpose These data are for display on the OBIS portal and associated mapping programs and for download to personal computers for ad-hoc end-user analysis.
Alternative Identifiers https://oceantrack.org/ipt/resource?r=otndal-dfo-biocanadasable