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Summary
Item Identification
Keywords
Physical Location
Data Set Info
Support Roles
Extents
Access Info
Distribution Info
Data Quality
Data Management
Lineage
Child Items
Catalog Details

Summary

Short Citation
Alaska Fisheries Science Center, 2024: AFSC/ABL: Rockfish Barotrauma, https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/inport/item/24703.
Full Citation Examples

Abstract

Because rockfish (Sebastes spp.) are physoclystic, i.e. their gas bladders are closed off from the gut, they often suffer internal injuries from rapid, internal air expansion when caught and brought to the surface. Many discarded rockfish do not survive either because they cannot submerge due to excessive buoyancy or because of internal damage. There is some evidence that recompression may greatly increase the survival of barotrauma-injured rockfish. However, because survival can be species-specific it is important to gauge the impacts on each species of interest. Research completed in 2010 on a small NOAA vessel demonstrated that rougheye rockfish (S. aleutianus), caught at depths down to 700 feet and exhibiting barotrauma, can survive if recompressed after capture in portable pressurized tanks. This result is noteworthy because it is the deepest known successful capture and recompression of any rockfish species, which suggests theres potential to conduct scientific tagging studies to track movements and behavior. In 2011 and 2012 we chartered a longline vessel to sample rougheye rockfish on reefs nearby the NOAA, the Auke Bay Laboratories (ABL), Little Port Walter Research Station on the southeast side of Baranof Island. After rougheye were caught and brought to the surface, they exhibited signs of barotrauma such as stomach eversion, exophthalmia (bulging eyes), and corneal gas bubbles. Of 43 fish that were recompressed immediately after capture in portable pressure tanks, 25 survived and are currently held at TSMRI for long term monitoring. The deepest fish that was captured and has survived long-term was caught at ~915 feet. Some fish still have corneal gas bubbles, but other signs of barotrauma have since subsided. Other rougheye rockfish were tagged and released at 250 ft using a weighted crab ring and a downrigger (n=130).

Distribution Information

  • Note: Dataset migrated by Dan Woodrich (AFSC data management coordinator) on 12/15/2021. Contact: Daniel.woodrich@noaa.gov

  • Note: Dataset migrated by Dan Woodrich (AFSC data management coordinator) on 12/15/2021. Contact: Daniel.woodrich@noaa.gov

  • Note: Dataset migrated by Dan Woodrich (AFSC data management coordinator) on 12/15/2021. Contact: Daniel.woodrich@noaa.gov

  • Note: Dataset migrated by Dan Woodrich (AFSC data management coordinator) on 12/15/2021. Contact: Daniel.woodrich@noaa.gov

  • Note: Dataset migrated by Dan Woodrich (AFSC data management coordinator) on 12/15/2021. Contact: Daniel.woodrich@noaa.gov

Access Constraints:

Contact the Point of Contact for data request form.

Use Constraints:

User must read and fully comprehend the metadata prior to use. Data should not be used beyond the limits of the source scale. Acknowledgement of NOAA, as the source from which these data were obtained, in any publications and/or other representations of these data is suggested.

Controlled Theme Keywords

biota

Child Items

Type Title
Entity Catch
Entity evert_esoph_code
Entity eye_status_code
Entity fish_status
Entity haul
Entity tank_status

Contact Information

Point of Contact
Cara Rodgveller
cara.rodgveller@noaa.gov

Metadata Contact
Metadata Coordinators MC
AFSC.metadata@noaa.gov

Extents

Geographic Area 1

-135.5° W, -135° E, 56.5° N, 56.25° S

Baranof Island, Southeast Alaska

Time Frame 1
2010 - 2012

Item Identification

Title: AFSC/ABL: Rockfish Barotrauma
Short Name: AFSC/ABL: Rockfish Barotrauma
Status: Completed
Publication Date: Unknown
Abstract:

Because rockfish (Sebastes spp.) are physoclystic, i.e. their gas bladders are closed off from the gut, they often suffer internal injuries from rapid, internal air expansion when caught and brought to the surface. Many discarded rockfish do not survive either because they cannot submerge due to excessive buoyancy or because of internal damage. There is some evidence that recompression may greatly increase the survival of barotrauma-injured rockfish. However, because survival can be species-specific it is important to gauge the impacts on each species of interest. Research completed in 2010 on a small NOAA vessel demonstrated that rougheye rockfish (S. aleutianus), caught at depths down to 700 feet and exhibiting barotrauma, can survive if recompressed after capture in portable pressurized tanks. This result is noteworthy because it is the deepest known successful capture and recompression of any rockfish species, which suggests theres potential to conduct scientific tagging studies to track movements and behavior. In 2011 and 2012 we chartered a longline vessel to sample rougheye rockfish on reefs nearby the NOAA, the Auke Bay Laboratories (ABL), Little Port Walter Research Station on the southeast side of Baranof Island. After rougheye were caught and brought to the surface, they exhibited signs of barotrauma such as stomach eversion, exophthalmia (bulging eyes), and corneal gas bubbles. Of 43 fish that were recompressed immediately after capture in portable pressure tanks, 25 survived and are currently held at TSMRI for long term monitoring. The deepest fish that was captured and has survived long-term was caught at ~915 feet. Some fish still have corneal gas bubbles, but other signs of barotrauma have since subsided. Other rougheye rockfish were tagged and released at 250 ft using a weighted crab ring and a downrigger (n=130).

Purpose:

This dataset contains information on rockfish barotrauma

Notes:

Loaded by FGDC Metadata Uploader, batch 5932, 04-30-2015 19:20

The following FGDC sections are not currently supported in InPort, but were preserved and will be included in the FGDC export:

- Taxonomy (FGDC:taxonomy)

Keywords

Theme Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
ISO 19115 Topic Category
biota
UNCONTROLLED
None barotrauma
None deep-water
None tag
None tagging

Spatial Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
UNCONTROLLED
Geographic Names Information System Alaska
Geographic Names Information System Baranof Island
Geographic Names Information System Gulf of Alaska
Geographic Names Information System Southeast Alaska

Physical Location

Organization: Auke Bay Laboratories
City: Juneau
State/Province: AK
Country: US

Data Set Information

Data Set Scope Code: Data Set
Maintenance Frequency: None Planned
Data Presentation Form: maps and data
Distribution Liability:

The user is responsible for the results of any application of this data for other than its intended purpose.

Support Roles

Data Steward

CC ID: 230494
Date Effective From: 2015-10-07
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Rodgveller, Cara
Email Address: cara.rodgveller@noaa.gov

Distributor

CC ID: 198675
Date Effective From: 2015-04-30
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Rodgveller, Cara
Email Address: cara.rodgveller@noaa.gov

Metadata Contact

CC ID: 198673
Date Effective From: 2015-04-30
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): MC, Metadata Coordinators
Email Address: AFSC.metadata@noaa.gov

Originator

CC ID: 198676
Date Effective From: 2015-04-30
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Rodgveller, Cara
Email Address: cara.rodgveller@noaa.gov

Point of Contact

CC ID: 198674
Date Effective From: 2015-04-30
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Rodgveller, Cara
Email Address: cara.rodgveller@noaa.gov

Extents

Currentness Reference: Ground Condition

Extent Group 1

Extent Group 1 / Geographic Area 1

CC ID: 198672
W° Bound: -135.5
E° Bound: -135
N° Bound: 56.5
S° Bound: 56.25
Description

Baranof Island, Southeast Alaska

Extent Group 1 / Time Frame 1

CC ID: 198671
Time Frame Type: Range
Start: 2010
End: 2012

Access Information

Security Class: Unclassified
Data Access Procedure:

N/A

Data Access Constraints:

Contact the Point of Contact for data request form.

Data Use Constraints:

User must read and fully comprehend the metadata prior to use. Data should not be used beyond the limits of the source scale. Acknowledgement of NOAA, as the source from which these data were obtained, in any publications and/or other representations of these data is suggested.

Distribution Information

Distribution 1

CC ID: 840527
Download URL: https://console.cloud.google.com/storage/browser/_details/nmfs_odp_afsc/ABL/Rockfish%20Barotrauma%3B%20Catch%20Data_ID_24703.csv
Distributor:
File Name: Catch Data
Description:

Note: Dataset migrated by Dan Woodrich (AFSC data management coordinator) on 12/15/2021. Contact: Daniel.woodrich@noaa.gov

Distribution 2

CC ID: 840530
Download URL: https://console.cloud.google.com/storage/browser/_details/nmfs_odp_afsc/ABL/Rockfish%20Barotrauma%3B%20Fish%20Status%20Data_ID_24703.csv
Distributor:
File Name: Fish Status Data
Description:

Note: Dataset migrated by Dan Woodrich (AFSC data management coordinator) on 12/15/2021. Contact: Daniel.woodrich@noaa.gov

Distribution 3

CC ID: 233598
Download URL: https://console.cloud.google.com/storage/browser/_details/nmfs_odp_afsc/ABL/Rockfish%20Barotrauma%3B%20GoPro%20Data_ID_24703.csv
Distributor:
File Name: GoPro Data
Description:

Note: Dataset migrated by Dan Woodrich (AFSC data management coordinator) on 12/15/2021. Contact: Daniel.woodrich@noaa.gov

Distribution 4

CC ID: 840531
Download URL: https://console.cloud.google.com/storage/browser/_details/nmfs_odp_afsc/ABL/Rockfish%20Barotrauma%3B%20Haul%20Data_ID_24703.csv
Distributor:
File Name: Haul Data
Description:

Note: Dataset migrated by Dan Woodrich (AFSC data management coordinator) on 12/15/2021. Contact: Daniel.woodrich@noaa.gov

Distribution 5

CC ID: 840532
Download URL: https://console.cloud.google.com/storage/browser/_details/nmfs_odp_afsc/ABL/Rockfish%20Barotrauma%3B%20Tank%20Status%20Data_ID_24703.csv
Distributor:
File Name: Tank Status
Description:

Note: Dataset migrated by Dan Woodrich (AFSC data management coordinator) on 12/15/2021. Contact: Daniel.woodrich@noaa.gov

Data Quality

Completeness Report:

None

Conceptual Consistency:

Contact POC for further information

Quality Control Procedures Employed:

Contact the dataset POC for full QA/QC methodology

Data Management

Have Resources for Management of these Data Been Identified?: Yes
Approximate Percentage of Budget for these Data Devoted to Data Management: Unknown
Do these Data Comply with the Data Access Directive?: Yes
Is Access to the Data Limited Based on an Approved Waiver?: No
If Distributor (Data Hosting Service) is Needed, Please Indicate: yes
Approximate Delay Between Data Collection and Dissemination: unknown
If Delay is Longer than Latency of Automated Processing, Indicate Under What Authority Data Access is Delayed:

no delay

Actual or Planned Long-Term Data Archive Location: To Be Determined
If To Be Determined, Unable to Archive, or No Archiving Intended, Explain:

NCEI cite yet to be determined

Approximate Delay Between Data Collection and Archiving: unknown
How Will the Data Be Protected from Accidental or Malicious Modification or Deletion Prior to Receipt by the Archive?:

IT Security and Contingency Plan for the system establishes procedures and applies to the functions, operations, and resources necessary to recover and restore data as hosted in the Western Regional Support Center in Seattle, Washington, following a disruption.

Lineage

Process Steps

Process Step 1

CC ID: 198680
Description:

Contact POC for methodology

Child Items

Rubric scores updated every 15m

Rubric Score Type Title
Entity Catch
Entity evert_esoph_code
Entity eye_status_code
Entity fish_status
Entity haul
Entity tank_status

Catalog Details

Catalog Item ID: 24703
GUID: gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:24703
Metadata Record Created By: Emily A Fergusson
Metadata Record Created: 2015-04-30 19:19+0000
Metadata Record Last Modified By: SysAdmin InPortAdmin
Metadata Record Last Modified: 2023-05-30 18:10+0000
Metadata Record Published: 2016-05-18
Owner Org: AFSC
Metadata Publication Status: Published Externally
Do Not Publish?: N
Metadata Last Review Date: 2016-05-18
Metadata Review Frequency: 1 Year
Metadata Next Review Date: 2017-05-18