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Diel activity and short‐distance movement pattern of the E uropean spiny lobster, P alinurus elephas, acoustically tracked
Author(s) -
Giacalone Vincenzo M.,
Barausse Alberto,
Gristina Michele,
Pipitone Carlo,
Visconti Valerio,
Badalamenti Fabio,
D'Anna Giovanni
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
marine ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.668
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1439-0485
pISSN - 0173-9565
DOI - 10.1111/maec.12148
Subject(s) - spiny lobster , diel vertical migration , foraging , sunrise , nocturnal , dusk , fishery , home range , range (aeronautics) , sunset , oceanography , american lobster , geography , biology , homarus , geology , ecology , habitat , crustacean , meteorology , materials science , composite material , physics , astronomy
This paper presents the results of the application of an ultrasonic telemetry system to the investigation of short‐term movements in the European spiny lobster, Palinurus elephas , in a coastal area of NW Sicily (Central Mediterranean Sea). Ten lobsters were tagged with miniaturized transmitters and released over a favourable habitat and their movements then recorded by means of nine automated receivers with the objective of investigating post‐release displacement, home‐range extension, movement patterns, activity rhythm and the influence of lunar light intensity on lobster activity. Acoustic detection data were used to assess activity and home range using estimates of horizontal and vertical movements and minimum convex polygons, respectively. Continuous wavelet transform ( CWT ) analysis was applied to time series of position data. Acoustic data from five of 10 lobsters were successfully recorded across a 78‐day study period between April and June 2008. All of them displayed an activity pattern characterized by diurnal sheltering and nocturnal foraging, with higher activity (i.e., longer distances travelled) at night. Their home range measured between 1629 and 8641 m 2 , and all lobsters relocated every 4.6 days on average, probably in search of unexploited feeding grounds. For this reason we hypothesize a nomadic movement pattern for our tagged lobsters. CWT analyses highlighted a 24‐h periodicity in lobster activity, with higher activity from sunset to sunrise. No clear influence of moon phase on lobster activity was detected.

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