• TemperateReefBase Geonetwork Catalogue
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Condition of rocky reef communities around Tasmania: fish surveys

The data is the quantitative abundance of fish derived from underwater visual census methods involving transect counts at rocky reef sites around Tasmania. This data forms part of a larger dataset that also surveyed megafaunal invertebrate abundance and algal cover for the area. The aggregated dataset allows examination of changes in Tasmanian shallow reef floral and faunal communities over a decadal scale - initial surveys were conducted in 1992-1995, and again at the same sites in 2006-2007. There are plans for ongoing surveys.


An additional component was added in the latter study - a boat ramp study looking at the proximity of boat ramps and their effects of fishing. We analysed underwater visual census data on fishes and macroinvertebrates (abalone and rock lobsters) at 133 shallow rocky reef sites around Tasmania that ranged from 0.6 - 131 km from the nearest boat ramp. These sites were not all the same as those used for the comparison of 1994 and 2006 reef communities. The subset of 133 sites examined in this component consisted of only those sites that were characterized by the two major algal (kelp) types (laminarian or fucoid dominated). Sites with atypical algal assemblages were omitted from the 196 sites surveyed in 2006.


This study aimed to examine reef community data for changes at the community level, changes in species richness and introduced species populations, and changes that may have resulted from ocean warming and fishing.


The methods are described in detail in Edgar and Barrett (1997). Primarily the data are derived from transects at 5 m depth and/or 10 m depth at each site surveyed. The underwater visual census (UVC) methodology used to survey rocky reef communities was designed to maximise detection of (i) changes in population numbers and size-structure (ii) cascading ecosystem effects associated with disturbances such as fishing, (iii) long term change and variability in reef assemblages.

Simple

Identification info

Date (Creation)
2015-06-07

Identifier

Title
Information and documentation - Digital object identifier system
Citation identifier
ISO 26324:2012

Code
10.4226/77/57216dec5940d
Codespace
doi.org
Description
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Principal investigator

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies - Barrett, Neville
ROR ID >

ORCID >

Point of contact

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies - Edgar, Graham
ROR ID >

ORCID >

Purpose
Description of biogeographical patterns on an Australia wide scale, for understanding natural variability over time, detecting changes associated with climate change (range extensions), quantifying impacts of introduced species (e.g. Undaria); understanding and describing ecosystem effects of fishing, and describing the influence of reef based fisheries at the decade scale. The initial survey provided a detailed census of marine life for each site, and by re-examining these sites the aim is to enhance our understanding of how reef species vary over a 12-13 year time scale. These data will allow better management of rocky reef resources from increased knowledge of changes in these systems through natural and human induced events, such as introduced species outbreaks, increased fishing pressure, climate change and disturbance of marine health.
Credit
Natural Resource Management (NRM)
Credit
National Heritage Trust (NHT)
Status
Completed

Point of contact

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies - Barrett, Neville
Private Bag 129
Hobart
Tasmania
7001
Australia
ROR ID >

ORCID >

Point of contact

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies - Edgar, Graham
Private Bag 129
Hobart
Tasmania
7001
Australia
ROR ID >

ORCID >

Collaborator

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies - Stuart-Smith, Rick
Private Bag 129
Hobart
Tasmania
7001
Australia
ROR ID >

ORCID >

Spatial representation type
Text, table
Topic category
  • Biota

Extent

N
S
E
W


Temporal extent

Time period
1992-01-01 1995-01-31

Temporal extent

Time period
2006-03-01 2007-06-26

Vertical element

Minimum value
5
Maximum value
10
Identifier
EPSG::5715
Name
MSL depth
Maintenance and update frequency
Irregular

Resource format

Title
Microsoft SQL Server
Date
Edition
-
NASA/GCMD Keywords, Version 8.5
  • EARTH SCIENCE | BIOSPHERE | ECOSYSTEMS | MARINE ECOSYSTEMS | BENTHIC
  • EARTH SCIENCE | BIOSPHERE | ECOSYSTEMS | MARINE ECOSYSTEMS | REEF
  • EARTH SCIENCE | BIOSPHERE | ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS | COMMUNITY DYNAMICS | COMMUNITY STRUCTURE
  • EARTH SCIENCE | BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION | ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES | FISH
Keywords (Discipline)
  • Temperate Reef
Keywords (Place)
  • TASMANIA
Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC): Fields of Research
  • Natural Resource Management
  • Marine and Estuarine Ecology (incl. Marine Ichthyology)
  • Community Ecology
AODN Platform Vocabulary
  • diver
AODN Discovery Parameter Vocabulary
  • Biotic taxonomic identification
  • Abundance of biota

Resource constraints

Classification
Unclassified

Resource constraints

Use limitation
The data described in this record are the intellectual property of the University of Tasmania through the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies.

Resource constraints

Linkage
http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by/4.0/88x31.png

License Graphic

Title
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License


>

Website
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

License Text

Use limitation
Please contact the researchers when accessing the data, and please consult researchers before usage of the data, in reference to authorship.
Other constraints
Cite data as: Barrett, N., & Edgar, G. (2015). Condition of rocky reef communities around Tasmania: fish surveys [Data set]. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies. https://doi.org/10.4226/77/57216DEC5940D

Associated resource

Title
Condition of rocky reef communities around Tasmania: a key marine habitat

Identifier

Code
29c481ab-e1b7-4eab-92df-3cfb20240255
Association Type
Larger work citation
Initiative Type
Project

Associated resource

Title
Condition of rocky reef communities around Tasmania: algal surveys

Identifier

Code
10.25959/46WY-NM22
Association Type
Cross reference
Initiative Type
Campaign

Associated resource

Title
Condition of rocky reef communities around Tasmania: invertebrate surveys

Identifier

Code
10.25959/ZCHV-XS58
Association Type
Cross reference
Initiative Type
Campaign
Character encoding
UTF8
Supplemental Information
Edgar, GJ, Barrett, NS, (1997). Short term monitoring of biotic change in Tasmanian marine reserves, Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 213: 261-279. Edgar GJ, Moverley J, Barrett NS, Peters D, Reed C (1997). The conservation-related benefits of a systematic marine biological sampling programme: the Tasmanian reef bioregionalisation as a case study. Biological Conservation 79: 227-240. Stuart-Smith, RD, Barrett, NS, Crawford, C, Edgar, GJ, Frusher, SD. (2008). Condition of rocky reef communities: A key marine habitat around Tasmania. NRM/NHT Report, Tasmanian Aquaculture and Fisheries Institute, Hobart. Stuart-Smith, RD and Barrett, NS and Crawford, C and Frusher, SD and Stevenson, DG and Edgar, GJ (2008). Spatial patterns in impacts of fishing on temperate rocky reefs: Are fish abundance and mean size related to proximity to fisher access points?, Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 365 (2) pp. 116 - 125. ISSN 0022-0981. Stuart-Smith, RD and Barrett, NS and Stevenson, DG and Edgar, GJ (2010). Stability in temperate reef communities over a decadal time scale despite concurrent ocean warming. Global Change Biology, 16 (1) pp. 122-134. ISSN 1365-2486.

Content Information

Content type
Physical measurement
Description
Determined by visual estimate
Name
Fish size class

Name
mm
Description
Identification of fish

Identifier

Code
Biotic taxonomic identification
Description
Abundance of fish per quadrat/transect

Identifier

Code
Abundance of biota
Name
Individuals per quadrat/transect

Distribution Information

Distribution format
  • CSV (.csv)

OnLine resource
DATA ACCESS - all fish surveys [direct download]

OnLine resource
ASSOCIATED PUBLICATION - Short term monitoring of biotic change in Tasmanian marine reserves (DOI: 10.1016/S0022-0981(96)02769-4)

OnLine resource
ASSOCIATED PUBLICATION - The conservation-related benefits of a systematic marine biological sampling programme: The Tasmanian reef bioregionalisation as a case study (DOI: S0006-3207(96)00095-X)

OnLine resource
ASSOCIATED PUBLICATION - Spatial patterns in impacts of fishing on temperate rocky reefs: Are fish abundance and mean size related to proximity to fisher access points? (DOI: 10.1016/j.jembe.2008.08.002)

OnLine resource
ASSOCIATED PUBLICATION - Stability in temperate reef communities over a decadal time scale despite concurrent ocean warming (DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2009.01955.x)

OnLine resource
imas:MB_EXTRACT_SAMPLE_FISH_ALL_MAP

MAP - Condition of rocky reef communities around Tasmania: fish surveys

OnLine resource
imas:MB_EXTRACT_SAMPLE_FISH_ALL_DATA

This OCG WFS service returns the data (fish surveys) for download in multiple formats, including CSV

OnLine resource
View and download this data through the interactive IMAS Data Portal.

Resource lineage

Statement
The underwater visual census (UVC) methodology used to survey rocky reef communities involved quantitative diver-based surveys of fishes, large mobile invertebrates and macroalgae (see below for more detail; also described by Edgar & Barrett, 1997 and Edgar et al., 1997). A total of 136 sites from 8 bioregions around Tasmania were surveyed in both 1992-1995 and 2006-2007. An additional 60 sites were either resurveyed (from sites first surveyed in 1999) or surveyed for the first time in 2006. At each site, 4 x 50m transects were laid at the 5m or 10m depth contour, and fishes, invertebrates (> 2.5 cm) and algae were recorded separately by a team of 2 - 3 divers. Details of each site, including the date and GPS location, were recorded and are available at IMAS. The methods below describe the specific survey technique for measuring fish abundance: FISHES:-The density and estimated size-class of fish species within 5 m either side of the 50 m transect line were recorded by a diver (i.e. 50 m x 10 m). This was done by swimming parallel to the transect line (2.5 m away) and recording fish within a 5 m wide lane, on each side of the transect. Size-classes of total fish length were categorised as 25, 50, 75, 100, 125, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350, 375, 400, 500, 625, 750, 875 and 1000+ mm. Lengths of fish >1000 mm length were individually estimated. For the boat ramp component, the UVC methods described above were used to record abundance and size structure of fishes and mobile benthic macroinvertebrates at 133 shallow reef sites around the Tasmanian coastline.
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Hierarchy level
Dataset

Platform

Identifier

Code
diver

Metadata

Metadata identifier
urn:uuid/caf7220a-19e0-4a7f-9af6-eade6c79a47a

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Author

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS), University of Tasmania (UTAS) - Barrett, Neville ()

Publisher

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS), University of Tasmania (UTAS) - IMAS Data Manager
Parent metadata
  • Condition of rocky reef communities around Tasmania: a key marine habitat

Type of resource

Resource scope
Dataset
Metadata linkage
https://metadata.imas.utas.edu.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/caf7220a-19e0-4a7f-9af6-eade6c79a47a

Point of truth URL of this metadata record

Date info (Creation)
2020-10-12T15:08:36
Date info (Revision)
2025-01-17T22:07:29

Metadata standard

Title
ISO 19115-3:2018
 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

N
S
E
W


Keywords

AODN Discovery Parameter Vocabulary
Abundance of biota Biotic taxonomic identification
AODN Platform Vocabulary
diver
Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC): Fields of Research
Community Ecology Marine and Estuarine Ecology (incl. Marine Ichthyology) Natural Resource Management
NASA/GCMD Keywords, Version 8.5
EARTH SCIENCE | BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION | ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES | FISH EARTH SCIENCE | BIOSPHERE | ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS | COMMUNITY DYNAMICS | COMMUNITY STRUCTURE EARTH SCIENCE | BIOSPHERE | ECOSYSTEMS | MARINE ECOSYSTEMS | BENTHIC EARTH SCIENCE | BIOSPHERE | ECOSYSTEMS | MARINE ECOSYSTEMS | REEF

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Associated resources

Not available


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