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Article
Movement Patterns of the Round Stingray Urobatis halleri (Cooper) Near a Thermal Outfall
Journal of Fish Biology
  • Jeremy Vaudo, California State University - Long Beach
  • Christopher G. Lowe, California State University - Long Beach
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1-2006
Keywords
  • Behaviour,
  • Elasmobranch,
  • Telemetry,
  • Temperature
Abstract

Fine-scale movements and site fidelity of round stingrays Urobatis halleri at Seal Beach California, U.S.A., were examined using acoustic telemetry. Actively tracked fish generally exhibited limited nearshore movement, with greater distances travelled at night when the tide was ebbing than during the day with ebbing tides. Increases in round stingray activity were associated with increases in ambient temperature. Passively tracked fish showed seasonal patterns in their presence at Seal Beach. Males left Seal Beach during the autumn, returned the following spring, and remained in the area until the following autumn. Females spent far less time at Seal Beach, remaining in the area for a few weeks during June and July. Passively tracked round stingrays were recorded more often in the warm waters of the San Gabriel River mouth (the location of a thermal outfall from an electric-generating station) than adjacent beaches, with fish often returning to Seal Beach after periods of absence. Anthropogenic effects resulting from coastal development may have created environmental conditions (i.e. warmer water and finer sediments) that influence the movements and site fidelity of round stingrays.

DOI
10.1111/j.0022-1112.2006.01054.x
Comments

©2006 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles

Additional Comments
University of Southern California Sea Grant Program grant #: NA86RG0054
Citation Information
Jeremy Vaudo and Christopher G. Lowe. "Movement Patterns of the Round Stingray Urobatis halleri (Cooper) Near a Thermal Outfall" Journal of Fish Biology Vol. 68 Iss. 6 (2006) p. 1756 - 1766 ISSN: 0022-1112
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jeremy-vaudo/27/