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Groundtruthing of pelagic forage fish detected by hydroacoustics in a whale feeding area using environmental DNA
Groundtruthing of pelagic forage fish detected by hydroacoustics in a whale feeding area using environmental DNA
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Groundtruthing of pelagic forage fish detected by hydroacoustics in a whale feeding area using environmental DNA
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Groundtruthing of pelagic forage fish detected by hydroacoustics in a whale feeding area using environmental DNA
Groundtruthing of pelagic forage fish detected by hydroacoustics in a whale feeding area using environmental DNA

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Groundtruthing of pelagic forage fish detected by hydroacoustics in a whale feeding area using environmental DNA
Groundtruthing of pelagic forage fish detected by hydroacoustics in a whale feeding area using environmental DNA
Journal Article

Groundtruthing of pelagic forage fish detected by hydroacoustics in a whale feeding area using environmental DNA

2020
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Overview
Conservation of whales, considered as umbrella species in marine environments, requires to be able to understand their relationships with ecosystem components such as prey species, including pelagic fish. However, studying such relationships in nature is a technical challenge. In this study, we used two noninvasive methods in combination, namely hydroacoustics and environmental DNA (eDNA), to detect five pelagic or semipelagic fish species in the Saguenay–St. Lawrence Marine Park (Québec, Canada): the sandlance Ammodytes sp., the Atlantic herring Clupea harengus, the capelin Mallotus villosus, the rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax, and the redfish Sebastes sp. The Marine Park is a major summer feeding ground for a wide diversity of marine wildlife species, including the endangered St. Lawrence beluga whale population. Up to now, scarce research efforts have been dedicated to the estimation of pelagic fish abundance and diversity in this area. Hydroacoustics allowed to easily discriminate the classification of echoes from fish, and with certain limitations to distinguish swim bladder fish from fish without swim bladder. We used eDNA to groundtruth acoustics data and to improve species identification. eDNA analyses especially demonstrated that the capelin was the most predominant species, while the abundance of the redfish and the sandlance was strongly variable over the 2 years of the study. Our results also suggest that there are annual fluctuations in prey availability that marine mammals encounter in this area. Although the approach we used is not without constraints that should be addressed in future studies, we hope that this study will contribute to science‐based conservation and fisheries management policies. We used hydroacoustics and environmental DNA (eDNA) in combination to detect five pelagic or semipelagic fish species in the Saguenay–St. Lawrence Marine Park (Québec, Canada). The Marine Park is a major summer feeding ground for a wide diversity of marine wildlife species, including the endangered St. Lawrence beluga whale population that feeds on fish. Our study, which was conducted over a 2‐year period, highlights the annual fluctuations in prey availability that marine mammals encounter in the Marine Park.