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Habitat associations and determinants of refuge use in post-settlement lingcod (Ophiodon elongatus)

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Title Habitat associations and determinants of refuge use in post-settlement lingcod (Ophiodon elongatus)
Names Petrie, Megan E. (creator)
Ryer, Clifford H. (advisor)
Sampson, David B. (advisor)
Date Issued 2005-05-23 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2006
Abstract Lingcod are an overexploited fish species in the Pacific Northwest and although there
has been extensive study of the habitat requirements of adults, particularly during
spawning, relatively little is known regarding the habitat requirements of post-settlement
juveniles. Many juvenile fish use structural components of habitat to
alleviate the risk of predation, as well as for foraging. Laboratory experiments and a
field tagging study were performed in order to investigate habitat preference in
juvenile lingcod, as well as factors that govern habitat use. Initial laboratory
experiments demonstrated an affinity by juvenile lingcod for structure over bare sand
habitats, whether the structure was rock, shell or seagrass. Body size, nutritional
state, and light level were also found to be determinants of the extent to which
juvenile lingcod use structural refuges. In the laboratory, older, larger individuals
exhibited a higher propensity for structure use than did smaller juvenile fish. In fish
of both body sizes, increasing hunger levels caused fish to emerge more readily from
refuges than did those that were satiated. Die! patterns of ambient illumination were
simulated in the laboratory, and refuge use decreased significantly in response to lower nocturnal light levels, a pattern that was not observed in the smaller size class.
An acoustic tagging study conducted in Yaquina Bay, Oregon corroborated the basic
habitat preferences seen in laboratory experiments. Juvenile lingcod showed a high
degree of site fidelity, remaining in discreet areas of significant structural complexity,
as revealed by underwater video of benthic habitat. The way in which an animal
utilizes structural refuges adds or detracts from individual fitness, making this
investigation into the habitat requirements of post-settlement lingcod an important
step in understanding the life history and ecology of an important recreational and
commercial species.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Lingcod -- Habitat -- Oregon -- Yaquina Bay
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/20233

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