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  #1  
Old 12-02-2011, 01:46 PM
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Default CCA Fishing Seminar

Lake Charles CCA Fishing Seminar
Thursday, December 15th
6 p.m.

LSU Ag Center
(7101 Gulf Highway • Lake Charles)


Guest Speaker

Jody Callihan
PhD Graduate of LSU and Post Doctoral Researcher at NC State University
will discuss his findings on the speckled trout acoustic telemetry tagging study he conducted on Big Lake in 2008. His presentation will last approximately one hour and an question & answer session will follow.




Light snacks and drinks will be served.

•••••

For more information, contact Julie Grunewald in the
CCA Office, (225) 952-9200.
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Old 12-02-2011, 02:12 PM
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Is this free?
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Old 12-02-2011, 02:57 PM
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No but in your case we will accept EBT cards.

Free to the public
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Old 12-02-2011, 03:50 PM
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Like this.
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Old 12-02-2011, 04:35 PM
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See they avoid west cove like the plague
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Old 12-02-2011, 05:27 PM
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No but in your case we will accept EBT cards.

Free to the public
Score.
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  #7  
Old 12-02-2011, 05:46 PM
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One I caught that jody tagged and named after me... It stayed on long point all spring and summer and in turners all winter and fall... Never left
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Old 12-02-2011, 05:56 PM
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Across the state of Louisiana, there is a lack of detailed scientific information about the movement of what ichthyologists would call the spotted sea trout, otherwise known to thousands of avid saltwater anglers as the speckled trout.
There are various theories about what speckled trout do at certain times of the year, but much of this information is based on angling observations and data collected by traditional tagging programs from the Coastal Conservation Association, most of which is difficult to figure out and winds up being a narrative of historical references rather than conclusive, scientifically collected data.
To help learn more about the movement of speckled trout, James Cowan, a professor in the LSU Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, wrote a grant that funded a telemetry study, the process of gathering data about remote objects and transmitting the data electronically, intended to understand site fidelity and movement patterns of speckled trout in coastal Louisiana waters.
Working in cooperation with the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries and along with the volunteer efforts of local anglers and the guides at Hackberry Rod & Gun, Cowan is combining the results of the telemetry study with the historical data from the CCA to focus on trout movement and exchange of trout between estuaries within the state.
“One of the primary estuaries we’re studying is Lake Calcasieu near Lake Charles,” said Cowan. “We’re very interested in what makes it a source of the trophy fish for which the lake is known. We’re curious about what is different about the trout in Calcasieu, and on a smaller scale Lake Pontchartrain. Are they biogenetically different than the fish in other bays? We’re not sure. It could depend on how much exchange there is between basins.”
The study at Lake Calcasieu is the project that LSU Oceanography and Coastal Sciences graduate student Jody Callihan chose for his Ph.D. dissertation research. Callihan is in charge of the telemetry study at Lake Calcasieu, and since the study’s inception in May 2007, he has tagged and released about 50 trout ranging from 12 inches to 29 inches with special acoustic transmitters that were inserted in a small incision below the stomach cavity of each fish.
Acoustic tags are much more effective than conventional tags because they emit an electronic ping sequence that is unique to each tagged fish. The ping sequences are “heard” by 50 receivers throughout the entire Calcasieu system any time a fish passes within 200 to 300 yards.
The unique signals go off every few minutes a staggered intervals, thus allowing Callihan to know which fish was recorded as well as the date and time of the detection. Some of the larger fish that were tagged received special transmitters that also identify the depth of the fish along with the water temperature.
According to Cowan, the detections allow them to map the patterns of movement from receiver to receiver.
“Of course, we don’t know if the fish was moving slowly or did 47 loops before it moved,” he said. “All it tells us is that the fish moved from one spot to the next.”
But that information is very valuable.
“With this system, we can semi-continually track individual trout movement patterns throughout the entire Lake Calcasieu system,” Callihan said.
The advantages of learning individual trout movement based on size, season and water conditions are obvious to anyone interested in catching speckled trout, the state’s most popular saltwater game fish. It was the popularity of the speckled trout combined with the serious lack of information about it that led Callihan to select it for his study.
“This work at Lake Calcasieu is funded by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries with Sport Fish Restoration dollars provided through the United States Fish and Wildlife federal assistance program,” Callihan explained. “It’s really a cooperative program, and we work closely together to meet the ultimate goal of better fish management.”
The big question at Lake Calcasieu is whether the fish move offshore and spend a lot of time out there. This study coupled with conventional tagging should help state agencies to make decisions where to draw lines as far as where the stock boundaries are, which would have an ultimate effect on determining if different management strategies are needed.
Callihan explained that stock boundaries are lines that divide different groups of fish that don’t mix with one another.
“For example, there may be some trout movement between Calcasieu and Vermilion Bay,” he said. “But they don’t go any farther than that. And maybe the fish from Barataria move to Terrebonne and vice versa, but they don’t move across the delta. The lines that they don’t cross are the stock boundaries.”
If through this study trout are found to move between systems, the obvious result would be that changing fishing regulations in one system, such as the 15-fish creel limit in Southwest Louisiana, would affect other systems as well.
System to system isn’t the only type of movement that Callihan is studying through his research. He’s also keeping up with seasonal migration patterns, how trout use different habitats and behavior ecology such as how movement differs with size and sex.
“If we can learn the movement patterns, it lets us gauge the vulnerability of fish to stressors like fishing pressure and industrial pollution,” Callihan said. “It will also help us determine if the artificial reefs are beneficial because we can compare them to natural oyster reefs in the system.”
While the ultimate goal of the study is to better the management of speckled trout, the most immediate question that all trout anglers are going to have is how will this study help them catch more fish? Knowing how trout move based on changes in temperature, salinity, tidal amplitude and direction and weather fronts would obviously benefit anglers.
Callihan is about a quarter of the way through the study, but he already has some preliminary results. He has learned some things that he expected he would discover, and he has learned some things that surprised him.
“We have some results in already,” Callihan said. “It’s important to note, though, that this is a 2-year study that started just a few months ago. The study will run through October 2009, so what we’ve learned up to this point is very preliminary. It’s going to take more time to solidify our data.”
One of Callihan’s first findings was that through late September 2007 about 40 percent of the tagged fish had a limited home range, and they tended to stay in one localized area like one pocket or one reef.
Beyond that 40 percent, about 16 percent were what he called transient in that they didn’t stay in one place very long, and they moved widely throughout the Calcasieu system in short time scales of one week or so.
Twenty percent of tagged fish showed a definite north to south shift over the summer. Callihan said fish were pushed down from Turner’s Bay, but it couldn’t be determined at this stage of the research if that north-to-south movement was based on anything more than the 20-plus inches of rain that the lake received during this time span.
“It’s no big surprise to learn that salinity has a big role in influencing trout movement,” he said. “And the final general pattern we have seen so far is that about 20 percent of the fish moved offshore during July and August and haven’t returned.”
Callihan added that the battery life of transmitters is about one year, and he can’t wait to see if these fish come back in the spring.
Many anglers may be wondering if these percentages can be farther broken down by size. In other words, was it the small fish that were homebodies and the large fish that were transient, or could it be the other way around?
“We haven’t really looked at that level of data yet, but there is a bit of anecdotal evidence that the schooling-size fish do roam more and are more transient than the bigger fish,” he said. “But one surprise we’ve seen so far is that there is a lot of diversity of movement from one trout to the next. We’ve had over 76,000 detections, which is a lot of data to go through, but right now the tendency is for the smaller males to be more exploratory and transient.”
While he hasn’t gotten into the fine-scale information at Lake Calcasieu, Callihan said expects to validate what most proficient anglers already know about trout movement as it relates to tide. Studies in the Barataria Basin have shown that fish respond to tide and will reposition on different sides of reefs based on the direction of the water movement.
He also expects to learn more about salinity and how much it varies and affects trout movement in a given day. In general, we already know that when salinity is high or depressed for long periods of time, an episodic event can have an almost immediate effect on trout movement from either a flood of fresh water or an intrusion of salt water.
“There really haven’t been any huge surprises yet,” Callihan added. “Lake Calcasieu is a small system, and I don’t think there are any real mysteries as to where the fish like to hang out. We have some specific data that only confirms what most already know, but we would like to keep that under wraps so our research results aren’t artificially affected. All our findings will be released after the study is completed.”
Since anglers will be the primary beneficiaries of this research, Callihan asked for all anglers to help out with the research when they catch a fish with a dark yellow tag sticking out below its dorsal fin. He requested that the angler please record the tag number and date of capture along with capture location and telephone number before carefully releasing the fish back into the system.
“There are such a small percentage of tagged fish that they are all valuable to the integrity of the study,” he explained. “The tags say LSU Reward Please Release, so you can’t miss them. Don’t cut the tag off. We ask that you please release the fish and call in the information that you recorded.”
Participating anglers will receive a tagging program T-shirt and cap, and they will be entered into a lottery for cash prizes up to $500 and merchandise like GPS navigation systems. Catching a big trout isn’t a reward, though, so don’t call in on the number to try to find out where the 9-pound trout is located because they aren’t going to tell you.
“For now, we can help anglers by explaining that the trout do seem to be associated with places where structure like reefs are present,” said Cowan. “And areas that have water movement through passes or between dredge islands along the ship channel tend to accumulate fish where current functions as a bait delivery method. We’ll tell you the truth, but we can’t reveal any strategic information.”
And Cowan explained that even though the study hasn’t shown any indication of a seasonal exit of trout out of the Calcasieu system at this point, it might just be a result of the warm fall Southwest Louisiana experienced last year.
“It’s hard to tell at this point if this is typical or it only happened because we didn’t have any cold weather,” he added. “We’ll just have to wait and see what happens next year. The one thing that’s important to remember is that if the fish that do leave the lake don’t return, it’s hard to argue that the Lake Calcasieu stock is somehow genetically isolated from others. Therefore, there must be something more to why that system has so many big trout.”
Just what that is will have to be determined. The key to a successful study is to keep the anglers interested in the project, which will run for another year and a half. If Callihan and Cowan can figure out where, when and why Louisiana’s most popular saltwater fish moves, that means you can be anchored there waiting on them when they do.
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Old 12-02-2011, 05:57 PM
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LSU Uses Sophisticated Acoustic Technology to Study Fishy Behavior

Cowan Lab uses DIDSON “acoustic cameras” to learn more about fish in their natural habitats

The Cowan Fisheries Science Labs, housed in LSU’s Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, has made quite a name for itself – and for the university – by being among the first to employ unique acoustic methods to monitor fish in their natural environment.
“This equipment was developed prior to use for our purposes,” said Jim Cowan, professor of oceanography and leader of the Cowan Lab. “It was developed for military surveillance of harbors and ports. Also, the state of Alaska routinely uses it to count salmon, but we are among the first to use it for habitat and behavioral research.”
The utilization of sophisticated acoustic technology, which uses pulses of sound to form real-time, near-video quality images of objects underwater, is necessary for the advancement of fisheries science because researchers in the field start off with a heavy disadvantage – they can’t see what they’re studying.
“One of the biggest challenges in fisheries science is actually counting fish and observing behavior,” said Cowan. “Indirect estimation of stock size is a problem because we really have no accurate way to see what we’re doing. These techniques are direct and have begun to illustrate how well we are doing using indirect approaches.”
Cowan, along with post-doctoral researchers and doctoral candidates working in his lab, utilizes acoustic technology to find more specifics than researchers have ever been able to learn about fish, whales and other marine animals and their behavior in natural environments.
“How does a whale spend a typical day?” asked Kevin Boswell, post-doctoral researcher in LSU’s Department of Oceanography. “It may sound like a silly question, but until we understand what kind of pressures these animals exert on their forage base, i.e., basic predator-prey dynamics, we remain at a disadvantage in our understanding of fundamental marine life processes.”
Boswell studies fish use of estuarine and coastal habitats, integrating the development of acoustic technology. He has been working with Sound Metrics Corp.’s DIDSON, or Dual-Frequency Identification Sonar, technology to perfect the software he uses to track the effects of predation on a highly contentious herring species off the coast of Alaska.
“Using these ‘active acoustics’ provides us the opportunity to directly observe fish distribution and behavior – specifically relating to predation, and habitat use,” said Boswell. “This gives us vision where we would otherwise be blind.”
Using active acoustics gives Boswell the opportunity to actually see the activity going on beneath the water’s surface and to study predatory behavior and the response of intended prey [see accompanying visualization].
He is currently preparing for a research trip to Iceland, where he will utilize this technology to identify and track spawning aggregations of Icelandic cod. Jody Callihan, a doctoral candidate in Cowan’s Lab, studies something a little closer to home – and to the hearts of sport fishermen everywhere – spotted trout, or “specks,” in Calcasieu Lake, located in Southwestern Louisiana.
“I’m exploring how and to what extent fish use different habitat types, how they migrate seasonally and how they interact with their environment in general,” said Callihan. “The estuary is famous for large, 'trophy-sized' trout that are extremely popular with recreational fishermen.”
Callihan, with generous support from the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, or LDWF, has been able to tag 172 fish with acoustic transmitters, or “pingers,” over the past two years. He and Cowan have placed approximately 60 receivers throughout the estuary to listen for tagged fish. When a tagged fish pings while within a few hundred yards of a receiver, the instrument will record the date and time of the ping and also mark the identity of the individual fish. Some tags with special sensors go a step farther and record the water temperature and depth at which the fish was swimming.
“We can’t begin to express our gratitude to the folks at Wildlife and Fisheries,” said Cowan. “There’s no way we could be as thorough in our research as we have been without their support, both financially and through the assistance of their staff and volunteers.”
“We also are greatly appreciative of the volunteer efforts of local anglers from the Lake Charles Coastal Conservation Association, or CCA, chapter, who caught all the fish used in the study,” said Callihan. “I believe this study is a fine example of how collaborative efforts among the user group of the resource, or fishermen, governmental agencies in charge of managing the fishery, like LDWF, and academia, such as LSU-based researchers like our team, can glean important scientific information that can ultimately be used to promote the sustainable use of an important fishery resource.”
The acoustic telemetry data they are gathering has begun to answer some of the mysteries surrounding these spotted seatrout. Prior to employing this technology, it was extremely difficult to gather data on individual fish behavior, movements and habitat use throughout time and space. The integration of a newly available software package, Eonfusion, delivers the ability to project the acoustic and environmental data at unprecedented resolutions to include multiple dimensions.
“Using this technique and integrating the telemetry data with habitat and environmental information in Eonfusion, we’ve been able to determine some very interesting trends in tagged fish,” said Callihan. “For instance, we now know that not all fish stay in the estuary; some leave for the Gulf. Also, there appears to be a difference in salinity preferences for male and female trout, which could affect their accessibility and vulnerability to the fishery.”
This advancement in technology provides Cowan, Boswell and Callihan – and other researchers with whom they collaborate – the opportunity to study aspects of marine life that have only been guessed at previously.
“Until we more fully understand how fish interact with their natural habitat, we can’t really manage or predict the impact of big issues like global climate change or restoration efforts on fisheries resources,” said Cowan.
Eventually, the DIDSON data will be used for behavioral modeling, and is expected to corroborate data captured from the acoustic telemetry projects. “The acoustic work we’re doing will take us a long way toward solving the gap between practice and theory,” said Cowan. And it’s a win-win situation for the company, since Boswell continues to work with them, pushing the envelope of possibilities for its use and incorporating the data at various temporal and spatial scales.
“We can now see how fish interact with each other and their habitat from a biological standpoint,” said Boswell. “By integrating the high-resolution acoustic data, habitat maps and environmental information into this multi-dimensional framework, we now have a way to easily visualize and interrogate seemingly disparate data.”
“We are very fortunate to stay well ahead of the curve in applying technology to fisheries science,” said Jim Cowan. “I believe we’re at the technological forefront of our field right now, due to some forward thinking and the extensive support of Louisiana’s Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.”
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  #10  
Old 12-02-2011, 06:05 PM
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There is also a 300 Page summery that Jody made...It on a PDF file and too big to upload on here.....I think you can read it at LSU Science
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Old 12-02-2011, 06:23 PM
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I went a couple of years ago, it was very interesting. You'll enjoy the slide show on tracking & movement of the specks in Big Lake.
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  #12  
Old 12-06-2011, 02:25 PM
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I'll be home for this. Let me know if you need some help Raymond.
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Old 12-06-2011, 03:37 PM
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http://www.seagrantfish.lsu.edu/reso...2011/12-11.htm
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Old 12-13-2011, 11:56 AM
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We have planned for a crowd of 25 for this event. If you are certain about attending, please post up so we can have enough Graham Crackers and Grape Juice for everyone.
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Old 12-13-2011, 12:59 PM
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I plan on it
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Old 12-13-2011, 01:18 PM
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X2
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Old 12-13-2011, 01:23 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Raymond View Post
We have planned for a crowd of 25 for this event. If you are certain about attending, please post up so we can have enough Graham Crackers and Grape Juice for everyone.
You better plan for more than that. I have talked to several anglers that will be participating. Is this an RSVP event?

Side note: I will be there.
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Old 12-13-2011, 02:46 PM
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Not an RSVP event but also do not want to run out of beverages (non-alcoholic).
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Old 12-13-2011, 03:09 PM
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Quote:
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Not an RSVP event but also do not want to run out of beverages (non-alcoholic).
Can we bring our own alcohol. Lol
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Old 12-13-2011, 03:45 PM
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Not an RSVP event but also do not want to run out of beverages (non-alcoholic).
Is there any sarcasm in there or do I need to bring my own alcohol?
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