From Ions to Ecosystems: A Novel Framework for the Biomonitoring and Management of Vulnerable and Commercial Fishes

Lead Research Organisation: University of Essex
Department Name: Life Sciences

Abstract

Aquatic ecosystems provide a variety of critical goods and services, including fisheries, energy and coastal protection. However, these fragile ecosystems are increasingly threatened by interacting stressors such as climate change, pollutants and overfishing. To protect key ecosystem services and ensure food security in an increasingly unpredictable climate, there is a pressing need to improve our understanding of fish habitat requirements and their vulnerability to different stressors. In this programme, we are using an integrated systems approach to address these knowledge gaps, providing novel solutions for the sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems in the 21st Century.
To deliver sustainable fisheries management we need to understand fish connectivity patterns across species and life stages. Our knowledge of fish movements and habitat use has been significantly enhanced by the advent of electronic archival tags, but sample sizes can be limited by high costs, and the tags are typically restricted to larger-bodied species and life stages. Accordingly, we often know very little about juvenile life stages and the nursery habitats supporting our commercial fisheries. Luckily, all animals are equipped with their own intrinsic 'sensors' that record a wealth of information about the internal and external environment as they grow. By interrogating biogeochemical tracers in incrementally-grown tissues such as fish ear stones and eye lenses, we will read their 'life stories' and gain unique insights into their past health and habitat use. These tissues often exhibit growth bands ('biochronologies'), analogous to tree rings, which allow us to look back in time to reconstruct the fish's age, growth and movement timings, providing exciting opportunities to explore latent and cumulative effects of stressors on their physiology and health. Despite clear opportunities for archival tags, chemical tracers and biochronologies to cross-validate and augment each other, they are rarely used in combination. This programme aims to demonstrate how to integrate and scale these tools to support effective ecosystem management.
This global programme involves a series of case studies that integrate emerging technologies (e.g. electronic archival tags and machine learning), novel chemical tracers and modelling to quantify and predict the movements and fitness of key fish species over a broad range of global change scenarios. We are using the North Sea as a model system to explore how integrated fish health and connectivity monitoring could enhance marine spatial planning. By pairing otolith chemistry and archival tag data from the same fish, we will determine optimal methods for reconstructing individual movement patterns using otolith tracers. To shed light on the mechanisms driving interannual variability in fisheries performance, we will develop and validate new tools for reconstructing fish health and contaminant exposure history. To reveal the critical habitats, dietary sources and fine-scale movement patterns of vulnerable salmonids we will use isotopic maps ('isoscapes') and tracers combined with novel machine learning methods. To quantify the latent and cumulative effects of hypoxia on fish size and fitness we will combine archival tag records and chemical tracers, then predict the impact of this growing environmental issue on fisheries productivity and stability. The overall synthesis of these case studies will provide new insights into fish habitat needs and their vulnerabilities to interacting stressors, improving our ability to predict fishery responses to differing global change and management scenarios. Finally, to promote multidisciplinary innovation and the integration of these emerging tools into mainstream resource management, we will establish an International Consortium dedicated to the EXploration, TRanslation and Application of Chemical records in fish Tissues (EXTRACT).

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Much of the award thus far (14 months) has been spent purchasing lab equipment, collecting samples and recruiting a team. However, I have performed research with impact and considerable amounts of outreach. Research I did on Chinook salmon behaviour and thermal tolerance was was used in a modeling exercise to try different scenarios of dam storage and written up into a Policy Brief by the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC 2022 - https://www.ppic.org/publication/storing-water-for-the-environment/). The ultimate goal was to identify better options for reservoir operations that optimise water supply as well as environmental benefits. I have also performed considerable outreach, creating an exhibit and Lightning Documentary 'Ocean Travellers' for the Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition in London (July 2022 ~7000 visitors) and First Light Festival in Lowestoft (June 2022 ~3000 visitors), as well as an educational video game 'The Maze of Misfortune' (https://www.cost.eu/action-blog-sea-unicorn/). The goal of these various activities was to grow public awareness about the perils faced by migratory animals and the importance of protecting critical habitats and corridors. In 2022-23 I organised five training schools/workshops as part of the COST Action Working Group I co-lead focused on marine connectivity (https://www.sea-unicorn.com/activities). These capacity building activities aimed to foster skills and knowledge transfer across typically siloed research fields to improve method integration and connectivity assessment and inform marine spatial planning. Finally, I am on the steering committee of the ICES/SEA-UNICORN conference 'Human Impacts on Marine Functional Connectivity' (May 2023 - https://www.ices.dk/events/symposia/ImpactsMFC/Pages/default.aspx) and co-convening the FSBI International Symposium 'Fish Habitat Ecology in a Changing Climate' (July 2023 - https://fsbi.org.uk/symposium-2023), collectively attracting around 250 delegates from more than 25 countries.
First Year Of Impact 2022
Sector Education,Environment
Impact Types Cultural,Societal,Policy & public services

 
Description PPIC
Geographic Reach North America 
Policy Influence Type Participation in a guidance/advisory committee
URL https://www.ppic.org/publication/storing-water-for-the-environment/
 
Description FSBI2023 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact In July 2023 I will run the FSBI2023 International Symposium at the University of Essex entitled Fish Habitat Ecology in a Changing Climate and an art exhibition alongside it for artists in residence to interpret the science and to create a conduit between the academics, artists and the general public. We have received almost 200 abstracts so are expecting at least 150 people to attend.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://fsbi.org.uk/symposium-2023/
 
Description Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition 2022 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact I was one of the main organisers and presenters at the 'Ocean Travellers' exhibit at the 2022 Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition where we talked about the variety of movements in the world's oceans and their importance (both to the species themselves and to humans via ecosystem services such as fisheries and carbon sequestration). We spoke to ~7k visitors ranging from the general public, school children in the daytime and policymakers/politicians and fellows of the Royal Society at the two Soiree evening events. For this exhibition I directed and starred in a 10 minute 'Lightning Documentary' (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRvxI41Onis - now viewed almost 8000 views) and designed an educational video game about the perils migratory animals face in the sea every day (https://bareknuckledev.itch.io/mazeofmisfortune). I was also interviewed on Summer Science Live (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bUrPA3E8ggY). Many of the visitors were particularly surprised by the amazing distances these animals movement and the peculiar behaviours and life history traits expressed by the smallest organisms in our exhibit (e.g. barnacles and diatoms). Many enjoyed watching the barnacles feeding, while others loved tracking the largest sharks and turtles using the Ocearch app and said that they would download the app and also the Maze of Misfortune video game after the event.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.essex.ac.uk/research-projects/ocean-travellers
 
Description SEAUNICORN 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact As part of my COST Action working group (https://www.sea-unicorn.com/working-group-1) I have helped to organise two 4-day international conferences with >100 delegates (first in Paris in 2021 and the second in Sesimbra, Portugal in 2023). I have also organised and/or taught on six training schools (Introduction to using 1 - genetics, 2- biophysical modelling, 3- biologging and 4- biogeochemical tracers to assess marine connectivity; 5- Introduction to performing systematic reviews; 6 - Introduction to mapping in R) to foster knowledge transfer and capacity building.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022,2023
URL https://www.sea-unicorn.com/training-schools