All Hands on Deck: Local Ecological Knowledge and Expert Volunteers Contribute to the First Delisting of a Marine Fish Species Under the Endangered Species Act

The listing of three species of rockfish ('Sebastes' spp.) under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) in 2010 motivated the development of a cooperative research program between government agencies and the local recreational fishing and SCUBA diving communities of Puget Sound (PS), WA, USA. Th...

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Main Authors: Kelly Andrews, Krista Nichols, Chris Harvey, Nick Tolimieri, Adam Obaza, Ron Garner, Danie Tonnes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2019-12-01
Series:Citizen Science: Theory and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://theoryandpractice.citizenscienceassociation.org/articles/221
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spelling doaj-f84f916d5ec04ab294c5b5a9da970cda2020-11-25T01:44:27ZengUbiquity PressCitizen Science: Theory and Practice2057-49912019-12-014110.5334/cstp.22177All Hands on Deck: Local Ecological Knowledge and Expert Volunteers Contribute to the First Delisting of a Marine Fish Species Under the Endangered Species ActKelly Andrews0Krista Nichols1Chris Harvey2Nick Tolimieri3Adam Obaza4Ron Garner5Danie Tonnes6Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationNorthwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationNorthwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationNorthwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationPaua Marine Research GroupPuget Sound AnglersWest Coast Regional Office, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationThe listing of three species of rockfish ('Sebastes' spp.) under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) in 2010 motivated the development of a cooperative research program between government agencies and the local recreational fishing and SCUBA diving communities of Puget Sound (PS), WA, USA. This program has examined rockfish life history characteristics, movement behavior, young-of-year recruitment and the population responses to fishing in PS. Of most significance has been the involvement of the recreational fishing community in testing whether the three ESA-listed rockfish populations in PS were genetically discrete from populations outside of PS. There was considerable uncertainty in the answer to this question during the original ESA listing process due to limited data on these three species in PS. We used the knowledge and expert angling skills of the fishing community to locate these rare species and non-lethally collect tissue samples for genetic analyses. Results showed that yelloweye rockfish ('S. ruberrimus') was genetically differentiated between PS and the outer coast, but the boundaries of the population were different than previously assumed. In contrast, canary rockfish ('S. pinniger') was genetically similar across PS and the outer coast. Federal managers used these results to expand the ESA-listed boundaries of yelloweye rockfish and to delist canary rockfish – the first delisting of a marine fish species from the ESA. The knowledge and angling expertise of the Puget Sound recreational fishing community were directly responsible for the successful collection of data to test hypotheses that resulted in very specific management decisions.https://theoryandpractice.citizenscienceassociation.org/articles/221rockfishadaptive managementrecreational fishingpopulation structurepuget soundcitizen science
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kelly Andrews
Krista Nichols
Chris Harvey
Nick Tolimieri
Adam Obaza
Ron Garner
Danie Tonnes
spellingShingle Kelly Andrews
Krista Nichols
Chris Harvey
Nick Tolimieri
Adam Obaza
Ron Garner
Danie Tonnes
All Hands on Deck: Local Ecological Knowledge and Expert Volunteers Contribute to the First Delisting of a Marine Fish Species Under the Endangered Species Act
Citizen Science: Theory and Practice
rockfish
adaptive management
recreational fishing
population structure
puget sound
citizen science
author_facet Kelly Andrews
Krista Nichols
Chris Harvey
Nick Tolimieri
Adam Obaza
Ron Garner
Danie Tonnes
author_sort Kelly Andrews
title All Hands on Deck: Local Ecological Knowledge and Expert Volunteers Contribute to the First Delisting of a Marine Fish Species Under the Endangered Species Act
title_short All Hands on Deck: Local Ecological Knowledge and Expert Volunteers Contribute to the First Delisting of a Marine Fish Species Under the Endangered Species Act
title_full All Hands on Deck: Local Ecological Knowledge and Expert Volunteers Contribute to the First Delisting of a Marine Fish Species Under the Endangered Species Act
title_fullStr All Hands on Deck: Local Ecological Knowledge and Expert Volunteers Contribute to the First Delisting of a Marine Fish Species Under the Endangered Species Act
title_full_unstemmed All Hands on Deck: Local Ecological Knowledge and Expert Volunteers Contribute to the First Delisting of a Marine Fish Species Under the Endangered Species Act
title_sort all hands on deck: local ecological knowledge and expert volunteers contribute to the first delisting of a marine fish species under the endangered species act
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Citizen Science: Theory and Practice
issn 2057-4991
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The listing of three species of rockfish ('Sebastes' spp.) under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) in 2010 motivated the development of a cooperative research program between government agencies and the local recreational fishing and SCUBA diving communities of Puget Sound (PS), WA, USA. This program has examined rockfish life history characteristics, movement behavior, young-of-year recruitment and the population responses to fishing in PS. Of most significance has been the involvement of the recreational fishing community in testing whether the three ESA-listed rockfish populations in PS were genetically discrete from populations outside of PS. There was considerable uncertainty in the answer to this question during the original ESA listing process due to limited data on these three species in PS. We used the knowledge and expert angling skills of the fishing community to locate these rare species and non-lethally collect tissue samples for genetic analyses. Results showed that yelloweye rockfish ('S. ruberrimus') was genetically differentiated between PS and the outer coast, but the boundaries of the population were different than previously assumed. In contrast, canary rockfish ('S. pinniger') was genetically similar across PS and the outer coast. Federal managers used these results to expand the ESA-listed boundaries of yelloweye rockfish and to delist canary rockfish – the first delisting of a marine fish species from the ESA. The knowledge and angling expertise of the Puget Sound recreational fishing community were directly responsible for the successful collection of data to test hypotheses that resulted in very specific management decisions.
topic rockfish
adaptive management
recreational fishing
population structure
puget sound
citizen science
url https://theoryandpractice.citizenscienceassociation.org/articles/221
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