BRUVS (TM) - Fish and Benthic survey of Inshore Shoals : Rockingham Bay 2010-05-10 to 2010-05-13

Created 24/06/2017

Updated 09/10/2017

The dataset comprises 460 individuals from 42 species of fishes, sharks, rays and sea snakes observed at 2 sites (Inshore Shoals : Rockingham Bay ) using 19 baited remote underwater video stations (BRUVS(TM)). 205 images were captured from these cameras.

Approximately 3500 of the best images from all BRUVS (TM) projects are stored in a reference library.

Data recorded concern: - classification of the habitat in the field of view (topography, sediments, benthos) - the identity of fish and CAABCODES - their time of arrival - their behaviour (8 categories, including feeding on the bait) - their maturity (adult or juvenile) - their relative abundance (as MaxN = the maximum number visible at one time, or distinguishable at different times as separate individuals e.g. much larger/smaller, male/female) - the time elapsed before MaxN and feeding occurs.

A custom interface has been developed by AIMS staff, using Microsoft Access, for reading and analysis of BRUVS(TM) tapes.

Files and APIs

Tags

Additional Info

Field Value
Title BRUVS (TM) - Fish and Benthic survey of Inshore Shoals : Rockingham Bay 2010-05-10 to 2010-05-13
Language English
Licence Other
Landing Page https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/023ec567-a690-4fed-b3f5-457effe967a5
Contact Point
Australian Institute of Marine Science
adc@aims.gov.au
Geospatial Coverage {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[146.26255, -18.162683], [146.265383, -18.162683], [146.265383, -18.16185], [146.26255, -18.16185], [146.26255, -18.162683]]]}
Data Portal data.gov.au

Data Source

This dataset was originally found on data.gov.au "BRUVS (TM) - Fish and Benthic survey of Inshore Shoals : Rockingham Bay 2010-05-10 to 2010-05-13". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/bruvs-tm-fish-and-benthic-survey-of-inshore-shoals-rockingham-bay-2010-05-10-to-2010-05-13

No duplicate datasets found.