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https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1986)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1987)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1988)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1989)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1990)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1991)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1992)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1993)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1994)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1995)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1996)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1997)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1998)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_1999)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_2000)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_2001)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_2002)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_2003)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_2004)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_2005)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_2006)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2006
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007/ CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at http://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Louisiana_2007)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number)\nFKEY (File identifier (date.station_code.station))\nstation_Code\ngear_Code\n... (46 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2007
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1982, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1982
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1983, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1983
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1984, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1984
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1985, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1985
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1986, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1986
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1987, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1987
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1988, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1988
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1989, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1989
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1990, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1990
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1991, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1991
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1992, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1992
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1993, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1993
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1994, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1994
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1995, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1995
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1996, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1996
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1997, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1997
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1998, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1998
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_1999, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_1999
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_2000, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2000
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_2001, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2001
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_2002, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2002
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_2003, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2003
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_2004, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2004
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005/ CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005 Estuaries are important in supporting much of the fishery production in the Gulf of Mexico, but this support appears to vary widely among different estuarine systems. The main objective of this project was to assess variability among estuaries in supporting fishery species and other abundant nekton. The project is part of a larger effort of the National Marine Fisheries Service Galveston Laboratory to develop a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES). The nekton abundance data summarized in this report are available at https://data.gcoos.org. This cooperative study with state natural resources agencies was designed to use fishery independent monitoring data and compare historical catches from 4.9-m and 6.1-m trawl surveys. This report provides an assessment of the abundance, length frequencies, and biomass of 14 species of fish and four species of decapod crustaceans that were either abundant in the samples or economically important. The most abundant species in the analysis include bay anchovy, Atlantic croaker, spot, and brown shrimp. Other fishery species of particular interest include Gulf menhaden, white shrimp, pink shrimp, blue crab, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, and red drum. While the years analyzed varied among states, samples from most estuaries were available and analyzed for the years 1986 to 2005. The 24 estuaries analyzed were identified using the Estuarine and Coastal Drainage Areas delineated by the U. S.Geological Survey and listed in NOAAs Coastal Assessment Framework\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory (CAGES_Texas_2005, Unknown)\nobservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Start depth, m)\ngeodeticDatum (Geodetic Datum)\nsample_nr (Sample number, unknown)\nFKEY (File identifier (date_station_Code_sample_nr_site_number))\nstation_Code\ngear (Gear name)\n... (43 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005&showErrors=false&email= Southeast Fisheries Science Center CAGES_Texas_CPUE_Trawl_study_DATA_2005
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021/ CREMP_Dry_Tortugas_Yearly_Revisited_DATA_v3_2021 The purpose of the Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project (CREMP) is to monitor the status and trends of selected reefs in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary(FKNMS).CREMP assessments have been conducted annually at fixed sites since 1996 and data collectedprovides information on the temporal changes in benthic cover and diversity of stony corals andassociated marine flora and fauna. The core field methods continue to be underwatervideography and timed coral species inventories. Findings presented in this report include datafrom 109 stations at 37 sites sampled from 1996 through 2008 in the Florida Keys and 1999 through 2008 in the Dry Tortugas. The report describes the annual differences (between 2007 and 2008) in the percent cover of major benthic taxa (stony corals, octocorals, sponges, and macroalgae), mean coral species richness and the incidence of stony coral conditions. Additionally, it examines the long-term trends of the major benthic taxa, five coral complex, Montastraea cavernosa, Colpophyllia natans, Siderastrea siderea, and Porites astreoides) and the clionaid sponge, Cliona delitrix.\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\nObservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsubRegionID (sub region sample identitfication)\nhabitatID (habitat identification)\nsiteCode (Code for the Site)\nsiteID (Site identifier)\nsiteName (Site Name)\nstationNumber (Station number)\naverageNumberOfPoints (Number of Points analize for sampling area, count)\ntransectLengthInMeters (Side length or transect length in meters of sampling rectangle. Area[m^2] = side length[m] x 2[m] width, m)\ntype\nlanguage\n... (39 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021/index.htmlTable https://myfwc.com/research/habitat/coral/cremp/ (external link) https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021&showErrors=false&email= Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission - Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWC-FWRI) dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022/ CREMP_Dry_Tortugas_Yearly_Revisited_DATA_v3_2022 The purpose of the Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project (CREMP) is to monitor the status and trends of selected reefs in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary(FKNMS).CREMP assessments have been conducted annually at fixed sites since 1996 and data collectedprovides information on the temporal changes in benthic cover and diversity of stony corals andassociated marine flora and fauna. The core field methods continue to be underwatervideography and timed coral species inventories. Findings presented in this report include datafrom 109 stations at 37 sites sampled from 1996 through 2008 in the Florida Keys and 1999 through 2008 in the Dry Tortugas. The report describes the annual differences (between 2007 and 2008) in the percent cover of major benthic taxa (stony corals, octocorals, sponges, and macroalgae), mean coral species richness and the incidence of stony coral conditions. Additionally, it examines the long-term trends of the major benthic taxa, five coral complex, Montastraea cavernosa, Colpophyllia natans, Siderastrea siderea, and Porites astreoides) and the clionaid sponge, Cliona delitrix.\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\nObservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsubRegionID (sub region sample identitfication)\nhabitatID (habitat identification)\nsiteCode (Code for the Site)\nsiteID (Site identifier)\nsiteName (Site Name)\nstationNumber (Station number)\naverageNumberOfPoints (Number of Points analize for sampling area, count)\ntransectLengthInMeters (Side length or transect length in meters of sampling rectangle. Area[m^2] = side length[m] x 2[m] width, m)\ntype\nlanguage\n... (39 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022/index.htmlTable https://myfwc.com/research/habitat/coral/cremp/ (external link) https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022&showErrors=false&email= Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission - Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWC-FWRI) dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021/ CREMP_Dry_Tortugas_Yearly_Revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021 The purpose of the Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project (CREMP) is to monitor the status and trends of selected reefs in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary(FKNMS).CREMP assessments have been conducted annually at fixed sites since 1996 and data collectedprovides information on the temporal changes in benthic cover and diversity of stony corals andassociated marine flora and fauna. The core field methods continue to be underwatervideography and timed coral species inventories. Findings presented in this report include datafrom 109 stations at 37 sites sampled from 1996 through 2008 in the Florida Keys and 1999 through 2008 in the Dry Tortugas. The report describes the annual differences (between 2007 and 2008) in the percent cover of major benthic taxa (stony corals, octocorals, sponges, and macroalgae), mean coral species richness and the incidence of stony coral conditions. Additionally, it examines the long-term trends of the major benthic taxa, five coral complex, Montastraea cavernosa, Colpophyllia natans, Siderastrea siderea, and Porites astreoides) and the clionaid sponge, Cliona delitrix.\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\nObservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndatasetName (Dataset Name)\neventID (Event Identification Number (Year_subRegionID_habitatID_SiteCode_siteID_station#))\nbasisOfRecord (basis Of Record)\nrecordedBy (recorded By)\noccurrenceID ((Year_subRegionID_habitatID_SiteCode_siteID_station#_scientificNameID)\norganismQuantity (Number of Organism per sample Area in Square Meters(value x 100 = percent coverage)., 0.01percent)\norganismQuantityType (Percent Coverage)\noccurrenceStatus (A statement about the presence or absence of a Taxon at a Location.)\nscientificName (Scientific Name)\nacceptedNameUsage (currently accepted Name)\nvernacularName (Common, vernacular Name)\n... (14 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu:8080/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021&showErrors=false&email= Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission - Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWC-FWRI) dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022/ CREMP_Dry_Tortugas_Yearly_Revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022 The purpose of the Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project (CREMP) is to monitor the status and trends of selected reefs in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary(FKNMS).CREMP assessments have been conducted annually at fixed sites since 1996 and data collectedprovides information on the temporal changes in benthic cover and diversity of stony corals andassociated marine flora and fauna. The core field methods continue to be underwatervideography and timed coral species inventories. Findings presented in this report include datafrom 109 stations at 37 sites sampled from 1996 through 2008 in the Florida Keys and 1999 through 2008 in the Dry Tortugas. The report describes the annual differences (between 2007 and 2008) in the percent cover of major benthic taxa (stony corals, octocorals, sponges, and macroalgae), mean coral species richness and the incidence of stony coral conditions. Additionally, it examines the long-term trends of the major benthic taxa, five coral complex, Montastraea cavernosa, Colpophyllia natans, Siderastrea siderea, and Porites astreoides) and the clionaid sponge, Cliona delitrix.\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\nObservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndatasetName (Dataset Name)\neventID (Event Identification Number (Year_subRegionID_habitatID_SiteCode_siteID_station#))\nbasisOfRecord (basis Of Record)\nrecordedBy (recorded By)\noccurrenceID ((Year_subRegionID_habitatID_SiteCode_siteID_station#_scientificNameID)\norganismQuantity (Number of Organism per sample Area in Square Meters(value x 100 = percent coverage)., 0.01percent)\norganismQuantityType (Percent Coverage)\noccurrenceStatus (A statement about the presence or absence of a Taxon at a Location.)\nscientificName (Scientific Name)\nacceptedNameUsage (currently accepted Name)\nvernacularName (Common, vernacular Name)\n... (14 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu:8080/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022&showErrors=false&email= Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission - Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWC-FWRI) dt_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021/ CREMP_Florida_Keys_Yearly_Revisited_DATA_v3_2021 The purpose of the Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project (CREMP) is to monitor the status and trends of selected reefs in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary(FKNMS).CREMP assessments have been conducted annually at fixed sites since 1996 and data collectedprovides information on the temporal changes in benthic cover and diversity of stony corals andassociated marine flora and fauna. The core field methods continue to be underwatervideography and timed coral species inventories. Findings presented in this report include datafrom 109 stations at 37 sites sampled from 1996 through 2008 in the Florida Keys and 1999 through 2008 in the Dry Tortugas. The report describes the annual differences (between 2007 and 2008) in the percent cover of major benthic taxa (stony corals, octocorals, sponges, and macroalgae), mean coral species richness and the incidence of stony coral conditions. Additionally, it examines the long-term trends of the major benthic taxa, five coral complex, Montastraea cavernosa, Colpophyllia natans, Siderastrea siderea, and Porites astreoides) and the clionaid sponge, Cliona delitrix.\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\nObservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsubRegionID (sub region sample identitfication)\nhabitatID (habitat identification)\nsiteCode (Code for the Site)\nsiteID (Site identifier)\nsiteName (Site Name)\nstationNumber (Station number)\naverageNumberOfPoints (Number of Points analize for sampling area, count)\ntransectLengthInMeters (Side length or transect length in meters of sampling rectangle. Area[m^2] = side length[m] x 2[m] width, m)\ntype\nlanguage\n... (39 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021/index.htmlTable https://myfwc.com/research/habitat/coral/cremp/ (external link) https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021&showErrors=false&email= Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission - Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWC-FWRI) fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2021
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022/ CREMP_Florida_Keys_Yearly_Revisited_DATA_v3_2022 The purpose of the Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project (CREMP) is to monitor the status and trends of selected reefs in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary(FKNMS).CREMP assessments have been conducted annually at fixed sites since 1996 and data collectedprovides information on the temporal changes in benthic cover and diversity of stony corals andassociated marine flora and fauna. The core field methods continue to be underwatervideography and timed coral species inventories. Findings presented in this report include datafrom 109 stations at 37 sites sampled from 1996 through 2008 in the Florida Keys and 1999 through 2008 in the Dry Tortugas. The report describes the annual differences (between 2007 and 2008) in the percent cover of major benthic taxa (stony corals, octocorals, sponges, and macroalgae), mean coral species richness and the incidence of stony coral conditions. Additionally, it examines the long-term trends of the major benthic taxa, five coral complex, Montastraea cavernosa, Colpophyllia natans, Siderastrea siderea, and Porites astreoides) and the clionaid sponge, Cliona delitrix.\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\nObservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ngeodeticDatum (geodetic Datum)\nsubRegionID (sub region sample identitfication)\nhabitatID (habitat identification)\nsiteCode (Code for the Site)\nsiteID (Site identifier)\nsiteName (Site Name)\nstationNumber (Station number)\naverageNumberOfPoints (Number of Points analize for sampling area, count)\ntransectLengthInMeters (Side length or transect length in meters of sampling rectangle. Area[m^2] = side length[m] x 2[m] width, m)\ntype\nlanguage\n... (39 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022/index.htmlTable https://myfwc.com/research/habitat/coral/cremp/ (external link) https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022&showErrors=false&email= Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission - Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWC-FWRI) fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_DATA_v3_2022
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021/ CREMP_Florida_Keys_Yearly_Revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021 The purpose of the Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project (CREMP) is to monitor the status and trends of selected reefs in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary(FKNMS).CREMP assessments have been conducted annually at fixed sites since 1996 and data collectedprovides information on the temporal changes in benthic cover and diversity of stony corals andassociated marine flora and fauna. The core field methods continue to be underwatervideography and timed coral species inventories. Findings presented in this report include datafrom 109 stations at 37 sites sampled from 1996 through 2008 in the Florida Keys and 1999 through 2008 in the Dry Tortugas. The report describes the annual differences (between 2007 and 2008) in the percent cover of major benthic taxa (stony corals, octocorals, sponges, and macroalgae), mean coral species richness and the incidence of stony coral conditions. Additionally, it examines the long-term trends of the major benthic taxa, five coral complex, Montastraea cavernosa, Colpophyllia natans, Siderastrea siderea, and Porites astreoides) and the clionaid sponge, Cliona delitrix.\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\nObservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndatasetName (Dataset Name)\neventID (Event Identification Number (Year_subRegionID_habitatID_SiteCode_siteID_station#))\nbasisOfRecord (basis Of Record)\nrecordedBy (recorded By)\noccurrenceID ((Year_subRegionID_habitatID_SiteCode_siteID_station#_scientificNameID)\norganismQuantity (Number of Organism per sample Area in Square Meters(value x 100 = percent coverage)., 0.01percent)\norganismQuantityType (Percent Coverage)\noccurrenceStatus (A statement about the presence or absence of a Taxon at a Location.)\nscientificName (Scientific Name)\nacceptedNameUsage (currently accepted Name)\nvernacularName (Common, vernacular Name)\n... (14 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu:8080/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021&showErrors=false&email= Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission - Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWC-FWRI) fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2021
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022.subset https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022.graph https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/files/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022/ CREMP_Florida_Keys_Yearly_Revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022 The purpose of the Coral Reef Evaluation and Monitoring Project (CREMP) is to monitor the status and trends of selected reefs in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary(FKNMS).CREMP assessments have been conducted annually at fixed sites since 1996 and data collectedprovides information on the temporal changes in benthic cover and diversity of stony corals andassociated marine flora and fauna. The core field methods continue to be underwatervideography and timed coral species inventories. Findings presented in this report include datafrom 109 stations at 37 sites sampled from 1996 through 2008 in the Florida Keys and 1999 through 2008 in the Dry Tortugas. The report describes the annual differences (between 2007 and 2008) in the percent cover of major benthic taxa (stony corals, octocorals, sponges, and macroalgae), mean coral species richness and the incidence of stony coral conditions. Additionally, it examines the long-term trends of the major benthic taxa, five coral complex, Montastraea cavernosa, Colpophyllia natans, Siderastrea siderea, and Porites astreoides) and the clionaid sponge, Cliona delitrix.\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\nObservations\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\neventDate (Event Date)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndatasetName (Dataset Name)\neventID (Event Identification Number (Year_subRegionID_habitatID_SiteCode_siteID_station#))\nbasisOfRecord (basis Of Record)\nrecordedBy (recorded By)\noccurrenceID ((Year_subRegionID_habitatID_SiteCode_siteID_station#_scientificNameID)\norganismQuantity (Number of Organism per sample Area in Square Meters(value x 100 = percent coverage)., 0.01percent)\norganismQuantityType (Percent Coverage)\noccurrenceStatus (A statement about the presence or absence of a Taxon at a Location.)\nscientificName (Scientific Name)\nacceptedNameUsage (currently accepted Name)\nvernacularName (Common, vernacular Name)\n... (14 more variables)\n https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022_fgdc.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022_iso19115.xml https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022/index.htmlTable https://gcoos4.tamu.edu:8080/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/rss/fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022.rss https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022&showErrors=false&email= Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission - Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWC-FWRI) fk_CREMP_yearly_revisited_OBIS_Occurrence_v3_2022

 
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