CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_OBIS_Event_2006
eng
UTF8
dataset
service
Tuomo Saari
GCOOS
+1 979-845-7662
797 Lamar St, College Station, TX 77843
College Station
TX
77843
USA
tsaari@tamu.edu
pointOfContact
2024-03-28
ISO 19115-2 Geographic Information - Metadata Part 2 Extensions for Imagery and Gridded Data
ISO 19115-2:2009(E)
4
column
row
vertical
temporal
CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_OBIS_Event_2006
2022-05-12
creation
2022-05-12
issued
gcoos4.tamu.edu
CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_OBIS_Event_2006
Harmon Brown, Thomas J Minello, Ralf Riedel
harmon.brown@noaa.gov, , ralf.riedel@usm.edu
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000
information
web browser
Background Information
Background information from the source
information
originator
Jim Ditty
jim.ditty@noaa.gov
contributor
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
The authors would like to thank the field crews who collected the data and the biologists who analyzed the samples at Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, University of Southern Mississippi, Gulf Coast Research Laboratory and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. We would like to thank Phil Caldwell of the NOAA Galveston Lab for his assistance with GIS and construction of figures. We also would like to thank Michael Harden, Harry Blanchet, and Marty Bourgeois at the LDWF for their assistance with the Louisiana data. Chris Stafford and Kerry Flaherty at FFWCC provided assistance in compiling the Florida Data and Harriet Perry at FFWCC provided valuable guidance.
Harmon Brown, Thomas J Minello, Ralf Riedel
harmon.brown@noaa.gov, , ralf.riedel@usm.edu
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000
information
web browser
Background Information
Background information from the source
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Nekton from fishery-independent trawl samples in estuaries of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico: a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES).
project
time
eventdate
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CF Standard Name Table v72
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
Nekton from fishery-independent trawl samples in estuaries of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico: a Comparative Assessment of Gulf Estuarine Systems (CAGES).
largerWorkCitation
project
Unidata Common Data Model
Trajectory
largerWorkCitation
project
eng
geoscientificInformation
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2006-12-27T15:30:00Z
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CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_OBIS_Event_2006
2022-05-12
creation
2022-05-12
issued
Harmon Brown, Thomas J Minello, Ralf Riedel
harmon.brown@noaa.gov, , ralf.riedel@usm.edu
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000
information
web browser
Background Information
Background information from the source
information
originator
Jim Ditty
jim.ditty@noaa.gov
contributor
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
ERDDAP tabledap
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ERDDAP:tabledap
ERDDAP-tabledap
ERDDAP's tabledap service (a flavor of OPeNDAP) for tabular (sequence) data. Add different extensions (e.g., .html, .graph, .das, .dds) to the base URL for different purposes.
download
CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_OBIS_Event_2006
2022-05-12
creation
2022-05-12
issued
Harmon Brown, Thomas J Minello, Ralf Riedel
harmon.brown@noaa.gov, , ralf.riedel@usm.edu
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000
information
web browser
Background Information
Background information from the source
information
originator
Jim Ditty
jim.ditty@noaa.gov
contributor
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
OPeNDAP
1
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-89.24
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2006-01-03T08:07:00Z
2006-12-27T15:30:00Z
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OPeNDAPDatasetQueryAndAccess
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_OBIS_Event_2006
OPeNDAP:OPeNDAP
OPeNDAP
An OPeNDAP service for tabular (sequence) data. Add different extensions (e.g., .html, .das, .dds) to the base URL for different purposes.
download
CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_OBIS_Event_2006
2022-05-12
creation
2022-05-12
issued
Harmon Brown, Thomas J Minello, Ralf Riedel
harmon.brown@noaa.gov, , ralf.riedel@usm.edu
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000
information
web browser
Background Information
Background information from the source
information
originator
Jim Ditty
jim.ditty@noaa.gov
contributor
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
ERDDAP Subset
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ERDDAP_Subset
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_OBIS_Event_2006.subset
search
Subset
Web page to facilitate selecting subsets of the dataset
download
physicalMeasurement
trajectory
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Observations
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String
Event Date
geodeticDatum
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Country of origen of data
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Station number
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Duration of the Trawl
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Sample Size Value
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The amount of effort expended during an Event
crs
double
CRS
Tuomo Saari
GCOOS
+1 979-845-7662
797 Lamar St, College Station, TX 77843
College Station
TX
77843
USA
tsaari@tamu.edu
distributor
OPeNDAP
DAP/2.0
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_OBIS_Event_2006.html
order
Data Subset Form
ERDDAP's version of the OPeNDAP .html web page for this dataset. Specify a subset of the dataset and download the data via OPeNDAP or in many different file types.
download
https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/tabledap/CAGES_Louisiana_CPUE_Trawl_study_OBIS_Event_2006.graph
order
Make-A-Graph Form
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mapDigital
dataset
2022-05-12T17:03:57Z
This record was created from dataset metadata by ERDDAP Version 2.23