1 / 26

Ecological Sampling

Ecological Sampling. Why Do We Sample?. Determine presence and/or abundance Monitor population fluctuations Assess ‘ecological damage’ Assess quality of habitat Assess population responses. What Do We Sample?. Physical Environment Temperature, DO, pH, salinity, clarity, flow, sediment

mayda
Download Presentation

Ecological Sampling

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ecological Sampling

  2. Why Do We Sample? • Determine presence and/or abundance • Monitor population fluctuations • Assess ‘ecological damage’ • Assess quality of habitat • Assess population responses

  3. What Do We Sample? • Physical Environment • Temperature, DO, pH, salinity, clarity, flow, sediment • Biotic Environment • All living things

  4. YSI 550A DO Meter w/12' cable Physical Habitat • Temperature • Mercury thermometer • Electronic thermometer • Long-term thermometers • Dissolved Oxygen • Winkler method (titration) • DO meter (electrode) • pH • Litmus paper • pH meter (electrode) • Salinity • Salinity Meter

  5. Water Clarity • Secchi Disk • Disk is attached to a calibrated rope. The disk is lowered into the water until the white parts can no longer be seen. Secchi disk depth is then recorded and serves as the waters transparency index. The clearer the water, the greater the secchi disk depth. Secchi Disk

  6. Current Velocity (flow) • Floating-orange method. • Put an orange (or something else that floats just below the water surface) and measure the time it takes it to float across a known distance. • Odometer-type flow meter • Number of revolutions the propeller makes for a given time is calibrated to flow velocity.

  7. Sediment • Sediment size is important to many aquatic organisms. • Sieve’s are used to separate and grade sediment samples. • Percent of each size grade can be determined

  8. Water Sample • Water and plankton from various depths can be collected. • A trigger mechanism is used to close the sampler. • Sample is then brought back to the surface

  9. Small Mammals • Mouse/rat Traps • Fatal • Pit Falls • Bucket is placed in the ground • Sometimes have ‘leads’ to the buckets • Live traps • Havahart • Sherman • Spot-light Havahart trap Sherman trap

  10. Birds • Stick-under-the-box method • Bird-trap • Works like a minnow trap • Mist net • Captures birds in flight • Rocket net • Uses a propellant to throw a net over birds

  11. Terrestrial Insects • Sticky paper • flies • Baited Traps • Fire ants • Nets • butterflies • Foggers • Collect insects from tree canopies

  12. Aquatic Insects • Drift Net • Place net in flowing water • Kick Net • ‘Kick’ sediment upstream from block net and the flow will wash them into the net • Wash bucket • Serber or Hess Sampler • Stir up known area of sediment • Animals are collected by a catch net • Multi-plate Sampler • Become colonized

  13. Crawfish and Crab Traps

  14. Fish Larvae • Light Traps • Larvae are attracted to the light • Ichthyoplankton nets • Can be towed at various depths • Fish collect at the ‘cod’end

  15. Fish • Lift net • Net is placed down, and after a set amount of time it is quickly lifted • Pop-net • Similar to a lift net, but floats are attached to a framed net. • Operated by a trigger mechanism • Throw net • A net attached to a heavy frame is thrown and every thing inside is netted out Pop-net Lift net Throw net

  16. Minnow trap • Usually use bait to attract small fish • Light is used sometimes as an attractant

  17. Fish • Electrofishing • Electricity is put into the water • Fish are temporarily stunned and usually swim towards the electricity source • Usually non-fatal but may cause some damage

  18. Fish • Gill Net • Gill nets resemble tennis nets • Fish can not swim completely through the net and get caught • Gill nets are size selective (based on mesh size) Square Mesh Stretch mesh Bar mesh

  19. Fish • Trammel Net • Three panels: two large mesh on the outside and a small mesh on the inside • Fish swim through the outer mesh, pushes the small mesh through the other side and becomes entangeled

  20. Hoop nets (and other similar nets) can have bait or not. Fyke nets have leads to help guide fish to the net.

  21. Seine • Seines are nets that are pulled through shallow water to catch fish.

  22. Purse Seine • Used to encircle entire schools of fish • Usually involves a spotter plane and a second boat

  23. Trotline (longline) • A series of baited drop lines connected to a main line. Can be deployed by tying one end to the bank and tying the other end with a heavy weight.

  24. Shrimp (or fish) Trawl • Net pulled behind a boat along the bottom • Either a beam or otter boards keep the net open

  25. Tagging Individuals • Coded Wire Tags • Microwire that has a unique label • Magnetic wand detects the tag • Tag retention should be determined • T-Bar tags • Can be individually numbered • External tag • PIT tags (Passive Integrated Transponders) • Wand induces the tag to transmit, individual number is displayed

  26. Other Tagging Methods • Toe clip • Amphibian and reptile • Clip of one or more toes to identify individuals • Bird Band • Place a metal band on a bird leg • Generally has identification information

More Related