Acoustic telemetry has been used extensively to study the behavior of aquatic animals. The Juvenile Salmon Acoustic Telemetry System (JSATS) is one such system; it was developed for studying juvenile salmonids but has been used to study numerous species. A recent innovation of the JSATS system is an injectable acoustic transmitter that is small enough to be implanted through injection instead of surgery. Use of the JSATS system involves deploying cabled acoustic receivers at hydroelectric dams and autonomous acoustic receivers in free-flowing sections of a river. The raw detections from acoustic-tagged fish are processed to remove potential false positives. The clean detections (5,147,996 total) are used to generate detection events and to compute 3-D trajectories (403,900 total), which are used to assign fish to a passage route through a dam. Controlled field testing involving a high-accuracy Global Positioning System receiver is done to validate the submeter accuracy of the trajectories. The JSATS dataset could be reused for expanding the understanding of near-dam fish behavior.
Published: September 24, 2021
Citation
Martinez J.J., T. Fu, X. Li, H. Hou, J. Wang, M.B. Eppard, and Z. Deng. 2021.A large dataset of detection and submeter-accurate 3-D trajectories of juvenile Chinook salmon.Scientific Data 8, no. 1:211.PNNL-SA-158634.doi:10.1038/s41597-021-00992-x