Abstract.
Swordfish (Xiphias gladius) were tagged with satellite "pop-off" tags that release from the fish after a preprogrammed time, float to the sea surface, and transmit present position and archived temperature data. Swordfish were tagged on the "Charleston Bump," a topographic feature on the Blake Plateau east of South Carolina and Georgia. This feature is an important swordfishing ground and may be a spawning and nursery area. Swordfish were tagged in spring of 2000 to determine movements in relation to the Charleston Bump, and tags were programmed to pop off the fish at 30 days (n=10 tags), 60 days (n=10), and 90 days (n=9). Although four swordfish were found in the vicinity of the Charleston Bump up to 90 days after tagging, most moved considerable distances to the east and northeast and were subsequently located in association with offshore seamounts, submarine canyons of the Middle Atlantic Bight, and with thermal fronts of the northern wall of the Gulf Stream. The longest minimum (i.e., straight-line) distance tracked was 2,497 km, and maximum speed inferred from tracking was 34 km/day. Seawater temperature data archived by the tags reflected diel vertical migrations in swordfish.
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Sedberry, .G., Loefer, .J. Satellite telemetry tracking of swordfish, Xiphias gladius, off the eastern United States. Marine Biology 139, 355–360 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002270100593
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002270100593