Fish Love Calls

When Gulf corvina, a commercially valuable fish in the Gulf of California, gather to spawn, they make sounds louder than an underwater rock concert, enough to damage your eardrums were it on land. Because corvina also are at risk of being overfished, marine scientists from the University of Texas Marine Science Institute (UTMSI) are part of a team trying to use these deafening mating calls to help protect the fish. 

Credit: Octavio Aburto-Oropeza

Credit: Octavio Aburto-Oropeza

The researchers developed an inexpensive yet accurate method for estimating how many corvina are in a spawning aggregation based on their mating calls. Accurate data on when and where fish spawn, as well as how many there are, would help fisheries managers design effective management practices, such as setting sustainable harvest levels. Monitoring wild fish populations isn’t easy, but anecdotal evidence and a trend toward smaller fish getting caught suggest overfishing poses a serious threat. 

“It can be extremely challenging to get a complete picture of fish spawning events because they can happen over very short to very long times and are often in difficult environments such as murky water,” said Brad Erisman, assistant professor at UTMSI. “Our work opens an acoustic window into these exciting spawning events.”

With calibrations, the method Erisman developed can be applied to other threatened fish around the world. 

“The idea is we try to bring all the stakeholders, different groups that have a vested interest in the fishery and the environment, together to try to work it out,” says Erisman. “It’s nice that science is playing a role in that.”

Tune in to our Point of Discovery podcast to hear Erisman describe the story behind this project.

Gulf Corvina look pretty ordinary—they’re a couple of feet long and silvery. Yet the sounds they make—when millions get together to spawn—are a kind of wonder of the natural world. It’s also why they are in danger. Gulf Corvina live in only one place in the world—the Gulf of California. A decade ago, the Mexican government asked marine biologist Brad Erisman and his colleagues to study the Corvina. They were worried that heavy fishing might cause the population to collapse. When Erisman put a microphone in the water for the first time, he was blown away by the sounds he heard. Learn More Video: Spawning Aggregations (by Natural Numbers): https://youtu.be/bpLMCyx9cic Video: Corvina Harvest, El Golfo (by Marine Ventures Foundation): https://vimeo.com/21330986 Biological and fisheries monitoring of the Gulf Corvina in the Upper Gulf of California (by dataMARES): http://datamares.ucsd.edu/eng/projects/fisheries/biological-and-fisheries-monitoring-of-the-gulf-corvina-in-the-upper-gulf-of-california/ Unmanaged Fishing at Spawning Sites Put Species, Economies at Risk (by UT Marine Science Institute): https://utmsi.utexas.edu/blog/entry/unmanaged-fishing-at-spawning-sites-put-species-economies-at-risk About Point of Discovery Point of Discovery is a production of the University of Texas at Austin's College of Natural Sciences. You can listen to all our episodes at @point-of-discovery . You can also subscribe via iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/point-of-discovery-podcast/id1036884430?mt=2 or via our RSS feed: http://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:150441582/sounds.rss or via Stitcher: www.stitcher.com/podcast/point-of-discovery or via Google Play: https://play.google.com/music/m/Igc5ifenl2bn7e5n2klmrwah7qq?t=Point_of_Discovery Questions or comments about this episode, or our series in general? Email Marc Airhart at mairhart[AT]austin.utexas.edu