CIRC Seminar: Alli N. Cramer

The Center for Institutional Research Computing’s February seminar, Deep Data: Modeling Sixgill Shark (Hexanchus griseus) Movement will be presented by Alli N. Cramer, School of the Environment at WSU.

This seminar series is open to all and refreshments will be available, so come join us in Spark 227.

The seminar will start @ 3:10 p.m. on Wednesday, February 21.

Abstract:

Movement is an essential question of ecology which impacts community connectivity and structure, and has implications for management. In the ocean tracking animal movements has unique challenges. For deep organisms, technological limitations require unique solutions to analyzing and obtaining data. Sixgill sharks (Hexanchus griseus) are one such organism, with very little known about their behavior – in situ sightings are rare and require submersibles. To understand their movements we must use remote methods, such as acoustic tagging, and pair those data with environmental information. Here, we present the first steps at such a project, pairing location data with the temporally varying environmental variables of temperature and salinity. Our results establish that acoustic technologies can extend analytical approaches common to terrestrial systems to the management and conservation of marine organisms.

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