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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin Galuardi is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin Galuardi.


Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2010

Complex migration routes of Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) question current population structure paradigm

Benjamin Galuardi; Francois Royer; Walt GoletW. Golet; John LoganJ. Logan; John NeilsonJ. Neilson; Molly LutcavageM. Lutcavage

Movements of Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus, ABFT) from specific western Atlantic forage grounds are not well described, and the extent of their spawning areas is mainly surmised. In 2005 and 2006, we deployed 41 pop-up satellite archival tags (PSATs) on adult Atlantic bluefin tuna off the coast of Nova Scotia, Canada, and on Georges Bank. During the assumed spawning period, 56% of the tagged ABFT occupied a known spawning area, while 44% were located in distant oceanic regions. Assuming obligate annual spawning, these results are inconsistent with the notion of spawning site fidelity to the Gulf of Mexico. The ocean-wide migrations of adult ABFT tagged on a common forage ground suggest evidence of a metapopulation requiring more spatially explicit management than the current simple two-stock structure.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Dispersal Routes and Habitat Utilization of Juvenile Atlantic Bluefin Tuna, Thunnus thynnus, Tracked with Mini PSAT and Archival Tags

Benjamin Galuardi; Molly Lutcavage

Between 2005 and 2009, we deployed 58 miniature pop-up satellite archival tags (PSAT) and 132 implanted archival tags on juvenile Atlantic bluefin tuna (age 2–5) in the northwest Atlantic Ocean. Data returned from these efforts (n = 26 PSATs, 1 archival tag) revealed their dispersal routes, horizontal and vertical movements and habitat utilization. All of the tagged bluefin tuna remained in the northwest Atlantic for the duration observed, and in summer months exhibited core-use of coastal seas extending from Maryland to Cape Cod, MA, (USA) out to the shelf break. Their winter distributions were more spatially disaggregated, ranging south to the South Atlantic Bight, northern Bahamas and Gulf Stream. Vertical habitat patterns showed that juvenile bluefin tuna mainly occupied shallow depths (mean  = 5–12 m, sd  = 15–23.7 m) and relatively warm water masses in summer (mean  = 17.9–20.9°C, sd  = 4.2–2.6°C) and had deeper and more variable depth patterns in winter (mean  = 41–58 m, sd  = 48.9–62.2 m). Our tagging results reveal annual dispersal patterns, behavior and oceanographic associations of juvenile Atlantic bluefin tuna that were only surmised in earlier studies. Fishery independent profiling from electronic tagging also provide spatially and temporally explicit information for evaluating dispersals rates, population structure and fisheries catch patterns.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Leatherback Turtle Movements, Dive Behavior, and Habitat Characteristics in Ecoregions of the Northwest Atlantic Ocean

Kara L. Dodge; Benjamin Galuardi; Timothy J. Miller; Molly Lutcavage

Leatherback sea turtles, Dermochelys coriacea, are highly migratory predators that feed exclusively on gelatinous zooplankton, thus playing a unique role in coastal and pelagic food webs. From 2007 to 2010, we used satellite telemetry to monitor the movements and dive behavior of nine adult and eleven subadult leatherbacks captured on the Northeast USA shelf and tracked throughout the Northwest Atlantic. Leatherback movements and environmental associations varied by oceanographic region, with slow, sinuous, area-restricted search behavior and shorter, shallower dives occurring in cool (median sea surface temperature: 18.4°C), productive (median chlorophyll a: 0.80 mg m−3), shallow (median bathymetry: 57 m) shelf habitat with strong sea surface temperature gradients (median SST gradient: 0.23°C km−1) at temperate latitudes. Leatherbacks were highly aggregated in temperate shelf and slope waters during summer, early fall, and late spring and more widely dispersed in subtropical and tropical oceanic and neritic habitat during late fall, winter and early spring. We investigated the relationship of ecoregion, satellite-derived surface chlorophyll, satellite-derived sea surface temperature, SST gradient, chlorophyll gradient and bathymetry with leatherback search behavior using generalized linear mixed-effects models. The most well supported model showed that differences in leatherback search behavior were best explained by ecoregion and regional differences in bathymetry and SST. Within the Northwest Atlantic Shelves region, leatherbacks increased path sinuosity (i.e., looping movements) with increasing SST, but this relationship reversed within the Gulf Stream region. Leatherbacks increased path sinuosity with decreasing water depth in temperate and tropical shelf habitats. This relationship is consistent with increasing epipelagic gelatinous zooplankton biomass with decreasing water depth, and bathymetry may be a key feature in identifying leatherback foraging habitat in neritic regions. High-use habitat for leatherbacks in our study occurred in coastal waters of the North American eastern seaboard and eastern Caribbean, putting turtles at heightened risk from land- and ocean-based human activity.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Changes in the Distribution of Atlantic Bluefin Tuna ( Thunnus thynnus ) in the Gulf of Maine 1979-2005

Walter J. Golet; Benjamin Galuardi; Andrew B. Cooper; Molly Lutcavage

The Gulf of Maine, NW Atlantic Ocean, is a productive, seasonal foraging ground for Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus), but commercial landings of adult size classes were up to 40% below the allocated total allowable catch between 2004 to 2008 for the rod and reel, harpoon, and purse seine categories in the Gulf of Maine. Reduction in Atlantic bluefin tuna catches in the Gulf of Maine could represent a decline in spawning stock biomass, but given wide-ranging, complex migration patterns, and high energetic requirements, an alternative hypothesis is that their dispersal patterns shifted to regions with higher prey abundance or profitability, reducing availability to U.S. fishing fleets. This study fit generalized linear models to Atlantic bluefin tuna landings data collected from fishermen’s logbooks (1979-2005) as well as the distances between bluefin tuna schools and Atlantic herring ( Clupea harengus ), a primary prey species, to test alternative hypotheses for observed shifts in Atlantic bluefin tuna availability in the Gulf of Maine. For the bluefin model, landings varied by day of year, latitude and longitude. The effect of latitude differed by day of year and the effect of longitude differed by year. The distances between Atlantic bluefin tuna schools and Atlantic herring schools were significantly smaller (p<0.05) than would be expected from a randomly distributed population. A time series of average bluefin tuna school positions was positively correlated with the average number of herring captured per tow on Georges Bank in spring and autumn surveys respectively (p<0.01, r2=0.24, p<0.01, r2=0.42). Fishermen’s logbooks contributed novel spatial and temporal information towards testing these hypotheses for the bluefin tuna fishery.


Stock Identification Methods (Second Edition)#R##N#Applications in Fishery Science | 2014

Telemetry Analysis of Highly Migratory Species

Benjamin Galuardi; Chi Hin (Tim) Lam

Fish stocks and breeding populations of sea turtles and marine mammals are often classified according to geographic distribution. While telemetry data is an essential tool for determining habitat utilization and behavior, it also presents unique challenges when applied to highly migratory species. We provide an overview of geolocation techniques and applicable uses of telemetry data. The scale at which inferences may be made is related to the animal physiology, limitations of tagging technology, and assumptions and processes of geolocation techniques. We focus especially on state-space models as a link between analysis of different data types and their ability to derive behavior and utilization.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Sailfish migrations connect productive coastal areas in the West Atlantic Ocean

Chi Hin Lam; Benjamin Galuardi; Anthony Mendillo; Emily Chandler; Molly Lutcavage

Isla Mujeres, Mexico is home to one of the most well-known aggregations of sailfish. Despite its fisheries prominence, little is known about this sailfish assemblage, or its relationship to other aggregation sites in the western Atlantic. In January 2012, April 2013 and 2014, we deployed 34 popup satellite archival tags on sailfish in order to study their behavior, population connectivity and biophysical interactions. Sailfish were monitored for up to one year, and displayed (1) predominantly shelf associated activity (2) occupancy of the Yucatán Current near Isla Mujeres for up to five months and (3) subsequent dispersals from the Yucatán to productive coastal areas in the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean Sea and along the South American coast. Tagged sailfish occupied a median temperature of 26.4°C (interquartile range, IQR = 2.5 °C; range = 12.3–33.3 °C) and median depth of 4.4 m (IQR = 19 m; range = 0–452 m). Diel activity was present and individuals made distinctive descents before sunrise and sunset. Tracking missions of sufficient duration (~1 year) revealed previously undetected connectivity between western Atlantic sailfish fisheries and pelagic longline catches, and highlighted how fishery independent tagging can improve understanding of sailfish migrations and behavior for assessment and management.


Fisheries Research | 2015

Using movement data from electronic tags in fisheries stock assessment: A review of models, technology and experimental design

Tim Sippel; J. Paige Eveson; Benjamin Galuardi; Chi Lam; Simon D. Hoyle; Mark N. Maunder; Pierre Kleiber; Felipe Carvalho; Vardis Tsontos; Steven L.H. Teo; Alexandre Aires-da-Silva; Simon J. Nicol


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2015

The paradox of the pelagics: why bluefin tuna can go hungry in a sea of plenty

Walter J. Golet; Nicholas R. Record; Sigrid Lehuta; Molly Lutcavage; Benjamin Galuardi; Andrew B. Cooper; Andrew J. Pershing


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2013

Contribution of cephalopod prey to the diet of large pelagic fish predators in the central North Atlantic Ocean

John M. Logan; Rebecca Toppin; Sean Smith; Benjamin Galuardi; Julie Porter; Molly Lutcavage


Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2014

Movements and oceanographic associations of bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus) in the Northwest Atlantic

Chi Hin Lam; Benjamin Galuardi; Molly Lutcavage

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Molly Lutcavage

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Chi Hin Lam

University of Massachusetts Boston

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Kara L. Dodge

University of New Hampshire

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Walter J. Golet

University of Maine System

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Alexandre Aires-da-Silva

Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission

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Chi Hin (Tim) Lam

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Chi Lam

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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