Hi-tech satellite tags which automatically 'pop-up' and float to the surface are being used for the first time to track southern bluefin tuna.

The tags will be used to track the large-scale migrations of the heavily- fished species.

The prototype tags combine satellite technology with data-logging capabilities, so that researchers can study the tuna's migration patterns without having to recapture tagged fish, according to John Gunn of CSIRO Marine Research.

"Importantly, improving our understanding of the species biology and behaviour will allow us to better estimate the probability of the population recovering," says Mr Gunn.

"After monitoring the fishes' movements and behaviour every minute for several months, the new-generation tags are designed to release from the fish, float to the surface and relay a summary of this information to a satellite," says Mr Gunn.

"In the past, we have relied on fishers, who catch tagged tuna, to return the tags to us for analysis. This has meant that only a proportion of the tags released are returned, and that a lot of data is still at sea"

Mr Gunn says that CSIRO has had tremendous support in this research, and is still receiving tags from fishers internationally. "But the new technology will allow us to retrieve information on the vast majority of tagged tuna in the future," he says.

Made and donated by Wildlife Computers Pty Ltd in Seattle, the satellite tags can record a megabyte of information.

The first tag was released earlier this month and is programmed to release from the tuna in November this year, which corresponds with the time southern bluefin tuna are known to spawn in the waters between Indonesia and north-west Australia.

"With the species at historically low levels, it is important to find out how often adults spawn," he says.

"At the moment we do not know whether individual tuna spawn every year, but with the pop-up tag technology we now have the tool to examine this critical question.

"The tags will also tell us the depths the fish swam to and the water temperatures it encountered during the four and a half months the tag was attached to the fish."

Fishing quotas for southern bluefin tuna are agreed to each year by the Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna (CCSBT), of which Australia is a member.

The goal of the Commission is to return the parent stock of the species to pre-1980 levels by the year 2020.

Australia (quota 5265 tonnes), Japan (quota 6065 tonnes) and New Zealand (quota 420 tonnes) all fish for southern bluefin tuna under quotas set by the Commission, based on advice from scientific assessments from the three countries.

A large part (4000 tonnes) of the global catch of SBT is by nations such as Indonesia, Taiwan and Korea that are fishing outside the quota system.

Ninety percent of the world's southern bluefin tuna is consumed in Japan where fresh sashimi fetches up to A$100/kg. Fully grown fish can reach weights of more than 200 kg.

CSIRO

Earth Observation Archives

TIMED Opens Up Near Orbit

Earth Search Profits From New Instrument

A Supermarket of EO Data

SpaceImaging Goes Airborne With Hi-Res Sensor

Proton Ready For EchoStar Launch

Landsat-7 Operational and Online

AlliedSignal Wins Commercial Operations Contract

Ocean Winds Sat Readies For Titan 2 Launch

EDO Wins Hughes GeoSat Sensor

OrbImage Debuts Online EO Catalog

SEAKR Wins Naval EO Deal

Integral Wins Command Contract

Earth Search For Cutthroat Trout

Satellites Track Bluefin Tuna

OrbView-2 Finishes Strong First Year

Earth Search Maps Federal Weeds

TRMM Data Live to the Net

Racel Tracks Moroccan Fish

PlanGraphics Signs EOSAT Distribution

Mexico Scanned At 2000 Miles A Day

EO Goes Retail

Fire Tower In Orbit

Canada Targets Quebec EO Services

Titan-II To Launch NOAA-K May 13

Earth Search Signs Up With EarthWatch

Russian Satellite Returns EO Images

Orbimage Fully Funds OrbView

Lockheed Beefs Up Remote Sensing

EUMETSAT Gets Green Light

OSC Gets Smallsat Contract

Ball Wins Fast Track ICESAT

Earth Search In Commercial Overflight

Geosat Ready For Saturday Launch

Earthwatch May Save Earlybird

Antartica Mapped In High Detail

Earlybird Calls Home At Last

OrbComm Establishes Leo Eight.

Ozone Satellite Redeployed

Orbital Wins $8M MiniStar Satellite Contract

ORBIMAGE Begins SeaStar Service

Kodak Launches EO Imaging Service

NASA Awards First Rapid Spacecraft Order

India Launches EO Satellite

OrbView-2 Sends First Test Images