Welcome To Tampa!

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With the AFS 2017 mobile app, you can:

• Stay organized with up-to-the-minute Exhibitor, Speaker, and Event information • Sync the app across all of your devices with Multi-Device Sync • Receive important real-time communications from AFS • Build a personalized schedule and bookmark exhibitors • Take notes and download event handouts and presentations • Share your event photos and experiences with the Photo Gallery • Locate sessions and exhibitors on the host venue maps • Find attendees and connect with your colleagues through Friends • Stay in-the-know and join in on social media with #AFS147 • And much, much more!

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Once you have downloaded and opened the app, choose AFS Annual Meeting 2017 and tap Download. If you already have the AFS Annual Meetings app on your device, tap “Exit to show list” from the Dashboard. Choose AFS Annual Meeting 2017 then tap download. Once downloaded, you will not need Internet service to access the app.

Platform Compatibility: Android v4x+ and iOS v7x+

Should you have any questions, please contact [email protected] Table of Contents

Welcome to Tampa 2017...... 4 AFS 2017 Team...... 7 Getting Started...... 8 Registration...... 8 Information Booth...... 8 Internet Access...... 8 Instructions for Presenters and Moderators...... 9 Transportation around Tampa...... 9 Childcare...... 9 Maps...... 10 Marriott Waterside...... 10 ...... 11 Exhibit/Tradeshow Map...... 13 Maps...... 14 Schedule at a Glance...... 16 Continuing Education & Workshops...... 23 Plenary Sessions...... 26 2017 Awards...... 28 Events...... 32 Welcome Networking Event ...... 32 Tradeshow and Poster Networking Event...... 32 Grand Networking Event...... 32 Business Meeting...... 33 Student Activities...... 33 Student Networking Event...... 34 Spawning Run and Carcass Crawl...... 34 Silent Auction...... 34 Local Attractions...... 35 Tradeshow...... 36 Symposia and Contributed Paper Sessions List...... 50 Schedule of Oral Presentations...... 64 Monday, August 21...... 64 Tuesday, August 22...... 76 Wednesday, August 23...... 88 Thursday, August 24...... 100 Poster List...... 112 Welcome to Tampa 2017!

On behalf of the 2017 AFS Meeting Planning Committee, we extend a warm welcome to the participants of the 147th Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society—WELCOME TO TAMPA!!! We have been planning for this meeting for over four years and have put a lot of heart into it. We expect that everyone attending will have a great time, learn new things, network with colleagues, reconnect with old friends, and have an overall fantastic experience.

The last time that hosted the Annual AFS Meeting was in 1995, and things have changed quite a bit since then. Besides the significant advances in technology, the area around the Tampa Convention Center has grown with the addition of new hotels, restaurants, museums, parks, and stores. One thing that hasn’t changed is the amount of preparation involved and the anticipated quality of the meeting. We have a lineup of 74 symposia, over 200 posters, more than 1,100 presentations, a Student Networking Event at the Lowry Park Zoo, and a Grand Networking Event at the . Our Tradeshow will have at least 90 full booths with vendors and agency representatives ready to meet you and discuss what they have to offer. We have also scheduled a cooking demonstration and tasting session at the Tradeshow on Tuesday, which will include some of Florida’s invasive, native, and farm-raised species.

While you are here, we encourage you to take advantage of all the opportunities that the Sunshine State has to offer, including our beautiful beaches and the best fishing opportunities you can find. After all, Florida is the Fishing Capital of the World! Also, don’t forget about the solar eclipse that will occur on Monday, August 21st. The peak time for our area is 2:49 pm, when 85% of the sun will be hidden from view. As a convenience, our Program Committee scheduled a break during this rare celestial event.

We know that you will have an excellent experience, and if you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please connect with one of our Local Planning Committee members!

Kerry Flaherty-Walia and Travis Tuten 2017 AFS Meeting General Co-chairs 4 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Florida Chapter Welcome

Welcome AFS members to the 147th Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society in Tampa, Florida. The Florida Chapter has done a great job collaborating with the parent society to plan what should be an out- standing meeting. This meeting provides an opportunity to meet new people, rekindle old friendships, and exchange information in the field of fisheries science.

This meeting features numerous opportunities to network and collaborate with fellow colleagues. With 74 symposia and more than 1,100 presentations, there promises to be something to learn for everyone. We also have an exciting line-up of daytime workshops and nightly social events. The Silent Auction/Raffle is sure to draw a lot of attention with an estimated $20,000 in raffle items and vacation getaways up for grabs. The AFS Business meeting is scheduled from 3:30 PM – 5:30 PM on August 23rd. Be sure to check the schedule for the date, time, and location of all other events.

On behalf of the Florida Chapter of the American Fisheries Society, welcome to Tampa and enjoy the meet- ing!

Andy Strickland Florida AFS Chapter President

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 5 AFS President’s Welcome

Welcome to the 147th Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society in Tampa. All members of the arrangements and program committees have done a fantastic job in putting this meeting together. I hope you will join me in thanking each of them personally as you see them around the various venues. They have made a huge contribution in energy and time to make this meeting a great event.

I attended my first AFS meeting in New York City in 1970, which happened to be the society’s 100th anniver- sary. I went to a few meetings in the 1970s, but I haven’t missed a meeting since 1979. Simple math says that this is my 37th annual meeting in a row. I can tell you from personal experience that, while the presentations are excellent, it is the opportunity to create and maintain a personal network of professional fisheries biolo- gists that is the most lasting and important thing that you will do here in Tampa. I hope you enjoy and make the most of this opportunity just as much as I have enjoyed each and every one of the AFS meetings I have attended over the years.

Joe Margraf American Fisheries Society President

6 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting AFS 2017 Team

AFS President Josh Patterson SDAFS REPRESENTATIVES Joe Margraf David Gandy Wes Porak (President) General Meeting Co-Chairs Dave Coughlin (Past-President) Kerry Flaherty-Walia AUDIOVISUAL AIDS Travis Tuten Chris Bradshaw (Chair) PRINTED PROGRAM PROGRAM Kurt West (Staff) CHILD CARE Eric Nagid (Co-Chair) Mike Allen (Co-Chair) Chelsey Crandall (Chair) TRADESHOW Jeff Hill (Symposia Chair) Deb Murie (Poster Co-Chair) PUBLICITY & MEDIA Shawn Johnston (Staff) Huiping Yang (Poster Co-Chair) RELATIONS Mendy Allen Kim Bonvechio (Chair) AFS Staff Kelly Richmond Douglas Austen (Executive Director) Jessica Pernell REGISTRATION Beth Beard Jeff Holland Linda Lombardi (Chair) Thomas Bigford Gus Holzer Quenton Tuckett Daniel Cassidy Bradley Walker Jynessa Dutka-Gianelli Katrina Dunn Michelle Kerr Alexis Trotter Juanita Flick Sarah Harrison PRINTING Laura Hendee ACCOMMODATIONS & EVENTS Mohammed Hossain Daryl Parkin (Co-Chair) Beverly Sauls (Co-Chair) Shawn Johnston Geoff Smith (Co-Chair) Bill Pouder (Co-Chair) Debby Lehman Cheree Steward Aaron Lerner Angela Collins WEBSITE Jackie Machado Jonathan Freedman Hae Kim (Co-Chair) Lauren Maza Bob Heagey Eric Sawyers (Co-Chair) Eva Przygodzki Paul Zajicek Beth Beard (Staff) Jasmine Sewell Denise Spencer Kurt West BUDGET & FINANCE SPAWNING RUN Howard Williams Kevin Johnson (Chair) Mandy Tyler-Jedlund (Co-chair) Jo-Anne Williams Dave Kerstetter (Co-chair) Martha Wilson FUNDRAISING Elise Irwin Drue Winters Ethan Barbin (Meetings Intern) Kathy Guindon (Chair) Marcos Holland (Meetings Intern) Rich McBride RAFFLE & SILENT AUCTION Wesley Muys (Policy Intern) Brad Fontaine Andy Strickland (Co-Chair) Hannah Wolfahrt (Comms Intern) Jessica Feltz Alan Collins (Co-Chair) Nick Trippel Amanda Croteau Natalie Simon STUDENT ACTIVITIES Allison Durland Donahou Ross Boucek (Co-Chair) Keith Mille John Hargrove (Co-Chair)

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 7 Getting Started REGISTRATION

Registration kiosks will be located at the 2nd Floor Foyer of the from Saturday through Sunday and at the 2nd Floor West Hall Foyer of the Tampa Convention Center Monday through Thursday. Hours for registration are:

Saturday, August 19 12:00 PM – 6:00 PM (Tampa Marriott Waterside)

Sunday, August 20 10:00 AM – 4:30 PM* (Tampa Marriott Waterside)

Monday, August 21 7:00 AM – 6:00 PM (Tampa Convention Center)

Tuesday, August 22 7:00 AM – 6:00 PM (Tampa Convention Center)

Wednesday, August 23 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM (Tampa Convention Center)

Thursday, August 24 7:30 AM – 12:00 PM (Tampa Convention Center)

Registration participants are required to wear their badges for all conference events. If you lose your badge, please return to Registration to receive a new one. *Note: For participants arriving after 4:30pm on Sunday, August 20, check-in will be available during the Welcome Networking Event at the Marriott Grand Ballroom.

INFORMATION BOOTH

If you have questions about the meeting, or Tampa in general, the Information Booth is a great source. The Information Booth will be located near the Registration Desk at the Tampa Marriott Waterside on Saturday and Sunday, and next to the Registration Desk in front of West Hall at the Convention Center from Monday to Thursday. The Tampa Visitors Bureau and Convention Center will also have an information booth at the Convention Center for additional help.

INTERNET ACCESS

Internet Access is available free of charge in the common area of the Convention Center, in front of West Hall on the 2nd floor. Internet access in the Tradeshow will only be available from the laptops provided at the Cyber Cafe.

AFS has contracted with the Conference Exchange (CONFEX) for program and scheduling support. CONFEX provides and maintains a complete searchable program listing on the meeting website (https://afs.confex.com/ afs/2017/meetingapp.cgi/Home/0). Because of the size of the program, and in an effort to minimize our envi- ronmental impact, only the scheduling information is provided in this program guide. Abstracts for all oral presentations and posters and the full list of authors are included online as well as on the AFS Annual Meetings mobile app. The Program Committee will update the program listing throughout the meeting as changes occur. 8 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Our attendees can also use the AFS Annual Meetings mobile app by Core-apps to view and schedule all other meeting activities on their laptops, tablets, or Apple and Android mobile phones. From the mobile app you can browse and select the workshops, meetings, and events that you plan to attend. The AFS Annual Meetings mobile app can be downloaded to your phone from Google Play or the Apple Store; simply search for “AFS Annual Meetings” to find the app. Once downloaded, you will not need Internet service to access the app. Please refer to the page opposite the Table of Contents for more details.

INSTRUCTIONS FOR PRESENTERS AND MODERATORS

The AV Loading Room is located in Room 1 of the Convention Center. Presenters should be aware that talks are to last 15 minutes, with the remaining 5 minutes allocated to questions and for room changes (total of 20 minutes).

Moderators are responsible for ensuring that talks start and end on time. Detailed instructions for modera- tors will be posted on each podium.

Computers and projectors are provided in each presentation room. Each room is equipped with a podium, LCD Projector (1024x768), Laptop with pre-loaded oral presentation files, Projection Screen, Laser Pointer, Podium Microphone, and PCDI for Computer Audio. Information about room size can be found on the Tampa Convention Center website: https://www.tampaconventioncenter.com/includes/content/docs/media/ Room-Specifications-FY-2015.pdf

Presentations are saved on computers that are set up in each presentation room in the early morning and re- main the entire day there: this means all presentations must be loaded no later than the day before your talk. You cannot use your personal computer for presentations.

TRANSPORTATION AROUND TAMPA

Tampa provides a variety of transportation options for getting in and around the city, including “The Downtowner”—a free-of-charge, five-passenger electric vehicle servicing downtown Tampa. For more infor- mation about transportation options: https://afsannualmeeting.fisheries.org/ground-transportation/.

CHILDCARE

Childcare is offered onsite at the Convention Center fromMonday, August 21 through Thursday, August 24 from 7:30 AM – 5:30 PM. Additionally, Childcare will be open during the Grand Networking Event on the night of Wednesday, August 23rd from 6:00 PM – 10:45 PM.

Childcare is located in Rooms 37 & 38 on the 4th floor of the Tampa Convention Center. A Mothering Room is also available in Room 36 on the 4th floor of the Tampa Convention Center.

For more information, please contact: Chelsey Crandall, Childcare Committee Chair [email protected] American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 9 Maps Salon I Salon J Salon H Salon G loor Salon F Door Freight F Grand Ballroom Grand Ballroom Foyer Salon E rd Salon A Salon B Salon C Salon D & 3 Office Banquet Terrace Salon Meeting Lobby Room 13 nd Meeting Room 12 Terrace Men Men Women Down Up UPS Store Meeting Room 11 , 2 Room Board Room Board Greco Bayshore THIRD FLOOR Women Elevators Elevators Conference Conference FLOOR SECOND Meeting Room 10 Room 9 Meeting FIRST FIRST FLOOR FLOOR (below) (below) Lobby Bridge

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# Route & Stops 46 MON-THU NOON - 10 PM FRI & SAT 11 AM - 1:30 AM SUN NOON - 8 PM Hillsborough Area Regional Transit Authority Service every 20 - 30 minutes www.goHART.org Marion Transit Center STATIONS Connection to 27 Local and Express Routes IN-TOWNER YBOR CITY plus MegaBus and RedCoach 1 Union Station In-Towner - FREE Centennial Park Station Tampa Route 96 - Service & Stops CENTRO YBOR STATION MONDAY - FRIDAY 2 David A. Straz, Jr. Greyhound 6 AM - 8:30 AM Center fforor the Bus Lines 3:30 PM - 6 PM 3 STREETCAR SOCIETY STATION Performing Arts Service every 15 minutes Stageworks 4 CADRECHA PLAZA STATION John F. Germany Theatre 5 USF In-Towner - FREE Public Library DowntDowntownown Route 97 - Service & Stops 5 STATION Centers SATURDAY 11 AM - 7 PM YORK STREET STATION Tampa Glazer Service every 30 minutes 6 Museum Children’s 11th St. of Art Museum Tampa 12th St. CUMBERLAND AVENUE STATION Theatre Port 7 Curtis Hixon Tampa HART LOCAL SERVICE Waterfront Bay 8 STATION Park Local Route 30 University 6 Airport Service 9 HSBC STATION of Tampa Service & Stops* (Downtown to Tampa DICK GRECO PLAZA Henry B. Plant International Airport/ 10 Town ‘N Country) Transportation Center Museum CruisCruisee Terminal DOWNTOWN TAMPA 7 Local Route 8 11 Whiting Street Station Service & Stops* 11 American (Downtown to Progress Ticket Vending Machines Cumberland Victory Village/Brandon) Ave. MusMuseumeum at all stations Ship r. # D Connecting Bus e HART Route 8 buses parallel the 4 Channelsid Route Stops * Streetcar line for those exploring outside Florida 19 Amalie 8 Aquarium with close proximity the normal Streetcar operating hours. Arena to Streetcar 4 Cruise * Please refer to Route Schedules 9 Terminal For Your Convenience, Publix 19 10 Farecards Are Also Available Yacht StarShip At The Following Sales Outlets: Cruises POINTS OF INTEREST Tampa Bay Channelside History CenterCenter BaBayy Plaza Downtown TampaTampa (Shopping and Dining) Marion Street HART Marion Transit Center ConvConventionention Transit Parkway HART at City Hall CCenterenter 100 North Tampa Building - Concierge Points of Interest Bank of America Building - Concierge Cross Bay Ferry (St. PetPetersburgersburg Duckweed Urban Market to Tampa) Visitor Information Center Official Tampa Bay Visitor Center Tampa General Duckweed Urban Market Hospital Public Parking Grand Central at Kennedy Garages Ybor City HART Administrative Offices Tampa Riverwalk Ybor City Visitor Information Center

12/16 2016 - Hillsborough Area Transit Authority

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 15 Schedule at a Glance

Last updated July 14, 2017 See https://afsannualmeeting.fisheries.org/program-2/ or check the mobile meeting app for the most schedule.

CC = Tampa Convention Center MW = Tampa Marriott Waterside Numbers indicate floor level

Friday August 18

Time Event Room Location

8:00 AM 12:00 PM AFS Officers Meeting (Invitation Only) Presidential Suite (MW)

1:00 PM 5:00 PM Management Committee Meeting Meeting Room 3 (MW 2)

Saturday August 19

Time Event Room Location

7:30 AM 5:00 PM AFS Governing Board Meeting Florida Salon V-VI (MW 2)

8:00 AM 5:00 PM Continuing Education – Bayesian I: Intro to Bayesian Meeting Room 4 (MW 2) Inference Using Gibbs Sampling (BUGS) for Fish Biologists

8:00 AM 5:00 PM Continuing Education – Beginning/Intermediate Florida Salon I (MW 2) GIS for Fisheries Scientists

8:00 AM 5:00 PM Continuing Education – NEW! Facilitation Training: Meeting Room 5 (MW 2) Tips and Tools for Effective Stakeholder Engagement and Collaboration (Day 1)

8:00 AM 5:00 PM Continuing Education – New! Fish Ageing Meeting Room 6 (MW 2)

10:00 AM 5:00 PM American Institute of Fisheries Research Biologists Meeting Room 3 (MW 2)

12:00 PM 6:00 PM Registration and Information 2nd Floor Foyer (MW 2)

5:00 PM 6:00 PM AFS Governing Board Reception (Invitation Only) Florida Salon V-VI (MW 2)

16 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Sunday August 20

Time Event Room Location

8:00 AM 12:00 PM Continuing Education – Leadership at All Levels Meeting Room 6 (MW 2) in AFS (FREE)

8:00 AM 12:00 PM Continuing Education – NEW! Human Dimensions Meeting Room 2 (MW 2) Training: Survey Design and Implementation

8:00 AM 5:00 PM Continuing Education – Advanced GIS for Fisheries Florida Salon I (MW 2) Scientists

8:00 AM 5:00 PM Continuing Education – Age and Growth Analysis Meeting Room 1 (MW 2) Florida Salon I (MW)

8:00 AM 5:00 PM Continuing Education – Bayesian II: Intermediate Meeting Room 4 (MW 2) Bayesian Inference Using Gibbs Sampling (BUGS) for Fish Biologists

8:00 AM 5:00 PM Continuing Education – NEW! Facilitation Training: Meeting Room 5 (MW 2) Tips and Tools for Effective Stakeholder Engagement and Collaboration (Day 2)

8:00 AM 5:00 PM Fort DeSoto Dune Habitat Rehabilitation and Fort DeSoto Park Overview of Tampa Bay Estuary Restoration Efforts Workshop

8:30 AM 12:00 PM Through a Fish’s Eye: The 2015 NFHP Habitat Grand Salons A–B (MW 2) Assessment for Freshwater and Marine Workshop

8:30 AM 4:30 PM BioBase Workshop and Field Demo: EcoSound and Florida Salon II (MW 2) EcoSat Automated Aquatic Habitat Mapping Technologies

9:00 AM 2:00 PM American Institute of Fisheries Research Biologists Meeting Room 3 (MW 2)

10:00 AM 6:00 PM Speaker Check-in and AV Loading Room 1 (CC 1)

10:00 AM 4:30 PM Registration and Information 2nd Floor Foyer (MW 2)

12:00 PM 2:30 PM Journal Editors Luncheon (Invitation Only) Meeting Room 8 (MW 3)

12:30 PM 3:30 PM Monsters of Fish Habitat Workshop Florida Salon IV (MW 2)

1:00 PM 5:00 PM Continuing Education – NEW! Uncomfortable Meeting Room 6 (MW 2) Conversations: Addressing Unintentional Bias in the Fisheries Profession (FREE!)

1:00 PM 2:30 PM Fisheries Administration Section Meeting Florida Salon V (MW 2)

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 17 Sunday August 20

Time Event Room Location

2:00 PM 5:00 PM Working Group on Burmese Fisheries (Invitation Only) Florida Salon III (MW 2)

2:00 PM 6:00 PM Tradeshow Exhibit Move-in West Hall (CC 3)

2:30 PM 3:30 PM Fisheries Administration Section and Florida Salon V (MW 2) Fisheries Management Section Joint Meeting

3:00 PM 5:00 PM Fish Culture Section Meeting Meeting Room 11 (MW 3)

3:30 PM 5:00 PM Fisheries Management Section Meeting Florida Salon V (MW 2)

4:00 PM 6:00 PM Poster Set-up West Hall (CC 3)

4:00 PM 6:00 PM Marine Fisheries Section and Estuaries Section Meeting Room 10 (MW 3) Joint Business Meeting

5:00 PM 6:00 PM International Partner’s Reception (Invitation Only) Presidential Suite (MW)

5:00 PM 7:00 PM Education Section Meeting Florida Salon IV (MW 2)

6:00 PM 9:30 PM Welcome Networking Event Grand Ballroom (MW 2)

Monday August 21

Time Event Room Location

7:00 AM 6:00 PM Registration and Information West Hall Foyer (CC 2)

7:00 AM 6:00 PM Speaker Check-in and AV Loading Room 1 (CC 1)

7:00 AM 8:00 AM Plenary Speakers Breakfast (Invitation Only) Meeting Room 11 (MW 3)

7:30 AM 5:30 PM Childcare and Mother Rooms Open Rooms 37/38 & 36 (CC 4)

8:00 AM 10:00 AM Tradeshow Exhibit Move-in / Poster Set-up West Hall (CC 3)

8:00 AM 9:20 AM Plenary (Dr. Katsumi Tsukamoto) and The Carl R. Ballroom B&C (CC 1) Sullivan Fishery Conservation Award Presentation

9:20 AM 9:40 AM Break West Hall Foyer (CC 3)

10:00 AM 8:30 PM Tradeshow & Posters Open and Cyber Café West Hall (CC 3)

9:00 AM 6:00 PM Silent Auction and Raffle West Hall (CC 3)

18 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Monday August 21

Time Event Room Location

9:40 AM 5:00 PM Symposia and Contributed Paper Sessions Various Rooms (CC)

12:30 PM 2:30 PM Plenary Speakers & Award Recipients Luncheon Florida Salon IV (MW 2) (Invitation Only)

2:40 PM 3:00 PM Break West Hall (CC 3)

3:00 PM 4:00 PM Socioeconomics Section Meeting Meeting Room 3 (MW 2)

3:30 PM 5:30 PM AFS Journal Editorial Board Meeting Meeting Room 4 (MW 2)

4:00 PM 5:00 PM Hutton Oversight Committee Meeting Meeting Room 9 (MW 3)

5:00 PM 6:00 PM Section Meeting Meeting Room 2 (MW 2)

5:00 PM 6:00 PM Introduced Fish Section Meeting Meeting Room 10 (MW 3)

5:00 PM 7:00 PM Virginia Tech Alumni and Friends Social Room 34 (CC 4)

5:30 PM 7:00 PM Michigan State Fisheries & Wildlife Alumni Rooms 31-33 (CC 4) and Friends Social

5:30 PM 7:00 PM University of Georgia Alumni Reception Room 35 (CC 4)

6:00 PM 8:30 PM Tradeshow and Poster Networking Event West Hall (CC 3)

Tuesday August 22

Time Event Room Location

7:00 AM 6:00 PM Registration and Information West Hall Foyer (CC 2)

7:00 AM 6:00 PM Speaker Check-in and AV Loading Room 1 (CC 1)

7:30 AM 5:30 PM Childcare and Mother Rooms Open Rooms 37/38 & 36 (CC 4)

7:45 PM 9:15 AM Sea Grant Fisheries Extension Network Meeting Room 3 (MW 2)

8:00 AM 9:20 AM Plenary (Dr. Marah Hardt) and Meritorious Ballroom B&C (CC 1) Service, Excellence in Fisheries Education, 2017 Fellows, and Emmeline Moore Prize Presentations

9:20 AM 9:40 AM Break West Hall (CC 3)

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 19 Tuesday August 22

Time Event Room Location

9:00 AM 6:00 PM Tradeshow & Posters Open and Cyber Café West Hall (CC 3)

9:00 AM 6:00 PM Silent Auction and Raffle West Hall (CC 3)

9:40 AM 5:00 PM Symposia and Contributed Paper Sessions Various Rooms (CC)

10:00 AM 11:00 AM Cooking Demonstration and Tasting Opportunity West Hall (CC 3) of Florida’s Native, Non-native, and Farm Raised Seafood

11:00 AM 12:00 PM Public Panel Discussion—Stop the Invasion! Room 30B (CC 4) Innovative Lionfish Management

12:00 PM 2:00 PM Best Student Paper and Poster Judges Luncheon Meeting Room 3 (MW 2) (Invitation Only)

12:00 PM 2:00 PM World Council of Fisheries Societies Luncheon Meeting Room 4 (MW 2) (Invitation Only)

12:00 PM 1:00 PM Equal Opportunities Section Business Meeting Meeting Room 11 (MW 3)

1:00 PM 2:00 PM Student Subsection of the Education Section Meeting Florida Salon I (MW 2)

1:30 PM 3:30 PM AFS Unit Leaders Workshop (Invitation Only) Florida Salons II-III (MW 3)

2:00 PM 3:00 PM Cooking Demonstration and Tasting Opportunity West Hall (CC 3) of Florida’s Native, Non-native, and Farm Raised Seafood

2:30 PM 4:30 PM Student Mentoring Event: Making Yourself Stand Out Room 30B (CC 4) in Hyper Competitive Job Markets, Using Florida as a Case Study

2:30 PM 3:30 PM AFS Book Editorial Advisory Board Meeting Bayshore Board Rm (MW 3)

3:00 PM 3:20 PM Break West Hall (CC 3)

3:00 PM 5:00 PM Fisheries Information and Technology Section Meeting Meeting Room 10 (MW 3)

4:00 PM 6:00 PM Fisheries Editorial Reception (Invitation Only) Meeting Room 1 (MW 2)

5:00 PM 6:00 PM Fisheries Data Exchange Open Discussion Meeting Room 10 (MW 3)

5:00 PM 6:15 PM AFS Florida Chapter Business Meeting Florida Salon V (MW 2)

5:30 PM 7:00 PM Fish Habitat Section and Water Quality Section Florida Salon IV (MW 2) Joint Meeting 20 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Tuesday August 22

Time Event Room Location

5:30 PM 7:00 PM International Fisheries Section Meeting Meeting Room 9 (MW 3)

5:30 PM 7:30 PM VEMCO and HTI-VEMCO Social and Demo Terrazo II (MW 1)

6:00 PM 8:00 PM Marine Artificial Social Florida Salon VI (MW 2)

6:00 PM 9:00 PM Student Networking Event (Students Only) Lowry Park Zoo

Wednesday August 23

Time Event Room Location

6:15 AM 7:30 AM Spawning Run and Carcass Crawl Tampa Riverwalk

7:00 AM 5:00 PM Registration and Information West Hall Foyer (CC 2)

7:00 AM 5:00 PM Speaker Check-in and AV Loading Room 1 (CC 1)

7:30 AM 10:45 PM Childcare and Mother Rooms Open Rooms 37/38 & 36 (CC 4)

8:00 AM 9:20 AM Plenary (Jack Payne) and William E Ricker Resource Ballroom B&C (CC 1) Conservation Award, President’s Fishery Conservation Awards (Member and Non-Member), and Award of Excellence Presentations

9:20 AM 9:40 AM Break West Hall (CC 3)

9:00 AM 2:00 PM Tradeshow & Posters Open and Cyber Café West Hall (CC 3)

9:00 AM 10:00 AM Silent Auction and Raffle West Hall (CC 3)

9:40 AM 5:00 PM Symposia and Contributed Paper Sessions Various Rooms (CC)

12:00 PM 2:00 PM AFS Past-Presidents Luncheon (Invitation Only) Meeting Room 4 (MW 2)

3:00 PM 3:20 PM Break West Hall Foyer (CC 3)

2:00 PM 4:00 PM Tradeshow and Poster Takedown West Hall (CC 3)

2:45 PM 3:30 PM Science and Communication Section Meeting Meeting Room 9 (MW 3)

3:30 PM 5:30 PM AFS Business Meeting Ballroom B&C (CC 1)

6:15 PM 10:15 PM The Grand Networking Event The Florida Aquarium

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 21 Thursday August 24

Time Event Room Location

7:00 AM 8:30 AM Incoming AFS Governing Board Breakfast Meeting Room 4 (CC 2) (Invitation Only)

7:30 AM 12:00 PM Registration and Information West Hall Foyer (CC 2)

7:30 AM 12:00 PM Speaker Check-in and AV Loading Room 1 (CC 1)

7:30 AM 5:30 PM Childcare and Mother Rooms Open Rooms 37/38 & 36 (CC 4)

8:00 AM 5:00 PM Symposia and Contributed Paper Sessions Various Rooms (CC)

9:20 AM 9:40 AM Break West Hall Foyer (CC 3)

12:00 PM 2:00 PM Tampa—Atlantic City Hand-off Luncheon Jackson’s (Westin) (Invitation Only)

3:00 PM 3:20 PM Break West Hall Foyer (CC 3)

22 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Continuing Education & Workshops

More complete details about each course are available online at: https://afsannualmeeting.fisheries.org/continuing-education-workshops/.

Continuing Education Courses

Saturday, August 19, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Bayesian I: Intro to Bayesian Inference Using Gibbs Sampling (BUGS) for Fish Biologists Instructors: Benjamin Staton, Auburn University; Matthew Catalano, Auburn University

This course will meet a growing need among fisheries biologists and researchers to apply Bayesian statistical methods to analyze fisheries data. A brief overview of Bayesian statistics will be provided, but the course will focus on practical applica- tion of the BUGS language for Bayesian inference using basic fisheries sampling data.

Beginning/Intermediate GIS for Fisheries Scientists Instructors: Michael Moore, University of Missouri; Kayla Key, University of Missouri; Jodi Whittier, University of Missouri

This course will provide an overview of beginning/intermediate GIS skills for fisheries biologist using ArcGIS, including use of existing data, creating your own data, and review of fundamental concepts for GIS.

NEW! Facilitation Training: Tips and Tools for Effective Stakeholder Engagement and Collaboration – DAY 1 Instructors: Chelsea Crandall, Ph.D., University of Florida; Jynessa Dutka-Gianelli, Ph.D., University of Florida; Joy Hazell, University of Florida

This interactive workshop will help you understand the differences between providing content expertise and facilitating groups to reach sustainable decisions. The training will consist of a mixture of presentations, group brainstorming activities, and interactive group exercises designed to give participants experience in using the tools provided.

NEW! Fish Ageing Instructor: Jessica Carroll, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission

Attendees will learn the basics on how and why we age fish. This course will also cover why ageing fish is important to fish- eries; sampling design considerations to reduce bias, how to estimate age structure, growth rates, and mortality rates; and the use of age structured models to inform management decisions.

Sunday, August 20, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Advanced GIS for Fisheries Scientists Instructors: Michael Moore, University of Missouri; Kayla Key, University of Missouri, Jodi Whittier, University of Missouri

This course is intended to meet the continued need of fisheries professionals to integrate spatial assessments into their re- search and management objectives. American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 23 Age and Growth Analysis with R Instructor: Travis Brenden, Michigan State University

This one-day course for fisheries professionals interested in expanding their R skills to include analysis of age and growth data. Participants should be familiar with the fundamentals of R, including basic applications.

Bayesian II: Intermediate Bayesian Inference Using Gibbs Sampling (BUGS) for Fish Biologists Instructors: Benjamin Staton, Auburn University; Matthew Catalano, Auburn University

NEW! Facilitation Training: Tips and Tools for Effective Stakeholder Engagement and Collaboration – DAY 2 Instructors: Chelsea Crandall, Ph.D., University of Florida; Jynessa Dutka-Gianelli, Ph.D., University of Florida; Joy Hazell, University of Florida

Sunday, August 20, 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM

NEW! Human Dimensions Training: Survey Design and Implementation Instructors: Nia Morales, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission; Jessica Feltz, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission

This workshop will provide attendees with an understanding of the process of survey design and implementation. Among other things, attendees will learn how to identify and reach their target population, how to construct effective survey ques- tions, and how to analyze and present survey results to different audiences. Attendees will also have the chance to work through examples of effective and poor surveys as well as to design their own mock survey.

Leadership at All Levels in AFS – FREE! Instructor: Steve McMullin, McMullin Training and Consulting, LLC

This workshop is designed for new and emerging leaders in AFS. It addresses the need for new and emerging leaders to bet- ter understand how AFS functions, the roles of Unit leaders in AFS, and how to be an effective leader in an all-volunteer organization such as AFS.

Sunday, August 20, 1:00 PM – 5:00 PM

NEW! Uncomfortable Conversations: Addressing Unintentional Bias in the Fisheries Profession – FREE!

The Equal Opportunities Section of AFS is providing a workshop to identify, understand, and create tools to address un- intentional bias within AFS and the fisheries profession at-large. Unintentional bias can be defined as the “unconscious mental models we all have about social groups (i.e., favorable or unfavorable attitudes or stereotypes) that affect our uncon- scious assessment of others.” Understandably, tackling issues related to gender, race, age, culture, and sexual orientation can be uncomfortable conversations to navigate and tend to be avoided. However, for AFS to meaningfully address this issue, these are the uncomfortable conversations that we need to have.

24 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Workshops

Fort DeSoto Dune Habitat Rehabilitation and Overview of Tampa Bay Estuary Restoration Efforts Sunday, August 20, 7:00 AM – 1:00 PM

This workshop will offer participants a hands-on experience in bay habitat restoration efforts through a sea-oat beach planting rehabilitation project at Fort DeSoto Park in Pinellas County, FL. As part of the workshop, participants will learn about other volunteer restoration efforts in Tampa Bay, their effects on the Bay’s overall ecosystem recovery, and the impor- tance of the Ft. DeSoto Park and surrounding habitats to ecologically and economically-important fish and wildlife species of the Tampa Bay estuary.

Transportation will be provided from the Tampa Marriott Waterside to Fort DeSoto Park. Attendees should meet at the hotel lobby at 7:00 AM for departure to the park.

Details: https://afsannualmeeting.fisheries.org/continuing-education-workshops/

BioBase Workshop and Field Demo: EcoSound and EcoSat Automated Aquatic Habitat Mapping Technologies Sponsored by: C-MAP Inc. Sunday, August 20, 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM

Come learn about how fisheries resource managers and researchers across the US and abroad are using off-the-shelf and GPS technology along with automated, cloud-based data processing to map depth, aquatic vegetation and bottom hardness in waterbodies (EcoSound). Next, we’ll discuss new cloud technologies for automated processing of high resolu- tion satellite imagery for the detection of riparian, wetland, coastal and floating leaf vegetation (EcoSat). Together, these products form the BioBase Cloud Platform.

Details: https://afsannualmeeting.fisheries.org/biobase-workshop-and-field-demo/

Through a Fish’s Eye: The 2015 NFHP Habitat Assessment for Freshwater and Marine Sunday, August 20, 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM

The 2015 NFHP Fish Habitat Assessment Report summarizes the results of a continuing unprecedented nationwide assess- ment of human effects on fish habitat in the rivers and estuaries of the and provides a basis for comparing fish habitat condition on a national scale. This workshop will provide an overview of the assessment and how it can be used as a diagnostic tool when considering aquatic habitat condition and conservation strategy planning.

Details: https://afsannualmeeting.fisheries.org/through-a-fishs-eye-nfhp-habitat-assessment-workshop/

Monsters of Fish Habitat Science Workshop Sunday, August 20, 12:30 PM – 3:30 PM

The “Monsters of Fish Habitat Science” workshop will bring together top scientists from around the country for an af- ternoon of mayhem, mirth, and majorly informative presentations on different aspects of fish habitat science. The eight Monsters will provide fascinating and fun mini-lectures on critical fish habitat science topics. This event–organized by the AFS Fish Habitat, Estuaries, and Marine Fisheries Sections–will benefit student travel awards for the AFS Annual Meeting.

Details: https://afsannualmeeting.fisheries.org/monsters-of-fish-habitat-workshop/

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 25 Plenary Sessions

Convention Center Ballroom B&C 8:00 AM – 9:20 AM

Monday August 21

8:00 Opening remarks 8:05 Welcome and Introductions – Joe Margraf, AFS President; Bob Buckhorn, Mayor of Tampa; Nick Wiley, Executive Director of Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission 8:30 Contributions of Fisheries Science to Society: The Example of Eel Research for Sustainable Use and Conservation Katsumi Tsukamoto 9:00 Carl R. Sullivan Fishery Conservation Award presentation 9:10 Carl R. Sullivan Fishery Conservation Award recipient comments 9:20 Close session and Break

Tuesday August 22

8:00 Opening remarks 8:10 Sex in the Sea: Turning Science into Stories that Make a Difference Marah Hardt 8:40 Awards presentations Meritorious Service Award Excellence in Fisheries Education Award 2017 AFS Fellows 9:00 Emmeline Moore Prize presentation 9:10 Emmeline Moore Prize recipient comments 9:20 Close Session and Break

Wednesday August 23

8:00 Opening remarks 8:10 Stand Up for Science: Sticking to Evidence over Activism, Misinformation, and Death Threats Jack Payne 8:40 Awards presentations William E. Ricker Resource Conservation Award President’s Fishery Conservation Award – Member Category President’s Fishery Conservation Award – Non Member Category 9:00 Award of Excellence presentation 9:10 Award of Excellence recipient comments 9:20 Close Session and Break

26 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Plenary Speakers

Katsumi Tsukamoto President of the Japanese Society of Fisheries Science; Professor at Department of Marine Science and Resources, College of Bioresource Sciences, Nihon University Contributions of Fisheries Science to Society: The Example of Eel Research for Sustainable Use and Conservation Katsumi Tsukamoto has contributed to the field of fish migration through his 40-year career of wide-ranging research on diadromous fishes (ayu, salmon, eels) that migrate between the sea and freshwater. He led his research team to collect freshwater eel eggs in the ocean for the first time in the world and discovered the spawning area of the Japanese eel in the western Pa- cific, which was highly publicized in Japan. Another contribution of his research activities in recent years is the promo- tion of eel conservation and sustainable use of eel resources by writing general books, facilitating TV documentaries, giving media interviews, and educating school children. His hope is to increase the number of adult eels migrating back to their spawning area in the future by enlightening the public about eel life history and evoking a societal sentiment to protect eels and their habitats. In his plenary talk, he presents his unique example of how fisheries science can contrib- ute to society by showing actual examples of eel research that may improve understanding eels, resource management plans, aquaculture techniques, and public awareness of eel conservation.

Marah Hardt Founder of OceanInk; Research, Writing, and Creative Consultant Sex in the Sea: Turning Science into Stories that Make a Difference A scientist and storyteller, Marah Hardt, Ph.D. works at the crossroads of research, sci- ence communication, and strategy to tackle the ocean’s thorniest challenges. Currently research director at Future of Fish, Marah works with innovators to create more sustain- able, traceable seafood supply chains. As a writer, Marah focuses on bringing research out of the ivory tower and into the wider world, where the wonders and insights of science can help entertain and inform a more balanced relationship between people and the seas. She has been published in scientific journals, books, and popular magazines. Her first book, Sex in the Sea (St. Martin’s Press, 2016) uniquely links the timeless topic of sex with the timely issue of ocean conservation. She will draw examples from this work to discuss three key elements for turning science into powerful stories that can foster positive change.

Jack Payne Senior Vice-President for Agricultural and Natural Resources, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida Stand Up for Science: Sticking to Evidence over Activism, Misinformation, and Death Threats Jack Payne is the senior vice president for agriculture and natural resources at the University of Florida and head of the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. UF/IFAS is the discov- ery and innovation arm of the $148-billion-a-year Florida agriculture and natural resource industries. It also makes the organization the target of those who try to drive decision-making through ideology, profit, or fear. Payne will discuss how today’s public scientists find themselves answering not only to their peers, but to the FBI, activist groups, the Food Babe, and politicians who sometimes disregard science. Payne calls on his colleagues to defend not only their own work but science itself. American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 27 2017 Awards

William E. Ricker Meritorious Service Award of Excellence Resource Conservation

Thomas Bigford Richard R. Beamish James B. Reynolds

Presidents’ Fishery Conservation

Carol Ann Woody West Palm Beach Fishing Club

Carl R. Sullivan Distinguished Service Award Excellence in Fisheries Fishery Conservation Education

John Waldman Lisa Eby Yushun Chen Lee Benaka

Emmeline Moore Prize Excellence in Public Outreach Award Hannibal Bolton Andy J. Danylchuk

28 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Emerging Leaders Mentorship Award

Hilary Meyer Dan Dauwalter Patrick O’Rourke Sara Turner

Outstanding Chapter Award

Oregon Chapter (Large) Indiana Chapter (Small)

Outstanding Student Subunit Award AFS Student Writing Award

Shannon White

University of Maine Student Subunit

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 29 J. Frances Allen Scholarship Award Skinner Memorial Honorable Mentions

Kevin Fraley Lucas Nathan William Z. Morris

Vivian Nguyen

J. Frances Allen Scholarship Runner-Up

Sam Wilson Brendan Runde Charles Waters

John E. Skinner Memorial Scholarship Recipients

Vaskar Nepal John Hargrove Hae Kim Zachary Klein David Fryxell

Michael J. Moore Daniel Weaver Douglas Zentner Jessica Valenti David Schumann

Steven Berkeley Marine Conservation Steven Berkeley Marine Conservation Fellowship Award Runners-up

Brendan Runde Sara Schaal Megan Winton 30 2017 AFS Fellow Awards

Ronald J. Essig Cynthia M. Jones David P. Philipp James B. Reynolds

Class of 1967 GOLDEN MEMBERSHIP

Douglas Anderson Ronnie Gilbert Frederick Kircheis Ronald Piening Farrell Bandow Mark Halter Joe Lock Allyn Powell Edward Baum Ronald Hover Dennis McNeish Kim Primmer Bert Bowler Frank Jernejcic Thomas Mears Robert Robertson Edward Braun In-Bae Kim Len Olson Dugan Sabins Samuel Dennison Ronald King Edward Peters Charles Zimmerman

PUBLICATION AWARDS Robert L. Kendall Best Paper in Best Paper in Marine and Coastal Fisheries Transactions of the American Fisheries Society Vanessa R. von Biela Influence of basin- and local-scale environmental Erika S. Rubenson conditions on nearshore production in the northeast Spatiotemporal spawning patterns of Smallmouth Pacific Ocean Bass at its upstream invasion edge

Best Paper in Journal of Aquatic Best Paper in North American Journal of Animal Health Aquaculture Mohamed Faisal Gerald L. Kurten Isolation of the Fathead Minnow nidovirus from Evaluation of community-level physiological Muskellunge experiencing lingering mortality profiling for monitoring microbial community function in aquaculture ponds

Mercer Patriarch Best Paper in North American Journal of Fisheries Management

Michael J. Maceina Assessing the accuracy of published natural mortality estimators using rates determined from five unexploit- ed freshwater fish populations

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 31 Events

NETWORKING EVENTS

Welcome to Tampa Networking Event

Sunday, August 20, 6:00 PM – 9:30 PM Tampa Marriott Waterside, Grand Ballroom and Foyer Come visit with colleagues and old friends on the 2nd floor of our beautiful host hotel to kick off the 2017 AFS Annual Meeting! Some delicious Florida food and beverages will be provided, and the event is set in a great atmosphere over- looking the Marriott Waterside Marina on . As a special opportunity, we will arrange a pair-up, where students and young professionals can spend a little bit of time with more experienced professionals and senior AFS members. This pairup is meant to allow individuals to meet and get acquainted with new friends at the beginning of the meeting and help with networking throughout the meeting.

Tradeshow and Poster Networking Event

Monday, August 21, 6:00 PM – 8:30 PM Tampa Convention Center, West Hall At the end of the first exciting day filled with a plenary session and professional presentations, mingle with businesses providing the latest technology and tools used in fisheries science, explore what local crafters have to offer, and discuss the projects and findings of over 200 poster displays with their presenters. This is a great opportunity to meet contacts, learn new things, and come up with ideas, while also sampling some great food and beverages provided for meeting attendees.

The Grand Networking Event at The Florida Aquarium

Wednesday, August 23, 6:15 PM – 10:15 PM The Florida Aquarium Enjoy yourselves at the Grand Networking Event at The Florida Aquarium, and see why it’s ranked in the top 10 aquari- ums in the country by TripAdvisor.com. While conversing with fisheries colleagues from around the world, explore the wetlands trail, journey to Madagascar, and discover aquatic life from the bays, beaches, coral reefs, and oceans of Florida. You can even download The Florida Aquarium App to enhance your experience! A fantastic menu of fresh Florida seafood and tasty beverages are planned. A variety of classic rock, blues, and modern country will be performed by The Gearz on the outdoor deck overlooking the waterways leading into Tampa Bay. The venue is within walking distance of the host hotels, but a few buses will be provided or the TECO Line Streetcar can get you there.

32 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting SOCIETY BUSINESS MEETING

Wednesday, August 23, 3:30 PM – 5:30 PM Convention Center Ballroom B&C

The annual AFS Business Meeting will be held from 3:30 to 5:30 PM on Wednesday, August 23 in Ballroom B&C of the Convention Center. The meeting will include reports by President Joe Margraf, Executive Director Doug Austen, and Constitutional Consultant John Boreman; presentation of awards and scholarships; information on plans for the 2018 meeting in Atlantic City, ; installation of elected officers; and other aspects of Society business. Be sure to attend this meeting to honor award and scholarship recipients, and to hear plans for the upcoming year from incoming President Steve McMullin.

STUDENT ACTIVITIES

Students play a vital role in the American Fisheries Society, representing future professionals responsible for conserva- tion of our aquatic resources around the world. Students are encouraged to participate in these events to get the most out of their AFS 2017 Annual Meeting experience.

Best Student Paper and Poster Symposia

The Best Student Paper Symposium will be held on Monday, August 21 from 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM in Room 7 of the Convention Center. The Best Student Poster Symposium will be held on Monday, August 21 during the Poster Social from 6:00 PM – 8:30 PM. Award recipients will be announced at the AFS Business Meeting on Wednesday, August 23.

Student Mentoring Event: Making yourself stand out in hyper-competitive job markets, using Florida as a case study

Tuesday, August 22, 2:30 PM – 4:30 PM Tampa Convention Center, Room 30B

On average, hiring committees receive over 70 applications per entry level technician job posting in Florida. Under these circumstances, getting a job as an early career scientist is seemingly impossible. This mentoring event will pro- vide a venue for students to ask professionals that are hiring fisheries biologists what they need to do to improve their chances at getting a job in this hyper-competitive market.

The first half of the event will be a panel discussion, where students can ask professionals questions regarding inter- views, resumes, and most importantly how to best position yourself for long-term employment. Panelists will include eight scientists from academic, state and federal agencies, and not-for-profit organizations in Florida. The panel discus- sion will last for 45 minutes, where students are free to ask employment questions from this group.

Immediately following the panel discussion, we will transition to a speed mentoring session. Here the students can in- terface in a small group (5-6 students per mentor) with the panelists to seek advice about how to improve your chances of getting a job in fisheries science. The speed mentoring session will allow students to ask panelists questions in a less public, more personal setting, as well as provide a venue for more in-depth discussion. Mentors are assigned to tables and students will seat themselves. At the end of ten minutes, students will switch tables. We will run the event for 50 minutes (5, 10 minute sessions).

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 33 Student Networking Event

Tuesday, August 22, 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM Lowry Park Zoo

The 2017 AFS Meeting Student Networking Event will take place at the Lowry Park Zoo. We are particularly excited about this prospect given this zoo has been recognized globally for its excellence in conservation and is one of the most popular zoos in the southeast United States! As part of our event, students will have exclusive access to the zoo and receive tours through the Manatee Hospital led by the zoo’s medical director, access to the Africa section of the zoo (where they have zebras, elephants, meerkats, white rhinos, cheetahs, pygmy hippos, and African penguins, to name a few), and receive a catered meal including a free drink for each student.

Students are asked to bring your meeting badge and a student ID for admission plus an appropriate form of government issued ID should you plan to consume adult beverages.

Total space will be restricted to the first 500 students. Buses are scheduled to pick up at 5:30pm outside the Marriott/ CC area.

SPAWNING RUN AND CARCASS CRAWL(5K)

Wednesday, August 23, 6:15 AM – 7:30 AM Tampa Riverwalk

Need a break from the sitting and networking at the meeting? If you feel like stretching your legs a bit, run with your colleagues and friends along the beautiful Tampa Riverwalk for the Spawning Run. Feeling more relaxed? Follow along at a more leisurely pace in the Carcass Crawl.

The route will be an out and back 3.1 mile course starting and finishing at Cotanchobee Ft. Brooke Park, which is right next to the meeting venue and hotel. So just roll out of bed and come join the fun!

Runners will begin at 6:00 a.m. with Crawlers immediately behind. The run will be timed via Chronotrack Live, with results posted later online. Refreshments at the finishing line await all participants and awards will also be presented to the top finishers in multiple categories. Volunteers along the route will help show you the way and keep your gills wet!

Check in at the Spawning Run booth in the convention center to receive race information and your commemorative t- shirt. All online registrants will receive a t-shirt. Onsite registration will be allowed at the booth until 5 p.m. on Monday, but t-shirts and size choice cannot be guaranteed. Visit KC

SILENT AUCTION

Get ready for an exciting Silent Auction and Raffle at the 2017 Annual Meeting in Tampa! We will be contacting cities across the United States to put together various getaways all over the country. Silent Auction packages will typically include a couple nights lodging, restaurant gift cards, and admission to at least one local attraction or activity. Activities included in the packages will range from aquarium tickets to guided fishing trips. A small number of big ticket prizes will also be up for grabs via raffle, including framed artwork and a $1,500 gift card from Carnival Cruise Lines. Be sure to bring plenty of cash or your checkbook to the meeting to place a bid or buy your raffle tickets. Trust us…there will be something for everyone. Remember, the proceeds provide funds to the John E. Skinner Memorial Fund, which provides travel awards for students to attend AFS Annual Meetings.

34 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting LOCAL ATTRACTIONS

From world renowned fishing and beaches to family-friendly theme parks, welcome to Tampa: a vibrant cultural scene with shopping, dining, and nightlife, there’s something for everyone here! Explore local waterways on a standup pad- dleboard right in front of the convention center! Or take a short walk along the waterfront to visit art and history mu- seums, a children’s museum, the performing arts center, and The Florida Aquarium.

Looking for ways to play in, on, or around the water? Florida is the Fishing Capital of the World and Tampa Bay is home to Spotted Seatrout, Common Snook, Sheepshead, Tarpon, Red Drum, Gray Snapper and more! Or take a peace- ful paddle trip on the beautiful Hillsboro River. The Tampa area is also home to three of the country’s top 10 beaches.

Take the youngest members of the family to the Glazer Children’s Museum—just a short walk along the Bayshore Bou- levard waterfront sidewalk. Or visit the 250,000 square-foot Florida Aquarium, which displays more than 20,000 plants and animals, including sharks, eels, and other deep sea creatures, and has a 2-acre outdoor water play area for kids. For bigger thrills, visit Busch Gardens, or the Lowry Park Zoo (#1 Zoo in America for Kids). Adjacent to Busch Gardens is Adventure Island, a 30-acre water-theme park.

Looking for a quiet museum day? The , Henry B. Plant Museum, and Tampa History Center are all located along the downtown waterfront. The Museum of Science and Industry (MOSI), the largest science center in the Southeast United States, is a short drive away.

Hop on the streetcar at the convention center to spend a day immersed in the rich . Once the cigar capital of the world, Ybor City is the birthplace of the Cuban sandwich and home to Florida’s oldest restaurant (Colum- bia). This National Historic Landmark District abounds in unique shopping, dining and nightlife.

August is time for both baseball and football! Take in a Tampa Bay Rays MLB game at Tropicana Field a short drive away in St. Pete. The Rays are hosting two series during our Meeting, one with the Mariners and the other with the Blue Jays. Or watch the Tampa Bay Buccaneers take on the Cleveland Browns at Raymond James Stadium if you are still around on August 26th for a little pre-season NFL action. Major shopping malls are plentiful in the Tampa area as are smaller collec- tions of specialized stores like those found at Village, nestled within one of Tampa’s oldest neighbor- hoods. From the famous stores found at International Plaza and WestShore Plaza to Centro Ybor in Ybor City, there is something for every wish list and in every size in Tampa.

The beautiful, tropical Tampa area really does have something for everyone. Catch a fish, make a splash, learn some- thing new, or shop til you drop, enjoy your Tampa adventure! Find out more about what to do in Tampa at: https://afsannualmeeting.fisheries.org/things-to-do/ and https://www.visittampabay.com/afs/#sthash.gjWmHNxo.dpbs

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 35 Tradeshow

EXHIBITOR LISTING

Advanced Telemetry Systems Alpha Mach Booth 143 Booth 113 470 1st Ave N 101-2205 Bombardier Isanti, MN 55040 Ste-Julie, QC J3E 2J9, Canada 763-444-9267 450-446-3153 www.atstrack.com www.alphamach.com Advanced Telemetry Systems (ATS) offers innovative and Alpha Mach specializes in miniature and low cost archival reliable fish tracking products designed for researchers tags used in fisheries and biology research. Our instru- world-wide. Our product line includes: VHF and Acous- ments offer the opportunity to economically tag a large tic Transmitters, VHF and Acoustic Receivers/Data log- number of animals or monitor rivers, lakes & tributaries. gers, Antennas, and more. Visit ATStrack.com to see Our newest logger, the Weetag®, are RFID, implantable complete product details and to request your same day and have a large capacity memory. product quote. American Fisheries Society – Publications Atlantic City—Mid-Atlantic Chapter AFS Booth Booth 149 425 Barlow Place, Ste. 110 360 N New York Rd. Bethesda, MD 20814 Port Republic, NJ 08241 301-897-8616 609-748-2020 www.fisheries.org/bookstore mid-atlantic.fisheries.org/ The Books Program publishes textbooks, reference books, The Mid Atlantic Chapter is hosting the 2018 AFS Annual manuals, handbooks, and conference proceedings. In- Meeting in Atlantic City, NJ. Come on by our booth for a depth studies on fisheries and interdisciplinary subjects, taste of the region and a preview of what to expect in AC. thematically-related collections of papers, and general interest books are produced for classroom learning, con- AFS Fisheries Management Section tinuing professional development, and public education. Booth 111 Videos, computer software, and CDs are also offered. The latest aspects of research, management, policy, and 5596 E St. Rd. 46 techniquest are addressed by AFS books on fish biology Bloomington, IN 47404 and , biodiversity and ecosystem management, restoration and conservation, introduced species, native This booth is for the AFS Fisheries Management Section species, genetics, evolution, statistics and mathematics, Early Career Professionals committee. administration, sampling, engineering, aquaculture, and more. Also covered are sociology, economics, water qual- ity, and other related aspects of aquatic science.

36 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting American Institute of Fishery Research Atlantis Marine Habitats Biologists Booth 106 Booth 209 5310 East Plantation Oaks 2001 West Garfield St. #C-106 Arcola, TX 77583 Terminal 91, Bldg A-1 6782748193 Rocklin, CA 95677 Artificial Reefs and Habitats. The mission of AIFRB, incorporated in 1956, is to advance excellence in fishery science and to promote stewardship, BioBase by C-MAP conservation, sustainability, and wise utilization of natu- Booth 236 ral resources, through support in professional develop- ment and recognition of competent achievement of its 1229 Tyler St. NE, Suite 120 members (including students), as measured by the highest Minneapolis, MN 55413 of professional standards. An annual business meeting (all 651-303-5265 members welcome), is held at the place of the American www.cibiobase.com Fisheries Society annual meeting. BioBase is an automated aquatic mapping system in use throughout the globe. Users can upload their sonar log Aqua Logic Inc. from their off-the-shelf sonar. Detailed depth, vegeta- Booth 134 tion, and bottom hardness maps are created automatically (EcoSound product). In 2017, C-MAP launched EcoSat 9558 Camino Ruiz that processes HD satellite images and produces detailed San Diego, CA 92126 maps and area summary reports of wetland and floating- 858-292-4773 leaf vegetation beds. These maps are available for analysis www.aqualogicinc.com and overlay in BioBase, thereby providing a full habitat Manufacturer of water chillers, heat pumps, gas boil- picture. ers, titanium heat exchangers, UV sterilizers. Complete Marisource / McDonald Jar recirculation systems for egg Biomark Inc. hatching. Packaged tank rack systems for aquatic research Booth 251 and larval rearing. Full line of pumps and filters for RAS. 705 S. 8th St. Boise, ID 83702 Archipelago Marine Research—Marine 208-275-0011 Instruments www.biomark.com Booth 235 Biomark specializes in RFID (PIT tag) and related PIT 525 Head St. tagging equipment and services for the fisheries and wild- Victoria, BC V9A 5S1, Canada life communities. Biomark serves the research communi- 250-383-4535 ty by designing, manufacturing, installing and maintain- www.archipelago.ca ing the systems that detect the tags at strategic locations This partnership enables more rapid adoption of technol- for comprehensive data collection and measurable results. ogy-based commercial fisheries monitoring programs. Biomark also provides additional specialized services in- Archipelago staff are experts in Electronic Monitoring cluding tagging, statistical analysis, software development, (EM) program design and implementation globally. Ma- study design and execution, report writing and computa- rine Instruments provides innovation and manufacturing tional model development to support analysis and deci- for ruggedized marine electronics products, including EM sion making. systems. The partnership brings together their comple- mentary strengths to enable high quality, cost effective EM program implementations - a big win for fisheries sustainability. Come learn about EM technology, design considerations and best practices for EM programs! American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 37 BioSonics Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Booth 215 Booth 213 4027 Leary Way NW 45600 Woodland Rd. Seattle, WA 98107 Sterling, VA 20166 206-782-2211 https://www.boem.gov/ www.biosonicsinc.com BOEM manages the development of offshore energy and BioSonics, Inc. of Seattle, Washington, has been pioneer- mineral resources, appropriately balancing economic ing scientific echosounders for monitoring and assessing development, energy independence, and environmental fisheries and the aquatic habitat since 1978. BioSonics in- protection. novative echosounders provide a complete hardware and software . Transducer frequencies from 38 kHz to The Catch and Release Print Shop 1 MHz. Split beam technology provides data on aquatic Booth 221 organisms including abundance, size distribution, 3D target tracking. Advanced, innovative, and easy-to-use 1425 W Forrest Hill Ave. software for fish tracks, SAV assessment, substrate clas- Peoria, IL 61604 sification, and mapping is FREE with purchase of an echo- 309-635-9820 sounder. www.prints.fish We create fish prints to the actual length the angler catches. Bonefish & Tarpon Trust Our product is an alternative to taxidermy and promotes Booth 141 catch and release fishing practices. Our prints are custom 135 San Lorenzo Ave., Suite 860 made to the actual catch and have information regarding Coral Gables, FL 33146 the catch stamped on the print. 786-618-9479 www.BTT.org Central Life Sciences Booth 212 Bonefish & Tarpon Trust is a science-based, non-profit, conservation organization that funds and conducts col- P.O. Box 3432 laborative research to inform conservation of the recre- Burleson , TX 76097 ational fisheries for bonefish, tarpon, permit and other 682-300-0949 flats species, and their habitats. BTT works with scientists, www.zoecon.com anglers, guides, and others to obtain research findings that are used in conjunction with resource management enti- Zoecon offers a variety of piscicides designed to control ties to improve conservation. invasive fish species. These formulas feature rotenone, a general use piscicide naturally derived from the cube resin root. Used by native populations for centuries, rotenone Bulletin of Marine Science effectively controls all fish species without affecting most Booth 115 mammals, birds and vegetation when applied as directed. 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway Further, rotenone degrades quickly in the environment, , FL 33149 making it the ideal choice for maintaining a balanced eco- 305-421-4681 system. http://rsmas.miami.edu/bms Published by University of Miami since 1951, Bulletin of Marine Science is an international, peer-reviewed outlet for research from the world’s oceans. Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science, University of Miami.

38 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Department of Homeland Security— ETS Electrofishing Systems, LLC Infrastructure Security Compliance Division Booth 122 Booth 114 1240 E. Washington Ave. The Department of Homeland Security, Office of Infra- Madison, WI, 53703 structure Protection (IP) leads and coordinates national 608-661-0599 programs and policies on critical infrastructure secu- www.etselectrofishing.com rity and resilience. Within IP, the Infrastructure Security ETS has provided high quality boat, stream barge, and Compliance Division (ISCD) leads the nation’s effort to backpack electrofishing systems to federal, state, and pri- secure America’s high-risk chemical facilities and prevent vate agencies for over 30 years. Our systems feature accu- the use of certain chemicals in a terrorist act on the home- rate peak current and voltage metering and user-friendly land through the systematic regulation, inspection, and precision controls. We offer excellent customer service enforcement of chemical infrastructure security require- and design each system to meet the needs of your agency, ments. reducing complexity and cost. ETS continues to innovate with our new Trident series of boat electrofishers and Diane Rome Peebles Fine Art, LLC stream barge designs. Booth 105 P.O. Box 12855 Eureka Water Probes St. Petersburg, FL 33733 Booth 225 727-321-5951 2113 Wells Branch Parkway, Suite 4400 www.dianepeebles.com Austin, TX 78728 Fine Art prints and scientific illustrations of saltwater fish. 512-302-4333 www.waterprobes.com Echoview Software Pty Ltd. Eureka Water Probes is a designer of premium water Booth 138 quality sondes and multi-parameter instruments used in a wide variety of monitoring applications. Eureka’s multi- P.O. Box 1387 probes are very easy to use, work great in harsh conditions Hobart, TAS 7001, and provide the most reliable data. Phone: 1 206-691-8293 www.echoview.com Feel Good, Inc. ® Echoview is the world’s premier software package for Booth 127 hydroacoustic data processing, delivering powerful and flexible capabilities for water-column and bottom echo- 1460 Gemini Blvd #8 sounder and sonar data processing. With its broad scope Orlando, FL 32837 and continued commitment to delivering cutting-edge ca- 407-986-3351 pabilities, Echoview has been widely adopted as the global www.feelgoodinc.org industry standard by fisheries scientists, aquatic ecolo- Feel Good, Inc. provides portable TENS (transcutaneous gists and environmental managers who need to monitor, electrical nerve stimulation) units offering wide variety understand and manage marine and freshwater environ- of benefits, including alleviating back, nerve and diabetic ments. pain and migraines. Our units can also improve circula- tion, sleep patterns and have been shown to decrease the use of pain relievers that can cause negative side effects.

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 39 Fishiding Reclaimed Artificial Fish Habitat Florida Aquatic Plant Management Society Booth 207 Booth 237 9011 Ramble Rd www.fapms.org Wonder Lake, IL 60097 815-693-0894 Florida Association of Benthologists www.fishiding.com Booth 246 Fishiding.com has been producing uniquely abstract and http://flbenthos.org densely intricate models of artificial fish habitat from reclaimed pvc since 2007. Diverse models with substan- The Florida Association of Benthologists (FAB) provides tially flat limbs of unlimited thickness, textures, sizes and a forum for the exchange of information and to provide shapes, focusing on periphyton growth, fish protection, training for benthologists and scientists in related disci- reproduction and overall stress relief. Dense and impen- plines. FAB conducts regular meetings and workshops at etrable shallow water fry/forage cover, mid depth transi- which reports and seminars on a variety of environmen- tion habitat, up to tall spires of vertical HighRise habitat, tal, taxonomic, and biological studies are presented. The all models self weighted, bend to shape lasting decades in membership of FAB includes freshwater and marine bi- /out of the water. ologists, taxonomists, and other scientists representing a diversity of academic, consulting, government, and com- FL International University—Institute of mercial interests. Water & Environment Booth 139 Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission 11200 SW 8th St., OE 148 Booths 238–241 Miami, FL 33199 305-348-3095 2590 Executive Center Circle East inwe.fiu.edu Tallahassee, FL 32301 850-617-9629 The FIU Institute of Water and Environment (InWE) MyFWC.com brings together university-wide centers, research pro- grams, scientists and engineers to address regional, na- Managing fish and wildlife resources for their long-term tional and global water and environmental issues, through well-being and the benefit of people. innovative interdisciplinary research and cutting edge technology. Florida Institute of Booth 247 Florida Academy of Sciences, Inc. Booth 223 830 1st Street South St. Petersburg, FL 33701 150 W University Blvd. 727-553-1100 BLDG 500 (BIO) Room 101 http://www.fio.usf.edu/ Melbourne, FL 32901 321-831-2500 Florida Institute of Oceanography (FIO) facilitates marine www.floridaacademyofsciences.org science and education for Florida’s higher education by providing large oceanographic vessels, field labs, and ma- Florida Academy of Sciences, founded in 1936, is a non-prof- rine technology. FIO works with it’s members to advance it scientific and educational corporation and the Florida af- scientific understanding of our waters to improve decision filiate of the AAAS. It is the only organization in Florida rep- making, natural resource management and public policy resenting all STEM disciplines. FAS hosts an annual meeting, for the well-being of Florida’s citizens. Our newest vessel, publishes the peer-reviewed Florida Scientist, and supports the 80’ R/V Hogarth, equipped with state of the art tech- the Florida Junior Academy of Sciences. Unlike most state nology, will be available for service in 2018. academies, FAS receives no State support and relies on dues, subscriptions, its endowment, and other contributions.

40 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Floy Tag & Manufacturing Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council Booth 135 Booth 242 4616 Union Bay Place NE 2203 N Lois Ave, Suite 1100 Seattle, WA 98105 Tampa, FL 33607 206-524-2700 813-348-1630 www.floytag.com www.GulfCouncil.org Floy Tag and Mfg., Inc. has been in the fisheries research We are a federal fisheries advisory body to NOAA fisheries. tag business for over 50 years. We specialize in the exter- nal, visual tags that are manufactured in Seattle, WA. Hallprint Pty Ltd. Booth 206 Forestry Suppliers Inc. Booth 208 27 Commerce Crescent Hindmarsh Valley, South Australia 5211, Australia 205 W Rankin St. +61 8 85523149 Jackson, MS 39201 www.hallprint.com 601-354-3565 www.forestry-suppliers.com Hallprint Pty Ltd is an Australian based manufacturer of world best quality external printed fish tags and anchor- Your one stop catalog source for instruments, equipment ing systems for electronic tags. Hallprint is the world-wide and supplies for water sampling, testing, and monitoring. distributor of Bioscribe and Scielex electronic measuring We offer a wide array of weighing scales, microscopes boards and food safe polymer PIT tags. Please come by and laboratory supplies, lights, safety equipment, animal our booth to see our new and exciting data management damage control supplies, engineering tools for mapping App—this App removes the hard work of data manage- and surveying, GPS, and laser distance measuring instru- ment in tagging programs. E-mail: darrenevans@hall- ments. print.com.au or [email protected] Web: www. hallprint.com. Frigid Units Inc. Booth 126 Halltech Aquatic Research Inc. Booth 224 5072 Lewis Ave Toledo, OH 43612 129 Watson Rd. South 419-478-4000 Guelph, ON N1L 1E4, Canada frigidunits.com 519-766-4568 www.halltechaquatic.com Frigid Units manufactures various Fiberglass Tanks and Water Chiller/Heater Units. Including our closed re-cir- Halltech has been servicing the Aquatic and Fisheries culating “Living Stream” which cools, aerates and filters Research and Management sector for over 25 years. Our in one operation & our Min-O-Cool’s. Versatile STREAM equipment is engineered to stand the test of time and en- MODULES (now in 3 sizes) for a continuous flow of water dure long hours of rugged field use with outstanding re- in limited space and Patented CHILLER/HEATER Units sults. Please visit our booth and learn why we are such with dual digital thermostat for consistent a trusted supplier to organisations working all over the control. Need something special? We have the flexibility world in the conservation of our most valued natural re- to custom manufacture to special needs. sources!

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 41 Hydrolox Kentucky State University Booth 145 Booth 120 301 Plantation Rd. 103 Athletic Drive New Orleans, LA 70123 Frankfort, KY 40601 866-586-2825 502-597-8107 www.hydrolox.com Showcases Kentucky State University’s College of Agricul- Hydrolox™ engineered polymer chainless traveling wa- ture and highlights our prestigious Aquaculture/Aquatic ter screens deliver long lasting, cost-effective, virtually Science program in efforts to increase awareness of our maintenance-free performance. Proven to exclude debris academic degree programs and recruitment. and reduce harm to aquatic life, these 316(b) compliant, easy to install are built to withstand extreme Keys Marine Lab/Florida Institute of debris events and eliminate uneven wear and mistrack- ing. Backed by expert project management and industry- Oceanography Booth 248 leading warranties, Hydrolox screens address the needs of water-extracting facilities across all industries. 68486 US-1 Layton, FL 33001 Kasco Marine 305-664-9101 Booth 142 http://www.keysmarinelab.org/ Contact: Bob Robinson The Keys Marine Laboratory is a full-service marine field 800 Deere Road station situated in the heart of the Florida Keys. The facil- Prescott, WI 54021 ity offers a unique opportunity for college level education 715-262-4488 and researchers studying the only tropical marine ecosys- www.kascomarine.com tems in the continental United States. The location pro- vides easy access to Florida Bay, the Everglades National Kasco, a leader in the aquaculture and fish rearing indus- Park, the Florida Current, and the Florida Keys National tries, offers several products to make your farm, ponds, Marine Sanctuary, KML offers an excellent base of opera- or tanks more productive with healthier, faster growing tions for your next field excursion. fish. Our surface aerators, Robust-Aire Diffused Aeration and circulators will help improve the health and growth rate of your fish, prevent winter kills and improve your Kongsberg Underwater Technology, Inc. Booth 110 overall water quality. Whether you’re a production farmer, researcher, or hobbyist, Kasco will provide the best water 19210 33rd Ave. West, Suite A quality management possible. Lynnwood, WA 98036 425-712-1107 Kelly of the Wild www.km.kongsberg.com Booth 128 Kongsberg Underwater Technology, Inc. is a world lead- 22 Lakeview Dr. S ing supplier of advanced underwater acoustic systems, in- Haines City, FL 33844 strumentation and robotics for marine operations and ad- 813-309-9663 vanced maritime communications amongst mobile assets. kellyquinnart.com Kelly Quinn is a graduate from the Fine Arts Program at the University of Florida and Resident Artist for The Flor- ida Aquarium. “As an artist, Florida’s captivating wildlife, unique history, and natural beauty is what truly drives my mission to protect wild Florida. Each piece of artwork tells the stories of iconic Florida wildlife with the goal to connect people to nature and the issues facing our wild heritage.”

42 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Lotek Wireless Inc. Media Cybernetics Booth 252 Booth 101 115 Pony Drive 401 N Washington St., Suite 350 Newmarket, ON L3Y 7B5, Canada Rockville, MD 20850 905-836-2904 301-495-3305 www.lotek.com www.mediacy.com Lotek is a world leader in the design and manufacture of Media Cybernetics believes in its ability to enable and trans- fish and wildlife monitoring systems used in 35 countries. form the way consumers and businesses use information These technologies include radio, acoustic, archival and to advance science and innovation, improving the world‘s satellite solutions. products, processes, and ability to make new discoveries. With 35 years in experience delivering software products Madewell Products Corporation that continuously exceed our customer expectations with Booth 222 such products as AutoQuant and Image-Pro, Media Cyber- netics continues its journey of delivery best in class imaging Coatings and linings for waterproofing concrete and steel analysis tools. For more information, visit mediacy.com. structures containing fish and other aquatic wildlife. Midwest Lake Electrofishing Systems Marel Booth 129 Booth 107 7561 SW Prairie Ridge Rd. 2001 W Garfield St. Polo, MO 64671 Terminal 91 Building A1 816-804-5604 Seattle, WA 98119 www.midwestlake.com 206-781-1827 www.marel.com Manufacturers of the most versatile electrofishing sys- tems in the industry- the Infinity Control Box, the Infinity Marel is the leading global provider is advanced process- HC-80 and the Infinity Xstream Backpack Electrofisher. ing systems and services to the Fish, Meat, and Poultry Through innovation and superior customer service, we industries. We offer the convenience of single source to are changing the way fisheries managers and researchers meet every need. In partnership with our customers we do business. We design, fabricate, and distribute sampling are transforming the way food is processed. Our vision is equipment, including top-notch electrofishing boats, to of a world where quality food is produced sustainably and meet the needs of the fisheries professional. Our biologists affordably. also perform contract consulting and fish sampling.

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 43 Miller Net Company, Inc. National Aquaculture Association Booth 147 Booth 121 P.O. Box 18787 P.O. Box 12759 Memphis , TN 83181 Tallahassee, FL 32317 800-423-6603 850-216-2400 www.millernets.com www.thenaa.net Miller Net Company is a family business with a prod- The National Aquaculture Association is a non-profit uct line developed from four generations of experience. trade association created and supported by farmers and Our hand-crafted nets are built in our net shop located in allied businesses that is dedicated to providing a unified Memphis, Tennessee. We have years of experience in the national voice for aquaculture that ensures its sustaina- art of hanging nets. We use only the finest materials in our bility, protects is profitability, and encourages its develop- nets—no seconds or inferior netting is ever used. Miller ment in an environmentally responsible manner. Net Company never substitutes material. We have years of experience specializing in trap/fyke nets, experimental gill nets, hoops nets, etc. National Fish Habitat Partnership Booth 216 Mossback Fish Habitat 1100 First St, NE Display Area Suite 825 1853 W Henride Tonti Blvd. Washington, DC 20002 Springdale, AR 72762 www.fishhabitat.org 479-751-4100 Since 2006, the National Fish Habitat Partnership has www.MossbackFishHabitat.com supported 679 projects benefiting fish habitat in all 50 Mossback Fish Habitat is a full line of artificial habitat states. The Partnership works to conserve fish habitat designed by fishermen for fishing and fisheries manage- nationwide, leveraging federal, state, tribal, and private ment with products custom-manufactured to meet your funding resources to achieve the greatest impact on fish specific habitat needs. Whether you are looking for habitat populations through priority conservation projects of 20 to hang from an individual dock to improve your catch regionally-based Fish Habitat Partnerships. rates, provide safe havens for fry and baitfish survival and recruitment, or a complete lake restoration project, Moss- National Oceanographic Partnership Program back Fish Habitat can meet your needs. Booth 214 4100 N. Fairfax Dr., Suite 800 The National Academies of Sciences, Arlington, VA 22203 Engineering, and Medicine 571-765-3151 Booth 109 www.nopp.org 500 5th St. NW The National Oceanographic Partnership Program Washington, DC 20001 (NOPP) facilitates interagency and multi-sectoral part- 202-334-2760 nerships to address federal ocean science and technology www.nationalacademies.org/rap research priorities. Through this collaboration, federal agencies can leverage resources to invest in priorities that The NRC Research Associateship Programs, established in fall between agency missions or are too large for any single 1954, have supported the research of over 14,000 scientists agency to support. and engineers. The goal of these programs is to provide advanced training and collaborative research opportuni- ties for highly qualified graduate postdoctoral and visit- ing scientists, while enhancing the research conducted in federal laboratories and affiliated institutions.

44 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Northwest Marine Technology, Inc. Pacific Netting Products, Inc. Booth 250 Booth 211 Olympia, WA 98502 25993 United Rd. NE 360-468-3375 Kingston, WA 98346 www.nmt.us 360-297-0858 www.pacificnettingproducts.com NMT specializes in implant tags for live fish, crustaceans, reptiles and amphibians, and other aquatic animals in a Pacific Netting Products is the world leader in design, manner that minimizes biological impact while providing , installation and service of fish and debris clear and unbiased data. All of our tags are injected inter- exclusion, guidance, and collection solutions. Systems in- nally and include Coded Wire Tags, Visible Implant Elas- stalled provide critical downstream passage solutions; as- tomer Tags, and Visible Implant Alpha Tags. NMT also sist with prevention of invasive species, and proved debris, offers fish counters for juveniles and adults. algae and temperature control barriers. For more infor- mation contact [email protected] or call Onset Computer Corporation 1.360.297.0858. Booth 104 470 MacArthur Blvd. Pentair Aquatic Ecosystems, Inc. Bourne, MA 02532 Booth 210 508-759-9500 www.onsetcomp.com 2395 Apopka Blvd. Apopka, FL 32703 For more than 30 years, Onset HOBO® data loggers have 407-886-3939 been widely recognized by field researchers and water www.riverwatcher.is managers as the industry standard for monitoring envi- ronmental conditions such as water temperature, water Pentair Aquatic Eco-Systems, Inc. is the largest source level, water quality, and more recently, dissolved . of aquatic products and systems worldwide and a world HOBO research-grade data loggers provide reliable, ac- leader in fish counting and size estimation. curate data under tough environmental conditions and can be rapidly deployed in a variety of field ecology and Reef Ball Foundation coastal research studies. Booth 205

Oregon RFID 1126 Central Ave. Sarasota, FL 34236 Booth 146 941-650-2519 4246 SE Ogden St. www.reefball.org Portland, OR 97206 Our mission is to rehabilitate and protect the ocean reef 503-929-2706 ecosystems using Reef Ball technologies t0 www.oregonrfid.com develop and preserve; Habitat stabilization and develop- Oregon RFID has manufactured equipment for tracking ment Establishment of recreational fishing areas Environ- fish and wildlife using low frequency PIT tags and read- mental mitigation Seagrass and other submerged aquatic ers since 2003. We provide technical support and classes vegetation protection and habitat development Develop so customers can build and maintain their own sites. We and stabilize habitat for invertebrate populations (oyster offer partners who are qualified experts at installation for beds, shellfish and corals) Provide increased area for fin- those who would prefer not to install themselves. Our fish and invertebrate population spawning and recruit- products are used worldwide for scientific research and ment Provide protective substrates for the native shore commercial operations. Oregon RFID is a certified wom- plants. an owned small business.

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 45 Scientists and Environmentalists for Sound Metrics Corporation Population Stabilization Booths 243–244 Booth 227 2810 Hudson St. 13913 Recuerdo Dr. Chesapeake, VA 23324 Del Mar, CA 92014 757-382-7616 www.populationstabilization.org www.soundmetrics.com Scientists and Environmentalists for Population Stabili- Sound Metrics designs and manufactures the DIDSON zation is an educational and environmental organization and ARIS lines of multi beam imaging , the world’s focused on U.S and world overpopulation and its environ- highest resolution “acoustic cameras” for visualization in mental consequences. It advocates,as do most national dark and/or turbid water. Used in military, construction, commissions on the topic, reduced immigration and small oil & gas, inspection, law enforcement and fisheries ap- family sizes so as to achieve U.S. population within a few plications. decades. Our booth distributes gratis, books, charts, and articles on these issues from a wide spectrum of authors Southern Sportsman Aquatics & Land and organizations.. Management Booth 112 Smith-Root Solutions for Fisheries Conservation 212 Longleaf Pine Dr. Booth 200–203 Advance, NC 27006 336-941-9056 16603 NE 50th Ave. southernsportsmanaquaticsandland.com Vancouver, WA 98686 360-573-0202 We are a full service fisheries consulting company with www.smith-root.com over 50 years of experience researching and managing wa- terbodies from one acre ponds to The Florida Everglades. Since 1964, Smith-Root has proudly partnered with fish- Services include water chemistry, vegetation manage- eries scientists to develop solutions for the fisheries con- ment, fisheries evaluation and monitoring (electrofishing, servation community. Stop by our booth to see the ad- hoop nets, gill nets, seines and trawls), habitat improve- vancements in our electrofishing products, eDNA device, ment (fish attractors, supplemental feeding) and stocking as well as our environmental DNA sampling ANDe™ sys- of native fish species. tem. During the conference, we will be demonstrating our field-portable DNA detection device, electrofishing prod- Springer ucts and the DNA sampling ANDe™ system. Booth 123

Sonotronics, Inc. Van Godewikstraat 30 Booth 249 3311GX Dordrecht, The Netherlands +31 78 6576161 3169 S. Ave. www.springer.com Tucson, AZ 85713 520-746-3322 Springer Nature is a leading global research, educational www.sonotronics.com and professional publisher, home to an array of respected and trusted brands providing quality content through a SONOTRONICS is THE pioneer in acoustic telemetry range of innovative products and services. Springer Na- for animal tracking. Now celebrating 46 years producing ture is the world’s largest academic book publisher, pub- ultrasonic transmitters, receivers, and hydrophones for lisher of the world’s most influential journals and a pio- tracking animals and equipment underwater. neer in the field of open research.

46 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting -Oddi UID Identification Solutions Booth 108 Booth 204 Skeidaras 12 500 Park Ave., Suite 109 210 Gardabaer Lake Villa, IL 60046 Reykjavik, Iceland 224-444-8484 354-533-6060 www.uidevices.com/ www.star-oddi.com UID specializes in unique solutions for the identification Star-Oddi manufactures Data Storage Tags (DSTs) and and tracking wildlife using PIT Tags. Customize your re- miniature data loggers. Available sensors are temperature, search with different solutions using UID PIT tags and /depth, salinity (CTD), 3D tilt angle (pitch and readers to complement your research needs. Each PIT roll), compass direction, light intensity and heart rate. DST tag is ISO 11784/85 and ICAR Compliant to ensure the series is used for implantation or external tagging of fish highest quality with 15 year minimum life expectancy for but also attached to fishing gear and moorings for envi- ensured long term reading. UID also provides custom ronmental studies. Starmon data logger series are durable software support to develop your specific application for and robost oceanographic instruments with high accuracy, research. Ask about our Free Reader Program. large memory, long battery life and high pressure survival.

University of South Florida—College of Taylor & Francis Marine Science Booth 144 Booths 102–103 530 Walnut Street, Suite 850 College of Marine Science Philadelphia, PA 19106 140 7th Ave. South 215-625-8900 St. Petersburg, FL 33701 www.tandfonline.com 727-553-3367 For two centuries, Taylor & Francis has been fully com- http://www.marine.usf.edu/ mitted to the publication of scholarly research. We publish the official journals for the American Fisheries Society, VEMCO and also a variety of similar titles relevant to the field of Booths 136-137 aquatics. Visit the Taylor & Francis booth to learn about our products and services, and to request free sample cop- 20 Angus Morton Dr. ies of our journals. Attn: Nancy Edwards Halifax, NS B4B 0L9, Canada 902-450-1700 x279 Trovan, Ltd. www.vemco.com Booth 253 VEMCO is the world leader in the development of acous- 175 Santa Elena Ln. tic telemetry monitoring and tracking systems used by Santa Barbara, CA 93108 researchers worldwide for behaviour, migration and po- 805-565-1288 sitioning studies of aquatic animals in fresh and saltwater www.trovan.com environments. VEMCO will be joined by HTI-VEMCO Trovan, Ltd. offers turnkey RFID solutions for identifica- USA, Inc., a manufacturer of hydroacoustic fisheries re- tion of fish and crustaceans. With over 280 million tags search equipment (acoustic tags, acoustic tag receivers using TROVAN technology sold to date, Trovan is the and active hydroacoustic systems). HTI-VEMCO also leading supplier of tagging equipment and automation conducts hydroacoustic research in oceans, lakes, and riv- solutions for fish identification globally. Miniature TRO- ers, and at hydropower dams, estuaries and shipping locks. VAN tags will work where others won’t, offering superior read performance for size of tag. Use Trovan transponders to safely identify individual specimens for life, with mini- mal impact on the animals. American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 47 Whole Foods Market Wildscapes Inc. Booth 125 Booth 228 1548 N Dale Mabry Hwy 1835 Ridge Rd. Tampa, FL 33607 Clover, SC 29710 954-632-5519 304-280-5428 http://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/ www.wildscape.com Jewelry made with the cases of caddisfly Larva. Larva are raised in a simulated stream and given gemstones to build their stone cases with. After emergence, the cases are col- lected and made into beautiful, one of a kind jewelry.

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American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 49 Symposia and Contributed Paper Sessions

For space-saving reasons, only the title, organizers, mod- AFS Role in Strengthening the ESA erators, and chairs are shown. Details about each session, inlcuding symposium descriptions, are available online Monday, August 21st at https://afs.confex.com/afs/2017/meetingapp.cgi/Pro- 1:00 PM – 4:00 PM gram/1074 or on the mobile app. Room: 4 All sessions take place in the Convention Center. Moderator: Tom Bigford Organizer: Patrick Shirey SYMPOSIA

Advances in On-Site DNA Testing for Species Aquaculture, Fish and Ecosystem Health in Detection and Monitoring Florida Tuesday, August 22nd Session I: Wednesday, August 23rd 1:40 PM – 5:00 PM 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Room: 5 Room: 19 Moderators: Amanda Naaum, Austen Thomas, Max Session II: Thursday, August 24th Perelman, and Robert Hanner 8:00 AM – 1:20 PM Room: 19 Organizers: Amanda Naaum, Austen Thomas, Max Perelman, and Robert Hanner Moderators: Roy Yanong, Jan Landsberg, and Theresa Tomas Cody Organizer: Ruth Francis-Floyd Advancing Side Scan Sonar Applications in Aquatic Research and Conservation Aquaculture Health Management Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Monday, August 21st Room: 20 9:40 AM – 2:00 PM Room: 19 Moderator: Jennifer Bock Moderator/Chair/Organizer: Kathleen Hartman Organizer: Adam Kaeser Best Student Papers Symposium AFS Interests in Farm Bill Reauthorization Monday, August 21 Wednesday, August 23rd 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM 1:40 PM – 3:00 PM Room: 7 Room: 11 Chair: Mark Fincel Organizer: Tom Bigford

50 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Beyond the Survey: Practical Application of Black Bass Diversity Methods in the Human Dimensions Toolbox Session I: Monday, August 21st Session I: Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM - 11:00 AM 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Room: 7 Room: 3 Session II: Tuesday, August 22nd Session II: Thursday, August 24th 9:40 AM – 5:20 PM 8:00 AM – 2:00 PM Room: 14 Room: 3 Organizers: James M. Long, Wes Porak, and Patrick Chair: Nia Morales O’Rouke Organizers: Allen Martin, Jessica Feltz, Corey A. Jager, and Vic DiCenzo Captive Propagation of Imperiled Aquatic Organisms Biochemical Trophic Markers in Aquatic Monday, August 21st Ecology 9:40 AM – 5:40 PM Room: 10 Monday, August 21st 9:40 AM – 4:00 PM Moderators: Paul Blanchard, Jason Persinger and Room: 9 Emily Tracy-Smith Moderators: Austin Happel, Jacques Rinchard, and Organizers: Gene Wilde and Steve Lochmann Matt Futia Chairs: Austin Happel, Jacques Rinchard, Matt Futia, Characterizing Recreational Fisheries for Reef and Sergiusz Czesny Fishes: Current Methods and Future Data Needs Organizers: Austin Happel, Jacques Rinchard, and Matt Futia Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Room: 13 Biology and Management of Aggregating Species in Freshwater and Marine Systems Moderator: Tiffani Cross Monday, August 21st Chair: Beverly Sauls 9:40 AM – 5:40 PM Organizers: Gregg Bray and Chip Collier Room: 15 Moderators: Lynn Waterhouse, Scott A. Heppell, Selina Heppell, Brice X. Semmens, and Brian C. Stock Organizers: Lynn Waterhouse, Scott A. Heppell, and Selina Heppell

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 51 Closing the Loop: Stakeholder Involvement in Cooperative Fisheries Research: Lessons the Management Strategy Evaluation (MSE) Learned, Continuing Collaborations and Process—Advancing Management Strategy Future Applications Evaluation Session I: Monday, August 21st Thursday, August 24th 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM 10:20 AM – 5:00 PM Room: 22 Room: 22 Session II: Tuesday, August 22nd Moderators: Sean M. Lucey and John F. Walter III 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Room: 22 Chair: Sean M. Lucey Moderators: Angela Collins, Nick Trippel, Richard S. Organizers: Sean M. Lucey, Sarah K. Gaichas, John F. McBride, Dave Herzog, Jynessa Dutka-Gianelli, and Walter III, Daniel Goethel, Aaron Berger, and Patrick Amber Von Harten Lynch Chairs: Angela Collins and Nick Trippel Conservation Genetics of Imperiled Fishes: a Organizers: Angela Collins, Nick Trippel, Richard Tribute to Dr. Tim King S. McBride, Dave Herzog, Quinton Phelps, Jynessa Dutka-Gianelli, and Amber Von Harten Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM – 2:40 PM Room: 4 Data Poor Methods for Stock Assessment: Advances, Applications, and Evaluations Chair: Stephen Faulkner Session I:Wednesday, August 23rd Organizers: David C. Kazyak, Carol A. Stepien, and 9:40 AM – 2:40 PM Wendylee Stott Room:10 Session II: Thursday, August 24th Conservation Measures Achieved Through 8:00 AM – 1:40 PM Law Enforcement: Highlighting Cooperation Room: 10 Between Management and Fishery Enforcement Groups Organizers: Kate I. Siegfried and Skyler R. Sagarese Tuesday, August 22nd Emerging Anthropogenic Pollution and its 1:00 PM – 3:40 PM Effects on our Aquatic Resources: Recent Ad- Room: 4 vances in Fish Kill and Pollution Event Inves- Moderators/Chairs/Organizers: Matthew Walia and tigations Richard Chesler III Session I: Monday, August 21st 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM Room: 5 Session II: Tuesday, August 22nd 9:40 AM – 1:40 PM Room: 5 Chair: Bryant Bowen Organizers: George Guillen and Rebecca O’Hearn 52 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Emerging Technologies in Fisheries- Fishing for a Solution in a Sea of Competing Dependent Science and Catch Monitoring Objectives: Sustaining Commercial and Recreational Fisheries in an Increasingly Monday, August 21st 9:40 AM – 6:00 PM Complex World Room: 20 Thursday, August 24th Moderators: Christopher McGuire, Brett Alger, 8:00 AM – 2:20 PM Farron Wallace, and Jane DiCosimo Room: 12 Chair: Brett Alger Moderators/Chairs/Organizers: Vaskar Nepal, Quinton Phelps, and Mary C. Fabrizio Organizers: Farron Wallace, Jane DiCosimo, Carmen Revenga, Erika Feller, Jennifer Mondragon, and Brett Florida Springs and Spring Run Stream Alger Ecosystems

Empirical Dynamic Modeling for Fisheries Monday, August 21st Prediction and Management 3:20 PM – 5:00 PM Room: Chouteau A Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Moderator/Chair/Organizer: Robert Mattson Room: 12 From Allocation to Ecosystems: Where Are the Chair: Hao Ye Social Sciences Today in Fishery Management? Organizers: William J. Harford, Mandy Karnauskas, Hui Liu, and George Sugihara Tuesday, August 22nd 9:40 AM – 2:40 PM Room: 16 Fish Welfare Organizers: Clifford Hutt, Mike Travis, Michael Tuesday, August 22nd Jepson, and Matthew McPherson 9:40 AM – 2:20 PM Room: 19 From Headwaters to the Sea and Karyotypes Moderator/Organizer: Craig Watson to Genomes: A Symposium in Honor of John Gold Fisheries Data Management Skills and Thursday, August 24th Techniques 8:00 AM – 3:00 PM Monday, August 21st Room: 23 9:40 AM – 3:40 PM Organizers: Thomas F. Turner, Kevin Conway, and Room: 8 David Portnoy Chairs/Organizers: Julie Defilippi Simpson and Jeff Kopaska

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 53 From Oil Spills to Global Climate Change: How Have Anthropogenic Stressors Changed Our Interactions with Fossil Fuels Impact Eco- Relationships Between Nutrients and Fish systems through Neurosensory, Behavioral, and Production? Metabolic Effects in Marine Fish Monday, August 21st Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM – 11:40 AM 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Room: Chicago C Room: 15 Chair: Edward S. Rutherford Moderators/Chairs/Organizers: Lela Schlenker and Moderators/Organizers: Edward S. Rutherford, Rachael Heuer Doran M. Mason, and Hongyan Zhang

From the Field to The Hill: Science Communi- Impacts of Deepwater Horizon and other Large cation with Policymakers Oil Spills on Fish and Fisheries in the Gulf of Mexico Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Session I: Monday, August 21st Room: 8 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM Room: 21 Chair: Ed Henry Session II: Tuesday, August 22nd Organizers: Julie Claussen, Solomon David, and 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM Natalie Sopinka Room: 21

Getting from Concept to Reality—Innovative Moderators/Chairs/Organizers: Steven Murawski, Techniques and Technologies for Control of William Patterson III, Luiz Barbieri, and David Portnoy Non Indigenous Fish

Wednesday, August 23rd Imperiled Aquatic Species from Headwaters to 9:40 AM – 2:20 PM Oceans: A Genomics Perspective Room: 7 Monday, August 21st Chair: William Stewart 9:40 AM – 6:00 PM Organizers: Julie Carter, Jessica Gwinn, and William Room: 23 Stewart Chair: Marlis R. Douglas

Harnessing the Power of Diversity and Moderators/Organizers: Marlis R. Douglas, Michael E. Douglas, Andrew Whiteley, and Gene Wilde Inclusion—Game Changing Solutions for Enhancing Diversity and Inclusion in the Fisheries Profession Tuesday, August 22nd 9:40 AM – 4:20 PM Room: 7 Organizers: Robert Mecum, April Croxton, and Shivonne Nesbit

54 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Implications of Freshwater Inflows on the Landscape Conservation Cooperatives and Spatial Ecology of Coastal Fisheries: Fish Habitat Partnerships Facilitate Networks Identifying Mechanisms Behind Processes and Tools for Ecologically Connected Landscapes and Seascapes Thursday, August 24th 10:40 AM – 5:00 PM Monday, August 21st Room: 18 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Room: 18 Moderator: Rolando Santos Moderator: Jessica Graham Chair: Jennifer Rehage Organizer: Gwen White Organizers: Philip Stevens, Kerry Flaherty-Walia, Ross Boucek, and David Stormer Life History Variability in Marine Fishes Integration of Technologies for Next Thursday, August 24th Generation Marine Observation Systems 8:00 AM - 4:20 PM and Fisheries Independent Surveys Room: 5 Session I: Monday, August 21st Chair: Robert Ellis 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM Moderators/Organizers: Robert Ellis, Jameal Room: 3 Samhouri, and Scott Hamilton Session II: Tuesday, August 22nd 9:40 AM – 1:40 PM Linking Inland Fisheries to Global Policies in Room: 3 Sustainable Development Moderator: Ryan Caillouet Session I: Tuesday, August 22nd Chairs: Matthew Campbell, William Michaels, 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM Steven Murawski, and Theodore Switzer Room: 6 Organizers: Benjamin Richards, J. Christopher Session II: Wednesday, August 23rd Taylor, Kevin M. Boswell, and Scott M. Gallager 9:40 AM – 11:20 AM Room: 6 International Flats Fishing Symposium Chair: Sui Chian Phang Monday, August 21st Organizers: T. Douglas Beard Jr., Julie Claussen, 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM Steven Cooke, Ian G. Cowx, Abigail J. Lynch, Ashley Room: 14 Steel, and William W. Taylor Organizers: David Philipp, Steven Cooke, Jason Franklin, and Greg Vincent

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 55 Marine Artificial Reef Research and Multispecies and Watershed Approaches to Development: Integrating Fisheries Freshwater Fish Conservation: Science, Management Objectives Planning, and Implementations Session I: Tuesday, August 22nd Session I: Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM – 6:00 PM 9:40 AM – 3:20 PM Room: 25 Room: 14 Session II: Wednesday, August 23rd Session II: WThursday, August 24th 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM 8:00 AM – 2:20 PM Room: 25 Room: 14 Moderators: Bill Lindberg, Gregory W. Stunz, and Organizers: Daniel Dauwalter, Timothy Birdsong, Steve Schroeter and Gary Garrett Chairs: Keith Mille and Sean F. Keenan National and International Perspectives on Organizers: Clay Porch, Dale Shively, Bob Martore, Improving Fisheries Science and Management Lisa Havel, and James Ballard Through Peer Review Thursday, August 24th Marine Species on the Move: Understanding 11:20 AM – 5:00 PM and Responding to Shifting Distributions of Room: 6 U.S. Fish Stocks Moderators: Stephen K. Brown, David Sampson, and Session I: Monday, August 21st David J. Die 9:40 AM – 5:20 PM Room: 12 Chair: Stephen K. Brown Session II: Tuesday, August 22nd Organizers: Manoj Shivlani and Roberto Koeneke 9:40 AM – 2:20 PM Room: 12 National Fish Habitat Partnership Film Organizers: Roger Griffis, Jay Peterson, and Becca Festival: Protection, Restoration and Selden Enhancement Tuesday, August 22nd Modeling Habitat and Distribution of Fluvial 9:40 AM – 10:45 AM Fishes: Peculiar Challenges, Emerging Room: 8 Statistical Tools, and Macroecological Moderator/Chair/Organizer: Ryan Roberts and Conservation Applications Thursday, August 24th National Fish Habitat Partnership Film 10:20 AM – 5:40 PM Festival: Conservation Science Room: 16 Tuesday, August 22nd Moderator/Chair/Organizer: Emmanuel A. Frimpong 11:00 AM – 11:40 AM Room: 8 Moderator/Chair/Organizer: Ryan Roberts

56 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting National Fish Habitat Partnership Film Observer Contributions to Fisheries Science, Festival: Recreational Angling Management, and Safety Tuesday, August 22nd Wednesday, August 23rd 1:00 PM – 2:40 PM 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Room: 8 Room: 21 Moderator/Chair/Organizer: Ryan Roberts Moderators/Organizers: Jane DiCosimo and Lee Benaka National Fish Habitat Partnership Film Festival: Memory of Fish Optimizing Connectivity in Running Waters: Tuesday, August 22nd Lessons, Challenges and Tools 3:20 PM – 4:20 PM Room: 8 Monday, August 21st 9:40 AM – 6:00 PM Moderator/Chair/Organizer: Jennifer Galvin Room: 25 Moderators/Organizers: Sofia Consuegra, Carlos Non-Fishing Impacts in Fisheries Garcia de Leaniz, and Guillermo R. Giannico Management: Are We Doing Enough, and How Could We Do More? Outreach, Extension and Stakeholder Wednesday, August 23rd Engagement in Fisheries 9:40 AM – 1:40 PM Session I: Monday, August 21st Room: 9 9:40 AM – 5:20 PM Moderators: John Boreman, Tom Bigford, Kara Room: 24 Meckley Session II: Tuesday, August 22nd Organizer: Sarah Schumann 9:40 AM – 1:40 PM Room: 24 Nutrient Cycling and Energy Flow from Chair: Kai Lorenzen Headwaters to Oceans: Identifying and Organizers: Joy Hazell, Bryan Fluech, Elizabeth Describing Mechanisms and Vectors in Staugler, and Amber Von Harten Aquatic Ecosystems

Tuesday, August 22nd Pelagic Fish Seascapes: Integration of New 9:40 AM – 11:40 AM Technology and Modeling Room: 4 Monday, August 21st Chairs: Daniel Weaver and Elizabeth Tristano 2:00 PM – 5:20 PM Moderators/Organizers: Daniel Weaver, Elizabeth Room: 19 Tristano, and Joseph Zydlewski Moderators/Organizers: Stephen Brandt and Doran Mason

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 57 Progress Towards Ecosystem-based Fisheries Redefining Darwinian Fisheries: Integrating Management the Diverse Roles of Evolution in Fisheries Sustainability Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Tuesday, August 22nd Room: 18 9:40 AM – 5:40 PM Room: 10 Chair: Kenric Osgood Moderators/Chairs/Organizers: Michael Kinnison Organizers: Karen Abrams, Heather Sagar, Margaret and Stephanie Carlson (Peg) Brady, and Tony Marshak

Response of Fishes to Extreme Climate Events Recent Advances in Conservation Engineering —the National Bycatch Reduction Engineering Tuesday, August 22nd Program 9:40 AM – 2:40 PM Room: 15 Monday, August 21st 9:40 AM – 3:40 PM Moderator/Chair: Cassandra Glaspie Room: 6 Organizers: Cassandra Glaspie and Stephen Brandt Moderators: Derek Orner and David Rudders Organizers: Derek Orner, Lee Benaka, David Ridges-to-Reefs: Large-scale Approaches Rudders, Noelle Yochum, and Erin Wilkinson to Sustainable Ecosystem Management Recent Progress in Lionfish Research and Tuesday, August 22nd Management 9:40 AM – 5:20 PM Room: 13 Monday, August 21st 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM Moderators: Matthew Johnson, Laura Jay Grove, and Room: 16 Tauna Rankin Moderator/Chair: Pam Fuller Chairs/Organizers: Matthew Johnson and Tauna Rankin Organizers: Pam Fuller and Pamela Schofield

River Development and Fisheries Challenges Red Snapper Biology in a Changing World in Tropical River Systems Monday, August 21st Session I: Tuesday, August 22nd 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM Room: 13 Room: 23 Chairs/Organizers: Stephen Szedlmayer and Stephen Session II: Wednesday, August 23rd Bortone 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Room: 23 Chairs: Zhiqun (Daniel) Deng, Kai Lorenzen, and Stephen J. Walsh Organizers: Lee Baumgartner, Victoria Isaac, and Luiz Silva 58 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Stable Isotope Analysis in Fisheries Ecology Survival Modeling, Biotelemetry, Fish Barriers and Passage: Applying Developing Thursday, August 24th 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM Technologies to Fisheries Management Issues Room: 25 Thursday, August 24th Organizers: Julie Vecchio and Ernst Peebles 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM Room: 11

Strengthening the Connection between Moderators:/Organizers: Mark D. Bowen and Steven Habitat Science and Ecosystem-Based T. Lindley Fisheries Management Synthesis of Florida’s RESTORE Act Centers of Thursday, August 24th Excellence Fish and Wildlife Research: What 8:00 AM – 3:40 PM Room: 13 Does it Mean for Gulf Resources? Moderators: Tony Marshak and Rebecca Peters Thursday, August 24th 8:00 AM – 11:20 AM Chair: Tony Marshak Room: 6 Organizers: Stephen Brown, Tony Marshak, and Moderator/Chair/Organizer: Elizabeth Fetherston- Rebecca Peters Resch

Sturgeon and Paddlefish Recovery in North Technologies and Techniques for Thermal America: Connecting Research across a Mapping and Behavioral Responses to Heat Diverse Array of Habitats Wednesday, August 23rd Session I: Monday, August 21st 1:00 PM – 3:40 PM 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM Room: 6 Room: 11 Moderators: Douglas Bradley, Daniel Giza, Andrew Session II: Tuesday, August 22nd Todd, and Jonathan Black 9:40 AM – 5:00 PM Chairs: Douglas Bradley and Daniel Giza Room: 11 Organizer: Douglas Bradley Session III: Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM – 1:20 PM Room: 11 Ten Years of Science-Based Management in U.S. Fisheries: Progress and the Road Ahead Chair: Stephania K. Bolden Tuesday, August 22nd Organizers: Molly A. Webb and James A. Crossman 1:40 PM – 4:40 PM Room: 3 Organizers: Jacob Kritzer and Helen Takade- Heumacher

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 59 A Tutorial on Understanding of the Potential Use and Development of Offshore Resources in Effects of Sound on Fishes relation to Sustainable Fisheries and Ecosystem Services Thursday, August 24th 8:00 AM – 3:00 PM Tuesday, August 22nd Room: 4 9:40 AM – 2:20 PM Room: 18 Chair: Amy Scholik Chairs: Debra J. Murie and Jennifer Bucatari Moderators/Organizers: Amy Scholik and Eric MacMillan Organizers: Debra J. Murie, Jennifer Bucatari, and Brian Hooker Under Pressure: Defining Harvest Strategies that Account for Biological, Environmental or Using Electronic Tags to Estimate Vital Rates Anthropogenic Spatiotemporal Complexity— in Fishes Advancing Management Strategy Evaluation Thursday, August 24th Session I: Tuesday, August 22nd 8:00 AM – 6:00 PM 3:20 PM – 5:00 PM Room: 20 Room: 22 Organizers: Jeffrey A. Buckel, Julianne E. Harris, Session II: Wednesday, August 23rd Janice Kerns, Jacob Krause, Brendan Runde, 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Frederick S. Scharf, and Trevor Scheffel Room: 22 Session III: Thursday, August 24th What Can We Expect from Non-natives and 8:00 AM – 10:20 AM Climate Change? Room: 22 Wednesday, August 23rd Moderators: Daniel Goethel, Aaron Berger, Patrick 9:40 AM – 2:00 PM Lynch, and Sean M. Lucey Room: 5 Chair: Daniel Goethel Moderator: Jesse Blanchard Organizers: Daniel Goethel, Aaron Berger, Patrick Organizers: Jesse Blanchard, Jennifer Rehage, and Lynch, Sarah K. Gaichas, John F. Walter III, and Sean Quenton Tuckett M. Lucey

Understanding Impacts of Climate Change on Fish and Fisheries Session I: Wednesday, August 23rd 9:40 AM – 3:00 PM Room: 24 Session II: Thursday, August 24th 8:00 AM – 1:40 PM Room: 24 Organizers: Lisa A. Kerr and Katherine E. Mills 60 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting CONTRIBUTED PAPER SESSIONS Fish and Shellfish Biology I

Thursday, August 24th Asian Carp 8:00 AM – 4:40 PM

Room: 9 Tuesday, August 22nd 9:40 AM – 3:40 PM Moderators: Dan Daugherty, David Buckmeier, Room: 9 Claire Crowley and Andrea Dominguez Moderators: Kevin Johnson and Drew Dutterer Fish and Shellfish Biology II

Contaminants and Toxicology Thursday, August 24th 8:00 AM – 2:20 PM Tuesday, August 22nd Room: 21 2:40 PM – 5:00 PM Room: 15 Moderators: Harry Grier, Katie Woodside and Jay Holder Moderators: Kevin Owen

Fish Culture Diadromous Fishes—Tuesday Thursday, August 24th Tuesday, August 22nd 8:00 AM – 3:00 PM 2:40 PM – 5:20 PM Room: 8 Room: 12 Moderators: Jeff Buckingham, Ahmed Mustafa and Moderator: Gary Grossman Shane Ramee

Diadromous Fishes—Thursday Fish Ecology I Thursday, August 24th Thursday, August 24th 3:20 PM – 4:20 PM 2:20 PM – 4:40 PM Room: 8 Room: 14 Moderator: Reid Hyle Moderator: Scott Bisping

Endemic Species Conservation—Tuesday Fish Ecology II Tuesday, August 22nd Thursday, August 24th 3:40 PM – 5:20 PM 8:00 AM – 10:40 AM Room: 9 Room: 18 Moderator: Kayla Key Moderators: Carson Watkins and Mark Fincel

Endemic Species Conservation—Thursday

Thursday, August 24th 1:40 PM – 4:40 PM Room: 10 Moderators: David Ruppel and Kate Harriger American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 61 Fish Health Habitat and Water Quality

Tuesday, August 22nd Thursday, August 24th 2:20 PM – 4:40 PM 1:40 PM – 5:00 PM Room: 19 Room: 4 Moderator: Josh Patterson Moderators: Nick Trippel and David Gandy

Fish Movement and Biotelemetry Marine Fisheries Management I

Wednesday, August 23rd Thursday, August 24th 9:40 AM – 1:20 PM 2:40 PM – 5:00 PM Room: 16 Room: 16 Moderator: Dan Shoup Moderator: Nicholas Ducharme-Barth

Fisheries Technology Marine Fisheries Management II Monday, August 21st 3:40 PM – 5:20 PM Thursday, August 24th Room: 8 8:00 AM – 4:20 PM Room: 15 Moderator: Kim Bonvechio Moderators: Beverly Sauls, Dave Chagaris, Grant Scholten and Robert Leaf Freshwater Fisheries Management I

Tuesday, August 22nd Monitoring and Methods I 9:40 AM – 4:40 PM Room: 20 Tuesday, August 22nd 2:20 PM – 5:20 PM Moderators: Cheree Steward, Derek Chamberlin Room: 18 and Quenton Phelps Moderator: Troy Farmer Freshwater Fisheries Management II Monitoring and Methods II Thursday, August 24th 8:00 AM – 10:20 AM Tuesday, August 22nd Room: 16 8:00 AM – 3:00 PM Room: 7 Moderator: Matt Catalano Moderators: John Hargrove, Fred Scharf and Brendan Scanlon Freshwater Fisheries Management III

Thursday, August 24th Non-native Species 1:40 PM – 5:00 AM Tuesday, August 22nd Room: 19 1:40 PM – 5:00 PM Moderator: Brandon Thompson and Lee Grove Room: 24 Moderators: Leo Nico and Larry Nielsen 62 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting yourvessel A product of genuine American Ingenuity. awaits Customize your tumbler

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American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 63 Schedule of Oral Presentations Consult the AFS Annual Meetings mobile app for the latest schedule changes.

Room Room 10 Room 11 Room 12 Room 13 Time Captive Propagation Sturgeons and Paddlefish IMarine Species On the Move IRed Snapper Biology Monday Monday August 21 August

9:40 AM Strip Spawning Methodology for How Acoustic Telemetry Networks Implications for Marine Fisheries of The Utility of Trawls and Small- Captive Propagation of Broadcast Benefit Sturgeon Conservation: Meeting the 1.5°C Global Mesh Fish Traps in Providing Spawning Cyprinids in the Great Connecting Research and Warming Target Fisheries-Independent Data for Plains Researchers William Cheung Juvenile Red Snapper in the U.S. Aaron Urbanczyk Gayle Zydlewski South Atlantic Russell Brodie

10:00 AM Snake River Sockeye Salmon - Investigating Riverine Habitat of Evidence for Variable Recruitment Twenty-Five Years of Progress Sturgeons: New Approaches to of Red Snapper in the Northcentral Towards Recovery Address Information Gaps at the Gulf of Mexico Paul Kline Meso-Scale Sean Powers Adam Kaeser

10:20 AM Photothermal Conditioning and Evaluating Potential Population Future Projection of Impacts of A Coupled Biophysical Modeling Reproduction of the Endangered Monitoring Programs for Climate Change on Marine and Empirical Framework to Atlantic Sturgeon Acipenser Endangered Pallid Sturgeon in the Fisheries Catches and Revenues at Estimate Red Snapper Recruitment oxyrinchus Context of Agency Objectives and Global Scale and the Arctic Strength and Larval Transport James Henne Adaptive Management Vicky Wing Yee Lam Rates Between the Gulf of Mexico Michael Colvin and U.S. South Atlantic Mandy Karnauskas

10:40 AM Evaluating Nursery and Outplanting The Next Generation of Lake Going Deep: How and Why The Effects of Modeled Dispersed Aspects of the Population Sturgeon Recovery in Missouri Surfclam Stock Distribution Has and Undispersed Hypothetical Oil Enhancement Process for Travis Moore Changed, and Consequences to Spills on Red Snapper Stocks in the Staghorn Coral Acropora the Fishery Gulf of Mexico Cervicornis Daphne Munroe Benny Gallaway Kelli O'Donnell 11:00 AM Sensitivity of Swim-up Guadalupe Potential Impacts of Commercial Projecting the Effects of Climate The Use of Acoustic Sampling to Bass Micropterus Treculii Fry to Anchoring on Atlantic Sturgeon Change on Calanus Finmarchicus Estimate the Red Snapper Critical Habitats Distribution within the U.S. Populations in the Northern Gulf of Michael Matthews Dewayne A. Fox Northeast Continental Shelf Mexico Brian Grieve Peter Mudrak

11:20 AM Conservation Aquaculture to Linking Diet and Habitat Use with Disentangling the Effects of Using Action Cameras to Correct Support Bull Trout Recovery in Prey Distribution to Identify Benthic Climate, Abundance, and Size on for Red Snapper Depredation Glacier National Park Foraging Habitat for Juvenile the Distribution of Marine Fish: An Events during Fishery-Independent Mark Maskill Atlantic Sturgeon in the Hudson Example Based on Four Stocks Surveys in Alabama's Artificial Reef River from the Northeast US Shelf Permit Zone Justin Krebs Rich Bell Crystal Hightower

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Raising Fish in a Purpose-Built Habitat Use By Atlantic Sturgeon in Distribution Shifts Associated with High Reward Tagging to Estimate Conservation Aquaculture Facility the Hudson River Estuary Changing Environmental Red Snapper Exploitation in the Using Conservation Aquaculture Christopher W.D. Gurshin Parameters in Two Demersal Northern Gulf of Mexico Off Management Species Summer Flounder Alabama Douglas Tave (Paralichthys dentatus) and Black Dana Sackett Sea Bass (Centropristis striata) Emily Markowitz

1:20 PM Propagation of Captive Eastern Overwintering on Mississippi Sound Comparing Ocean Conditions and Comparisons of Acoustic Telemetry Hellbenders (Cryptobranchus Barrier Islands By Eastern and Groundfish Distributional Changes and Conventional Tagging Methods alleganiensis) within Intensive Western Populations of Gulf Across the Gulf of Alaska, Northern to Estimate Fishing Mortality in Red Culture Systems Sturgeon (Acipenser oxyrinchus British Columbia and West Coast of Snapper James Civiello desotoi ): Importance of Critical US Stephen Szedlmayer Habitat to Recovery Lingbo Li Page Vick

64 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 14 Room 15 Room 16 Room 18 Time Flats Fishing Aggregating Species Lionfish Research and Landscapes & Seascapes Lynn Waterhouse, Moderator Manageme nt Jessica Graham, Moderator Scott A. Heppell, Moderator Pam Fuller, Moderator

Selina Heppell, Moderator August 21 Brice X. Semmens, Moderator Monday Brian C. Stock, Moderator

1:40 PM Spatial Ecology of Permit What Happens in Real Life: The Lionfish Invasion: A Florida Mississippi Basin / Gulf (Trachinotus falcatus) in the Florida Comparing Protected and Management Perspective on Initiative - Precision Conservation Keys Unprotected Aggregation Sites in Education, Outreach, and Control Blueprint Jacob W. Bro wn scombe the Florida Keys and Its Implications Kali Spurgin Gwen White for Management Danielle Morley 2:00 PM Understanding Bonefish Dynamics Estimating Fish Abundance at Harnessing Citizen Science for Social Networking and Scientific in South Florida: Patterns, Drivers, Spawning Aggregations from Early Detection/Rapid Response Tools Help Fishers & Farmers Space and Time Courtship Sound Levels Protocol: Mitigating Non-Native Connect with Conservation Jennifer Rehage Timothy J Rowell Species Proliferation Heidi Keuler Emily Stokes

2:20 PM Building Habitat Conservation Identifying Bonefish (Albula vulpes) Forecasting Lionfish Sources and A Framework for Assessing Initiatives for Florida Keys Flats Spawning Migration Pathways and Sinks in the Atlantic Using Conditions and Prioritizing Actions Fisheries Pre-Spawning Aggregation Sites to Biophysical Modeling in the Midwest Glacial Lakes Fish Ross Boucek Ensure Long-Term Species Matthew W. Johnston Habitat Partnership Conservation Kevin Wehrly Aaron Adams

3:00 PM Using an Island-Wide Acoustic Swirling, Jumping, Burping and Risk Screening for "Other" Lionfish A Condition Assessment of Telemetry Approach to Document Farting: Pre-Spawning Aggregation in the Marine Ornamental Trade Nearshore Fish Habitat in the Great Migration Corridors and Spawning Behaviors of Bonefish (Albula Timothy J. Lyons Lakes Fish Habitat Partnership Aggregations of Bonefish, Albula vulpes) Kevin Wehrly vulpes , on Eleuthera, The Andy J. Danylchuk Bahamas Georgiana Burruss Florida Springs Robert Mattson, Moderator 3:20 PM Spawning Movements of Bonefish Counting Past Ten: Methods for Assessing the Efficacy of Lionfish Florida Springs - an Ov erview (Albula vulpes) in Grand Bahama Estimating Population Size of Removals in High-Density Artificial Robert Mattson Karen J. Murchie Species Which Form Spawning Reefs Systems in the Florida Aggregations Panhandle Lynn Waterhouse Holden Harris

3:40 PM The Bahamian Bonefishing On the Science, Politics and Performance, Benefits, and Testing What Do We Know about Fish Landscape—Science and Conservation of Nassau Grouper Needs for New Lionfish Trap Communities in Central Florida Politics (Epinephelus striatus) in the Designs Springs? David P. Philipp Cayman Islands Stephen Gittings Melissa Gibbs Brice X. Semmens

4:00 PM Panel Discussion Spawning Migrations of Atlantic Developing a Lionfish-Specific How Could Discharge Management Goliath Grouper Trap, the Next Step in Managing Affect Florida Spring Fish Robert Ellis This Invasion? Assemblage Structure? Bob Hickerson Kirsten Work

4:20 PM Spatial Ecology and Sex Ratios in Commercial Lionfish-Abstract Striped Bass Monitoring in Springs Gag Grouper: Implications for Joe Glass of the St. Johns River, Florida Management Jay Holder Joel Bickford

4:40 PM Seasonal Cycles of Gonadal From Algae to Alligators: Exploring Development and Plasma Sex Trophic Structure in Florida’s Steroid Levels in the Protogynous Spring-Run Ecosystems Gag Grouper Mycteroperca James Nifong Microlepis Jordanna N. Bergman

5:00 PM Assessing Reproductive Traits of Snowy and Warsaw Grouper in the Gulf of Mexico Hayden Staley

5:20 PM Wrap up Discussion: Biology and Management of Aggregating Species in Freshwater and Marine Systems Lynn Waterhouse

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 65 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 19 Room 20 Room 21 Room 22 Time Aquaculture Health Manageme nt Emerging Technologies in Deepwater Horizon and Cooperative Fisheries Kathleen Hartman, Moderator Fisheries-Dependent Science Fisheries I Research I and Catch Monitoring Steven Muraws ki, Moderator Angela Collins, Moderator Christopher McGuire, Moderator William Patterson III, Moderator Nick Trippel, Moderator Brett Alger, Moderator Luiz Barbieri, Moderator Richard S. McBride, Moderator Farron Wallace, Moderator David Portnoy, Moderator Jynessa Dutka-Gianelli, Moderator Jane DiCosimo, Moderator Amber Von Harten, Moderator Monday Monday August 21 August 9:40 AM Introductory Remarks Technology Investments for Impacts of Oil Exposure on Mahi A Framework for Cooperative Tomorrow's Electronic Monitoring Embryos Fisheries Research Between (EM) Programs Christina Pasparakis Scientists, Stakeholders, and Howard McElderry Citizens Richard S. McBride

10:00 AM The Wickedness of Aquaculture: Is Electronic Monitoring (EM) in the Larval Fish Assemblages in the Gulf Using Fishermen’s Ecological There a Way to Protect the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) Commercial of Mexico during the Deepwater Knowledge to Map Atlantic Cod Environment While Minimizing Reef Fish Fishery Horizon Oil Spill Spawning Grounds on Georges Economic Harm? Carole Neidig Adrianne Wilson Bank Carole Engle Gregory DeCelles

10:20 AM A Need for Change: Needs to It's All Connected Effect of Crude Oil Exposure on Assessing Spatiotemporal Trends Create a More Harmonized and Morgan Wealti Reproduction in Captive Male in Data-Poor Fisheries: Using Local Effective System for Aquatic Animal Florida Pompano Broodstock Angler Knowledge to Understand Testing and Movement Nicole Rhody Bonefish Dynamics in South Bill Keleher Florida Rolando Santos

10:40 AM Aquaculture Health Management Implementation of Electronic Too Crude: The Decline of Cardiac Cooperative Research in Action: Plan Monitoring in Alaska for Compliance Function in Gulf of Mexico Pelagic How Canary Rockfish Became the Kathleen Hartman and Catch Estimation Fish Following Oil Exposure First Marine Fish Delisted from the William Donaldson Georgina Cox ESA Dayv Lowry

11:00 AM Cahps: Opportunity of Biosecurity What You Get for What You Pay: A Impacts of Crude Oil on Capitalizing on Angler Experience in Zones Cost-Efficiency Analysis for Catch Cardiomyocyte Function in the Mahi Cooperative Fisheries Research John MacMillan Monitoring in the New England (Coryphaena hippurus) Susanna Musick Groundfish Fishery Rachael M. Heuer Anna Henry

11:20 AM Improved Profitability through Better Seatube, Satlink's on Board Genomic Analysis of Oil Effects on Lost in Translation: Reconciling Animal Health? Potential Impacts of Electronic Monitoring and Video Exploited Marine Fishes Divergent Perspectives on the a Uniform Code for Commercial Recording Solution David Portnoy Status of Gulf of Maine Cod through Aquatic Animal Health Tomas Galan Collaborative Research Jonathan van Senten Micah Dean

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM National Oceanic and Atmospheric Dr. Hwang - Opening Remarks - A Comparison of Gulf-Wide Cooperative Research with the Administration's (NOAA) Focus on Machine Learning for Big Fishery Population-Level Effects of Oil Commercial Fishing Industry: Aquatic Animal Health Management Visual Data Exposure on the Genetic Diversity Lessons Learned in a Journey to Janet Whaley of a Demersal, Sedentary, Overcome Resistance to Change Deepwater-Burrowing Fish Steve Eayrs Shannon O'Leary

1:20 PM Comparison of Commonly Used Electronic Monitoring Data Suite: Gauging Gulf-Wide Golden Tilefish Can Multiple Commercial Vessels Fish Condition Indices in Fisheries Using Commercial Vessels to Health: How Do Demersal be Used to Monitor Sea Scallop and Aquaculture and Fish Welfare Collect and Integrate Catch, Denizens of Desoto Canyon Abundance in the Mid-Atlantic? Tetsuzan Ron Environmental, and Acoustic Data Compare to Their Cuban, Mexican, Sally Roman Mark Hager and US Neighbors? Kristina Deak

66 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 23 Room 24 Room 25 Room 3 Time Imperiled Aquatic Species and Outreach, extension and Connectivity in running waters Integration of Technologies for Genomics stakeholder engageme nt I Carlos Garcia de Leaniz, Nest Gernation Marine

Marlis R. Douglas, Moderator Moderator Observation Systems and August 21 Monday Michael E. Douglas, Moderator Sofia Consuegra, Moderator Fisheries Independant Surveys I Andrew Whiteley, Moderator Guillermo R. Giannico, Moderator Ryan Caillouet, Moderator Gene Wilde, Moderator

9:40 AM Genome Coverage Vs Sequencing Meaningful Action Gives Development of a Flow-Specific Developing a Strategic Plan to Depth: A Case Study Examining Satisfaction: The Role of Floodplain Inundation Model to Transition Technology into Population Structure in the Lake Stakeholder Engagement in Assess Alligator Gar Recruitment Operations Whitefish Recreational Fisheries Success William Michaels Carly Graham Chelsey Crandall Clint Robertson

10:00 AM Effective Number of Breeders (Nb) Regional Florida Artificial Reef Evaluation of Juvenile Salmonid Using Test Beds to Conduct As a Genetic Metric for Monitoring Workshops - Planning for People Passage and Behavior at Foster Multitiered Sampling and Gear Habitat Quantity and Quality and Pisces Dam Utilizing Radio Telemetry, Calibration Experiments Andrew Whiteley Holly Abeels 2015 and 2016 Matthew Campbell Stephanie Liss

10:20 AM Experimental Test of Genetic Getting Hooked: Reeling in the Regulatory Considerations for New Developing an Optic-Acoustic Rescue in Isolated Populations of Stories of Coastal Georgia Fishers Fish Passage Technologies Method for Assessing Reef Fish in Brook Trout Robert Crimian Brian Bellgraph Untrawlable Habitats in the Zachary Robinson Southeast US J. Christopher Taylor

10:40 AM Comparative Analysis of Genetic Win-Win: Reducing User Conflict The Intricacies of Properly High Spatial Resolution Fisheries and Phenotypic Risks of Inbreeding Between Recreational and Designing a Nature-like Fishway for Ecology from Fused Optical- Across Two Different Hatchery Commercial Fishers in Lake Alosines Acoustic Technologies Management Scenarios in Chinook Michigan Bryan Sojkowski, P.E. Steven Murawski Salmon Titus Seilheimer Charles D. Waters 11:00 AM Reproductive Success in Coastal Citizen Science As an Essential Consequences of Fishway Estimating Reef Fish Abundance Pond Breeding River Herring: Tool for Fisheries Conservation: Passage Restoration on Life History and Size Distributions within Effects of Migration Timing and Bahamas Case Study and Ecology of River Herring Schools through Integration of Body Size Justin Lewis Kellie McCartin Towed Camera and EK-60 Meghna Marjadi Echosounder Data Sarah Grasty

11:20 AM Using Genotyping-in-Thousands By Integrating Research and Outreach: Reconnecting Europe’s Rivers: Using Optical and Acoustic Sequencing (GT-seq) to Uncover Lionfish Management in the US Challenges & Opportunities for the Cameras to Quantify the Response the Key Factors Influencing Virgin Islands AMBER Project of Pacific Coast Rockfishes to Reproductive Success in Chinook Tracy Yandle Carlos Garcia de Leaniz Survey Vehicles Salmon W. Waldo Wakefield Ilana Janowitz Koch

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Non-Genetic Paternal Effects on Engaging Fishery Stakehholders in Large-Scale Data for Adaptive Habitat Classification and Mapping Early Salmonid Development Applied Research and Outreach Barrier Management: The AMBER across Wide Spatial Scales Using Laetitia Wilkins Robert A. Fisher Atlas Optical and Acoustic Sensor Wouter van de Bund Fusion: The Towed and Autonomous Habcam Vehicles Scott M. Gallager

1:20 PM Climate Variability Associated with Louisiana Fisheries Forward: Conowingo Dam: An Adaptive Using Advanced Technology to Larval Lake Sturgeon and Commercial Fisheries Engagement Approach for Implementing a Enhance the Resolution of Macroinvertebrate Relative to Advance the Industry Fishway Prescription Fisheries Independent Trawl Abundance and Dispersal Timing Julie Lively Sheila Eyler Surveys Impacts Stream Predator-Prey Benjamin Woodward Dynamics Kim Scribner

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 67 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 4Room 5Room 6Room 7 Time Stressor Effects on Nutrients - Emerging Anthropogenic Bycatch Reduction Bass Diversity I Fish Relationships Pollution and its Effects on our Derek Orner, Moderator Edward S. Rutherford, Moderator Aquatic Resources I David Rudders, Moderator Doran M. Mason, Moderator Hongyan Zhang, Moderator Monday Monday

August 21 August 9:40 AM Ecological Responses to Water Keynote Address: Emerging Bycatch Avoidance Communication The Role of Taxonomy in Black Diversion of the Eastern Route of Anthropogenic Pollution and Its Network Bass Diversity and Implications for the South-to-North Water Diversion Effects on Our Aquatic Resources: Emerson Hasbrouck Jr. Management and Conservation Project (SNWDP) of China Recent Advances in Fish Kill and James M. Long Yushun Chen Pollution Event Investigations George Guillen

10:00 AM Impact of Harmful Algal Blooms in Identifying Bottom Trawl Bycatch Recent Insights into Genetic the Western Basin of Lake Erie on Hotspots and Capture-and-Handling Diversity and Population Structure Walleye Year Class Strength Practices to Reduce the Incidental Among Florida Bass and Tomena Scholze Mortality of an Overfished Species Largemouth Bass in Florida of Concern "the Thorny Skate" in Brandon Barthel the Gulf of Maine Ryan Knotek

10:20 AM A Rewired Cold-Water Food Web Vulnerability and Resilience of the Spatial Overlap and Predictive Genetic Relationships Among and Its Consequences for Fisheries Niger Delta Coastal Communities to Modeling of Pilot Whale-Longline Georgia Black Bass Production in an Invaded Pollution and Environmental Interactions in the Mid-Atlantic Bight: Bryant Bowen Ecosystem Degradation Towards a Spatiotemporal Daisuke Goto Chinatu Charity Ndimele Approach to Reducing Bycatch Julia Stepanuk

10:40 AM Modeling Nutrient Loads to Improve Investigating Relative Risk and Key Behavioral Principles Hybridization and Genetic Structure Water Quality and Maintain Fishery Food Chain Toxin Transfer of Underlying Species Separation and in ' Phenotypic Spotted Bass Production in Lake Erie Cyanotoxins Produced By Bycatch Reduction in Trawls Preston Bean Hongyan Zhang Planktonic, Benthic and Epiphytic Pingguo He Cyanobacteria Susan Wilde Best Student Paper Symposium 11:00 AM Assessing Effects of Reduced Aquatic Life Kill Resulting from a Reducing Sturgeon Bycatch While Visual Ecology of Lake Erie Fish: Nutrients and Hypoxia on Living Concentrated Ammonia Discharge Preserving Commercial Harvest: Assessing the Impacts of Increased Resources in the Gulf of Mexico to an Urban Stream Two Approaches, Two Locations, on Vision Using a Coupled Ecosystem Ryan Spidel One Species Chelsey Nieman Modeling Approach Juan Levesque Kim de Mutsert 11:20 AM Increased Relative Nearshore Assessing the Exposure of Reducing Sturgeon Bycatch While Environmental Flows for Improving Production in Lake Michigan and Microcystin Cyanotoxin to Preserving Commercial Harvests: Downriver Thermal Conditions for Implications for Fish and Fisheries Smallmouth Bass Via Diet Content Two Approaches, Two Locations, Fishes Tomas Hӧӧk Analysis in the South Branch of the One Species - (Part II) Justin Alexander Potomac River Jason Dickey Brandon Keplinger

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Welcoming Remarks Is Ocean Acidification a Real Effect Semi-Pelagic Trawl Technology for Estimating Delayed Mortality of Along the Washington Coast? Traditional Groundfish Species: Gray Triggerfish Using Surface and Yongwen Gao Reducing Overfished Flounder Bottom Tagging While Targeting Haddock Brendan Runde Pingguo He

1:05 PM Introductory Remarks

1:20 PM 2015 AFS Policy Fellowship: Recovery of a Fish Assemblage Flounder Bycatch Reduction in the Identifying the Threat of Invasive Summarizing Efforts to Conserve Following a Unique Fish Kill Caused Georges Bank Haddock Fishery: Species in the Bait Trade: Edna, Candidate, Threatened, and By Golden Algae (Prymnesium Application of a Modified European Morphology, and Survey Results Endangered Aquatic Species parvum) in the Monongahela River Grid System Matthew Snyder Patrick Shirey Watershed, West Virginia Christopher Rillahan David Wellman Jr.

68 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 8Room 9 Time Fisheries Data Manageme nt Trophic Markers Austin Happel, Moderator

Jacques Rinchard, Moderator August 21 Monday Matt Futia, Moderator

9:40 AM Data Management Begins in the Effectiveness of DNA Barcoding for Field Identifying Piscine Prey Items in Christopher F. Bonzek Stomach Contents of Piscivorous Catfishes Eric Hallerman

10:00 AM Toward a More Critical Use of Multiple Generalist Morphs of Lake Spatial Data in Fisheries Trout: Avoiding Constraints on the Management Evolution of Intraspecific Vincent Lecours Divergence? Louise Chavarie

10:20 AM Maintaining Data Consistency in a Spatiotemporal Patterns in Trophic Changing World Niche Overlap Among Five Lake Beth Wrege Michigan Salmonine Species Matthew S. Kornis

10:40 AM Tools for Tool Selection: Choosing Using Stable Isotopes to Inform Hardware/Software to Meet Fish & Management: Aspects of Niche and Wildlife Project Needs Population Subdivision in a Large Kristin Rogers Lake Whitefish Commercial Fishery Rebecca Eberts 11:00 AM Surviving Your Data: Handling Long Quantifying Differences in Otolith Term Storage and Large Datasets Chemistry of Chinook Salmon in Julie Defilippi Simpson Lake Michigan to Determine Natal Origins Alexander Maguffee

11:20 AM Using Voice Recognition Software Evaluation of Trophic Markers (Fatty to Collect Fisheries Biodata: A Acid Signatures, Stable Isotope, Proof of Concept and Stomach Content) to Assess Shawn Sitar Lake Ontario Lake Trout Diet and Its Impact on Thiamine Deficiency Complex Matt Futia 11:40 AM Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Serving Your Data on the Web - an Fatty Acid Composition of an Egg Example Result from a Robust Boon Reveals Effects of a Climate Data Structure Event on a Marine Food Web Jeff Kopaska Lee Fuiman

1:20 PM Automated Commercial Data Are All Rivers Created Equal? Transmissions from North Carolina Determining How Food Web to the ACCSP Dynamics Affect Fish Nursery Stephanie McInerny Habitat Deborah Lichti

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 69 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 10 Room 11 Room 12 Room 13 Time Captive Propagation Sturgeons and Paddlefish IMarine Species On the Move IRed Snapper Biology

1:40 PM The Marine Rearing of Anadromous Contemporary Gulf Sturgeon Ontogeny Matters: Climate Competitive Interactions Between Pacific Salmon Taken into Captive Acipenser Oxyrinchus Desotoi Variability and Effects on Fish Gray Triggerfish, Balistes Programs to Prevent Extinction Summer Holding Areas in the Distribution in the Eastern Bering Capriscus and Red Snapper, Desmond J. Maynard Pascagoula River, Mississippi Sea Lutjanus Campechanus, in the Michael J. Andres Steve Barbeaux, PhD Northern Gulf of Mexico Monday Monday

August 21 August Carrie Simmons 2:00 PM A Synthesis of Spawning and Hydrologic Effects on White Incorporating Oceanographic Timing of Opaque Band Formation Rearing Methods for Two Sturgeon Distribution in the San Indicators into Indices of Abundance in Otolith Increments of Red Endangered Southwestern Fishes: Joaquin River, California for Stock Assessment with Atlantic Snapper Loach Minnow and Spikedace Laura Heironimus Blue Marlin As an Example Erin Fedewa Kristopher Stahr Francesca C. Forrestal

2:20 PM Diet Assimilation and Energy Reintroducing Lake Sturgeon Climate-Driven Spatial Development of Genomic Tools for Distribution in Larval Lake Sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens ) to the Redistribution of Commercially Red Snapper Lutjanus Janet Genz Maumee River, OH: Habitat Valuable Species in the Pelagic Campechanus and First Assessments Using Habitat North Pacific Implementation to Study Spatial Suitability Index Models Phoebe Woodworth-Jefcoats Structure in U.S. Waters Jessica Sherman-Collier Eric Saillant

3:00 PM Comparison of Reproductive Lake Sturgeon Habitat Use in a Modeling Marine Pelagic Fish Red Snapper Reproductive Biology: Ecology and Host Fishes Among Great Lakes Connecting Channel, Species Spatiotemporal Changes Since the Populations of the Endemic Texas the Lower Niagara River Distributions Utilizing a Maximum 1990s? Fatmucket Mussel in Two Dimitry Gorsky Entropy Approach Nancy J. Brown-Peterson Tributaries of the Colorado River, Lifei Wang Central Texas Ashley Seagroves

3:20 PM Captive Propagation As a Tool for Factors Influencing Lake Sturgeon Changing Distribut ion Overlap of Why Can’t We A ll Agree? the Restoration of Southern Behaviors and Captures at the Small Marine Pelagic Fishes: Drivers Influencing Recreational Appalachian Brook Trout Menominee River Fish Elevator, Implications for Future Fisheries Red Snapper Effort in the Gulf of (Salvelinus fontinalis) and Laurel Michigan and Wisconsin Management Mexico Dace (Chrosomus saylori) in Joshua Raabe Sara Turner Carrie Simmons Tennessee Clayton Raines

3:40 PM Development of Hatchery Shortnose Sturgeon Use of the Forecasting Future Range of Sea Searching the Vault for Historical Production for Stock Enhancement Penobscot River in the First Years Scallops Using a Trophically-Linked Red Snapper Records: Improving

of Bonefish in the Florida Keys after Dam Removal Species Distribution Model: Will the Baseline for Understanding Paul Wills Catherine Johnston Climate Change Constrain Scallop Changing Stock Conditions Distribution in the Mid-Atlantic Gary R Fitzhugh Bight? Jui-Han Chang

4:00 PM Is Good Fish Culture Management Population-Level Responses of Differential Shifts in Species Artificial Reefs in the Future Harming Recovery Efforts in Sturgeon to Dam Removals in Distributions Alter Marine Species Management of Red Snapper Aquaculture-Assisted Fisheries? Maine Interactions Stephen Bortone Douglas Tave Catlin Ames Becca Selden

4:20 PM The Early Life History of Hatchery- Results of Acoustic Monitoring of Reared Guadalupe Bass Shortnose Sturgeon below the Micropterus Treculii Holyoke Dam David Prangnell Nathan Henderson

4:40 PM Captive Propagation of the Devils Costs and Consequences of Dam Hole Pupfish at the Ash Meadows Passage for Paddlefish Fish Conservation Facility Jason D. Schooley Olin Feuerbacher

5:00 PM Evaluating Reintroduction Strategies for Endangered Snake River Sockeye Salmon Eric Johnson

5:20 PM Captive Propagation of the Endangered Yellowcheek Darter Steve Lochmann

70 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 14 Room 15 Room 16 Room 18 Time Flats Fishing Aggregating Species Lionfish Research and Landscapes & Seascapes Lynn Waterhouse, Moderator Manageme nt Jessica Graham, Moderator Scott A. Heppell, Moderator Pam Fuller, Moderator

Selina Heppell, Moderator August 21 Brice X. Semmens, Moderator Monday Brian C. Stock, Moderator

1:40 PM Spatial Ecology of Permit What Happens in Real Life: The Lionfish Invasion: A Florida Mississippi Basin / Gulf Hypoxia (Trachinotus falcatus) in the Florida Comparing Protected and Management Perspective on Initiative - Precision Conservation Keys Unprotected Aggregation Sites in Education, Outreach, and Control Blueprint Jacob W. Bro wn scombe the Florida Keys and Its Implications Kali Spurgin Gwen White for Management Danielle Morley 2:00 PM Understanding Bonefish Dynamics Estimating Fish Abundance at Harnessing Citizen Science for Social Networking and Scientific in South Florida: Patterns, Drivers, Spawning Aggregations from Early Detection/Rapid Response Tools Help Fishers & Farmers Space and Time Courtship Sound Levels Protocol: Mitigating Non-Native Connect with Conservation Jennifer Rehage Timothy J Rowell Species Proliferation Heidi Keuler Emily Stokes

2:20 PM Building Habitat Conservation Identifying Bonefish (Albula vulpes) Forecasting Lionfish Sources and A Framework for Assessing Initiatives for Florida Keys Flats Spawning Migration Pathways and Sinks in the Atlantic Using Conditions and Prioritizing Actions Fisheries Pre-Spawning Aggregation Sites to Biophysical Modeling in the Midwest Glacial Lakes Fish Ross Boucek Ensure Long-Term Species Matthew W. Johnston Habitat Partnership Conservation Kevin Wehrly Aaron Adams

3:00 PM Using an Island-Wide Acoustic Swirling, Jumping, Burping and Risk Screening for "Other" Lionfish A Condition Assessment of Telemetry Approach to Document Farting: Pre-Spawning Aggregation in the Marine Ornamental Trade Nearshore Fish Habitat in the Great Migration Corridors and Spawning Behaviors of Bonefish (Albula Timothy J. Lyons Lakes Fish Habitat Partnership Aggregations of Bonefish, Albula vulpes) Kevin Wehrly vulpes , on Eleuthera, The Andy J. Danylchuk Bahamas Georgiana Burruss Florida Springs Robert Mattson, Moderator 3:20 PM Spawning Movements of Bonefish Counting Past Ten: Methods for Assessing the Efficacy of Lionfish Florida Springs - an Ov erview (Albula vulpes) in Grand Bahama Estimating Population Size of Removals in High-Density Artificial Robert Mattson Karen J. Murchie Species Which Form Spawning Reefs Systems in the Florida Aggregations Panhandle Lynn Waterhouse Holden Harris

3:40 PM The Bahamian Bonefishing On the Science, Politics and Performance, Benefits, and Testing What Do We Know about Fish Landscape—Science and Conservation of Nassau Grouper Needs for New Lionfish Trap Communities in Central Florida Politics (Epinephelus striatus) in the Designs Springs? David P. Philipp Cayman Islands Stephen Gittings Melissa Gibbs Brice X. Semmens

4:00 PM Panel Discussion Spawning Migrations of Atlantic Developing a Lionfish-Specific How Could Discharge Management Goliath Grouper Trap, the Next Step in Managing Affect Florida Spring Fish Robert Ellis This Invasion? Assemblage Structure? Bob Hickerson Kirsten Work

4:20 PM Spatial Ecology and Sex Ratios in Commercial Lionfish-Abstract Striped Bass Monitoring in Springs Gag Grouper: Implications for Joe Glass of the St. Johns River, Florida Management Jay Holder Joel Bickford

4:40 PM Seasonal Cycles of Gonadal From Algae to Alligators: Exploring Development and Plasma Sex Trophic Structure in Florida’s Steroid Levels in the Protogynous Spring-Run Ecosystems Gag Grouper Mycteroperca James Nifong Microlepis Jordanna N. Bergman

5:00 PM Assessing Reproductive Traits of Snowy and Warsaw Grouper in the Gulf of Mexico Hayden Staley

5:20 PM Wrap up Discussion: Biology and Management of Aggregating Species in Freshwater and Marine Systems Lynn Waterhouse

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 71 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 19 Room 20 Room 21 Room 22 Time Aquaculture Health Manageme nt Emerging Technologies in Deepwater Horizon and Cooperative Fisheries Kathleen Hartman, Moderator Fisheries-Dependent Science Fisheries I Research I and Catch Monitoring Steven Muraws ki, Moderator Angela Collins, Moderator Christopher McGuire, Moderator William Patterson III, Moderator Nick Trippel, Moderator Brett Alger, Moderator Luiz Barbieri, Moderator Richard S. McBride, Moderator Farron Wallace, Moderator David Portnoy, Moderator Jynessa Dutka-Gianelli, Moderator Jane DiCosimo, Moderator Amber Von Harten, Moderator

1:40 PM Effiacacy of a Live Attenuated How a New Generation of Private Gulf-Wide Analysis of PAH Use of an Industry Work Group Edwardsiella Ictaluri Vaccine in and Public Instrumentation Can Exposure and Accumulation in Process to Develop Technical Monday Monday Channel and Hybrid Catfish Benefit the Fleet, the Environment, Golden Tilefish Solutions to North Carolina's August 21 August Nagaraj Chatakondi the Scientific and Regulatory Susan Snyder Shrimp Trawl Bycatch Communities Sara E. Mirabilio Christopher Rezendes Pelagic Fish Seascapes Stephen Brandt, Moderator Doran Mason, Moderator 2:00 PM Characterizing Habitat Use of Video, GPS and Mobile Phone What Can Bile Tell Us about the Shrimp Black Gill Tracker, a New Pacific Sleeper Sharks in the North Electronic Monitoring Applications Health of the Gulf of Mexico? Smartphone Application to Facilitate Pacific Ocean from Time-Series for Rural Small Scale Fishing Erin Pulster Shrimper Participation in Monitoring Analysis of Archived Electronic Tag Vessels in Developing Countries the Prevalence of Black Gill Data and Environmental Data Alfredo Sfeir-Camarena Bryan Fluech Dean Courtney

2:20 PM Hypoxia Impacts on Small Pelagic Development of Economical, Unintended Consequences of the Determining the Utility of Electronic, Fishes: Insights from High- Portable Electronic Monitoring Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: Self-Reported Recreational Data for Frequency Acoustic Sensing Systems for Small Vessels Collapse of the Iconic Oyster Fisheries Stock Assessment Cassandra Glaspie Operating in Small-Scale Fisheries Fishery in Apalachicola Bay, Robert Ahrens O. Jacob Isaac-Lowry Florida Romuald Lipcius

3:00 PM Applications of Ocean Heat Content Integrated Operational Approach to Shrimp Fisheries Resiliency to Cooperative Research - to Define Dynamic Ocean Habitat Fisheries Electronic Monitoring and Mega Oil Blowouts Stakeholder Engagement for Use By Large Pelagic Fishes Reporting (EMR) On board Fishing Adolfo Gracia Bycatch Reduction and Fisheries Jiangang Luo Vessels: Now and Tomorrow Management Strategies Greg Hammann Emerson Hasbrouck Jr.

3:20 PM Habitat Utilization of Juvenile Open Source Software Platform for Quantifying Pelagic Habitat Use By Cooperative Research Onboard Atlantic Menhaden in the Patuxent Electronic Monitoring Lanternfishes in the Northern Gulf of Charterboats to Evaluate Hook River Watershed Eric Torgerson Mexico Performance, Selectivity, and Hongsheng Bi Rosanna Milligan Management Alternatives for Red Snapper in the Northern Gulf of Mexico Steven B. Garner

3:40 PM Satellite-Derived Seascapes: A Query Learning for Fish Variations in the Parasite Fauna Real-Time Data from Real-Life Framework for Monitoring Fisheries Identification Based on Uncertainty and Gut Contents of Vertically Anglers: Using Cooperative in Dynamic Oceanic Habitats Measure and Diversity Constraint Migrating and Non-Migrating Research and Acoustic Telemetry Maria Kavanaugh Gaoang Wang Mesopelagic Fishes of the Northern to Assess Efficacy of Gulf of Mexico Mitigation Techniques and Long- Matthew S. Woodstock Term Survival of Groupers after Recreational Catch and Release Angela Collins 4:00 PM Echosounders in Ocean Gliders: Intelligent Monitoring Systems for Reproductive Ecology of Top Discarding Behavior, Usage and Simultaneous Measures of Fishery Applications Mesopelagic Predators in the Gulf Attitudes Towards Descender Oceanography and Pelagic Farron Wallace of Mexico Devices on Northern Gulf of Mexico Plankton and Fishes Alex Marks Reef Fish Charter Vessels J. Christopher Ta ylor Erin Bohaboy

4:20 PM Complex Vertical Commuting of Cloud and Machine Learning Cellular- to Co mm unity-Level Mesopelagic Scattering Layers: Technologies for Electronic Effects of the Deepwater Horizon Implications of Taxonomic-Based Monitoring Data Processing and Oil Spill on Deep Demersal Fishes: Migration Decisions on Global Analysis Six Years Monitoring Recovery in Biological Fluxes Penghai Wang Sharks, Teleosts and Hagfishes Kevin M. Boswell Jim Gelsleichter

4:40 PM Why Tag a Captive Fish? Improving Fishface: Exploring the Use of Our Understanding of Habitat Image Recognition Software in Utilization, Migration Patterns, and Fisheries Management; Examples Spawning Behaviors in Wild Mahi- from Indonesia and the Western Mahi (Coryphaena hippurus) Central Pacific Lela S. Schlenker Christopher McGuire

5:00 PM Resmo: Patterns of Residence and Accelerating the Development of Movement Across Sites Can Automated Fish Identification for EM Provide Novel Insights into Field Systems: An Example from New Distribution of Mobile Consumers in England Groundfish Pelagic Ecosystems Benjamin Woodward Martha E. Mather 5:20 PM Tracking and Measurement of Catch Events in Stereo Video for Longline Fisheries Tsung-Wei Huang

5:40 PM Panel Discussion

72 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 23 Room 24 Room 25 Room 3 Time Imperiled Aquatic Species and Outreach, extension and Connectivity in running waters Advancements in Marine Genomics stakeholder engageme nt I Carlos Garcia de Leaniz, Observation Systems and Marlis R. Douglas, Moderator Moderator Surveys I August 21

Michael E. Douglas, Moderator Sofia Consuegra, Moderator Ryan Caillouet, Moderator Monday Andrew Whiteley, Moderator Guillermo R. Giannico, Moderator Gene Wilde, Moderator

1:40 PM Diversity at MHC in the Endangered Development and Implementation of Effects of Flood-Control A Comparison of Methods to Rio Grande Silvery Minnow Is a Quota Valuation Calculator for Impoundments on Community Estimate Abundance and Biomass Maintained By Spatio-Temporal IFQ Fishers Structure of Stream Crayfish and from Belt Transect Surveys Variation in Parasite Communities Andrew Ropicki Their Fish Predators Dvora Hart Megan Osborne Zanethia Barnett

2:00 PM All Dressed up and Nowhere to Go: Use of a Mail Survey to Understand Examination of Fish, Crayfish, From Traditional Sampling to Adaptive Variation in a Unique Life North Carolina Saltwater Angler Mussels, and Habitat in Transitional Acoustic Cameras: Use of History of Lahontan Cutthroat Trout Education Needs and Information Reaches Upstream of Lewis Smith Complementary Approaches to in a Mountain-to-Desert Terminal Delivery Preferences Reservoir, Alabama Provide Novel Perspectives of Fish Lake System M. Scott Baker Jr. Craig N. Roghair Community Structure in Tidally Helen Neville Influenced Areas David Ayers 2:20 PM Assessment of Genetic Structuring, Patterns and Determinants of Sustaining the Lake-River-Sea Quantifying Potential Bias of Morphological Variation, and Barotrauma Mitigation Tool Use in Connectivity for Conservation of an Planktonic Invertebrates in Acoustic Hybridization Between Prairie Chub Reef Fisheries in the Southeastern Iconic Migratory Fish Coilia Nasus Surveys of Prey-Fish Density (Macrhybopsis australis) and Shoal United States: The Power of in the Yangtze River, China Rebecca A. Dillon Chub (M. hyostoma) Subjective Norms Jian Yang Alex Sotola Chelsey Crandall

3:00 PM Differential Introgression Suggests Fisheries Forums: Exploring The Effects of Inter-Basin Water Hydroacoustic Surveys Reveal an a Mosaic Hybrid Zone in Gila of the Potentials and Limitations of Place- Transfers on the Population Anthropogenically Mediated Colorado River Basin Based Approaches to the Connectivity of Fishes Environmental Disturbance and Its Tyler Chafin Management of Florida’s Bjorn Schmidt Impact on Coastal Fish Community Coastal Fisheries Dynamics Kai Lorenzen Benjamin M Binder

3:20 PM Phylogenetic Divergence and Angler Spatial Ranges: Implications Macroinvertebrate Community Initial Efforts to Integrate Acoustic Reproductive Compatibility: An for Stakeholder Engagement and Response to Long-Term Flow Mapping and Optical Biotic Data to Examination of Hybridization and Place-Based Marine Recreational Modification on the Tallapoosa Develop a Unified Reef Fish Survey Introgression in Endemic and Fisheries Management River, Alabama Design for the Eastern Gulf of Introduced Suckers (Pisces: Ed Camp Kristie Ouellette Mexico Catostomidae) in the Colorado Theodore Switzer

River Ecosystem of Western North America Using Ddrad Max Bangs 3:40 PM Riverscape Genomics of Speckled Participatory Mapping: Putting A Full-Scale Fishway Entrance A Novel Habitat-Based Approach for Dace Differ By Basin in Western Fisheries Stakeholders on the Right Experiment Performed at the USGS Combining Indices of Abundance of North America Spot Conte Anadromous Fish Research Reef Fishes from Multiple Fisheries- Steven Mussmann Jynessa Dutka-Gianelli Laboratory Independent Video Surveys Kevin Mulligan Kevin Thompson

4:00 PM A First Genetic Assessment of the Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Spatial Pattern of Larval Fish in the Queen Triggerfish, Balistes Vetula, the Effects of Hydroelectric Dam Middle and Lower Reaches of the in the Caribbean Region Using Construction on Madeira Basin Yangtze River: Influences of the Double Digest RAD Sequencing Fisheries Systems, Brazilian Three Gorges Dam and River-Lake Eric Saillant Amazon Connectivity Carolina Doria Songguang Xie 4:20 PM Genotyping By Sequencing and Using the Atoll Program for Fishes of the Upper New River: Analyses of Geographic Genetic Outreach, Extension, Secondary Assessing Longitudinal Differences Structure to Guide Conservation of and Postsecondary Education in Fish Assemblages Above and the World's Largest Salmonid, Tetsuzan Ron below a Dam in Southwest Hucho taimen Virginia Lanie Galland Hae Kim

4:40 PM Genetic and Genomic Approaches Engaging Stakeholders in a Assessing Longitudinal Patterns in Improve Our Understanding of Fisheries Governance Transition Freshwater Mussel, Crayfish, and Ecology and Drive Conservation Joy Hazell Other Benthic Macroinvertebrate Action in the Mekong Assemblages Above and below a Vittoria Elliott Hydroelectric Dam in the Upper New River, Virginia Caitlin Carey 5:00 PM Riverscape Genomics of Golden Challenges and Benefits of Using Mahseer in Bhutan: A Journey Back Stakeholders in Natural Resource to the Headwaters? Decision Making: The Missouri Marlis R. Douglas River Example Michael Mac

5:20 PM Discussion

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 73 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 4Room 5Room 6Room 7 Time Stressor Effects on Nutrients - Emerging Anthropogenic Bycatch Reduction Best Student Paper Symposium Fish Relationships Pollution and its Effects on our Derek Orner, Moderator Edward S. Rutherford, Moderator Aquatic Resources I David Rudders, Moderator Doran M. Mason, Moderator Hongyan Zhang, Moderator

1:40 PM Testing Canopy Cover As a Factor Anthropogenic Eutrophication in Artificial Light: Its Effect on the Linkage of Fish Mass-Abundance Monday Monday Affecting Habitat Quality of Ponds and Small Lakes and Overall Escapement of Chinook Relationships and Trophic Metrics August 21 August Okaloosa Darters Responses By the Cooperative Salmon out a Bycatch Reduction to Land Cover, Species Howard L. Jelks Extension Service in Georgia Device Composition, and Flow Regimes in Gary Burtle Mark J.M. Lomeli Headwater Streams Kevin M. Fraley 2:00 PM Potential Pathways for Impacts Spatio-Temporal Analysis of Sixty- Estimating and Mitigating Discard Evaluation of Sublethal Effects of from Cooling Water Intakes on Host Five Years of Fish Kills in Texas Mortality in Recreational Fisheries: Insecticide Fipronil on Brown Fish for Federally Listed Freshwater Sarah Haas Case Studies from the Northeast Shrimp and White Shrimp Mussels and Implications Under the U.S Ali Albadran Clean Water Act §316(b) Rules Douglas Zemeckis Brandon Johnson

2:20 PM Managing Spawning and Nursery Replacement Values for Fish and Determining Effective Release Effects of Sublethal Stressors on Habitat for the Endangered Rio Freshwater Mussel Kills Methods for Reducing Discard Topeka Shiner (Notropis topeka) Grande Silvery Minnow Robert Southwick Mortality in the Gulf of Mexico Red Michael Porter Snapper Recreational Fishery Rory Mott Alex K. Tompkins

3:00 PM Effectively Confronting the Certainty Investigation and Monetary Values Testing the Efficacy of Effect of Spatial Scale and Habitat of Hydrologic Scarcity to Conserve of Fish and Freshwater Mussel Kills Recompression Devices in on the Distribution of Black Sea an Endangered Species in the Rio Methodologies and Procedures Reducing Discard Mortality of Reef Bass and White Grunt Grande of New Mexico Survey Fish in the Eastern Gulf of Margaret Walker Michael Hatch Bryant Bowen Mexico Oscar Ayala

3:20 PM Balancing Habitat Needs for Multiple Unseen Fish Kills? Examining the Break Listed Species in a Channelized Effects of Harmful Algal Blooms on Riverine System (Sacramento Early Life Stages of Estuarine Fish River, California), Green Sturgeon Konstantine Rountos Vs. Delta Smelt Vs. Salmon and Steelhead Brian M. Mulvey

3:40 PM Discussion Effects of an Intake Barrier Curtain Identifying Conservation to Reduce Algae : Opportunities for Eastern Brook The Iron Gate Dam Experience Trout Using Riverscape Genetics Andy Peters Lucas Nathan

4:00 PM Quantifying Harvestable Fish Enhancement and Their Economic Values from Oyster Reefs in Mobile Bay, Alabama Quan Lai

4:20 PM Incorporating Uncertainty Due to Imperfect Sex Identification into Fisheries Assessment Models Henry Hershey

4:40 PM Development and Validation of Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Markers from Genotyping-By- Sequencing (GBS) for Parentage Assignment in the Florida Bass (Micropterus floridanus) Honggang Zhao 5:00 PM

5:20 PM

74 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Monday, August 21 Room Room 8Room 9 Time Fisheries Data Manageme nt Trophic Markers Austin Happel, Moderator Jacques Rinchard, Moderator August 21

Matt Futia, Moderator Monday

1:40 PM Data Management for Data Sharing: Fatty Acids Differentiate Between Who Needs It Anyway? Consumed Diets Despite Variation Andrew Loftus within Prey Species’ Profiles Austin Happel

2:00 PM Considering an Existing Application In Utero Vertebral Microchemical As a Solution for Your Agency's Signatures in Hammerhead Shark Fisheries Database Needs As a Proxy for Habitat Use and Karen Horodysky Dispersion Patterns in Pregnant Females Claire Coiraton

2:20 PM Defining a Systematic Protocol to Unraveling Sources and Pathways Collect River Fisheries Data of Selenium Exposure in Wild Globally Sacramento Splittail with Spinal Zeenatul Basher Deformities Rachel Johnson, PhD

3:00 PM How I Learned to Stop Worrying Insulin-like Growth Factor I (IGF-I) and Love the Standardization of As a Physiological Biomarker for Iowa’s Creel Data Growth Rate in Juvenile Sebastes Rebecca M. Krogman Rockfishes Nicole Hack

3:20 PM Creel Data: Sorting thro ugh the Occurrence of Environmental Rubbish Estrogens and Intersex Fish in an Keith Hurley Agriculturally Intensive Watershed Matthew Urich

3:40 PM Fast Fish Tracking Mechanism in System for Ocean Ranching Rui Nian

4:00 PM Techniques for Using Simple, Inexpensive High-Definition Video Technology to Film Aquatic Organisms Underwater Taylor Ulrich

4:20 PM Advances in Automated Stock Assessment Based on Computer Vision Deep Learning Technologies David Zhang

4:40 PM Density and Distribution of Pelagic Fishes in Reservoirs with Expanding Populations of Introduced Blueback Herring Ryan Bart

5:00 PM Olrac Electronic Logbook Solution for Bycatch Monitoring and Avoidance in the U.S. Scallop Fishery: A Case Study Amos Barkai

5:20 PM

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 75 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 10 Room 11 Room 12 Room 13 Time Redefining Darwinian Fisheries Sturgeon and Paddlefish II Marine Species on the Move II Large-scale Coral Reef Michael Kinnison, Moderator Ecosystem Manageme nt Stephanie Carlson, Moderator Matthew Johnson, Moderator Laura Jay Grove, Moderator Tauna Rankin, Moderator 9:40 AM An Introduction to Redefining Reproductive Ecology of How Accurate Should We Expect A Long-Term Perspective: Trends Darwinian Fisheries Shovelnose Sturgeon Fish Distribution Models to be of Reef Fishes in the Florida Keys Michael Kinnison (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus) in When We Project to Future Climate Laura Jay Grove the Wabash River Conditions? Jessica L. Thornton Andrew Allyn

10:00 AM Ecological Footprints of Fishing- Application of a Depletion-Based Testing the Reliability of Species Defining Ecological Connectivity Induced Evolution on Populations Stock Reduction Analysis (DB- Distribution Models: How Stable Are Based on Reef Fish Spatial and and Ecosystems SRA) to Lake Erie Lake Sturgeon Relationships Between Fishes and Temporal Distribution Patterns: Anna Kuparinen John A. Sweka Oceanographic Conditions in the Towards Ecosystem Based Southern California Current Management of US Caribbean Ecosystem? Coral Reefs Rebecca Asch Mark E Monaco Tuesday Tuesday August 22 August 10:20 AM Lake Champlain Sturgeon: Identifying Candidate Fisheries for Appropriate Spatial Scales to Characterizing the Spawning Run Climate Adaptation from Predictions Survey Coral Reefs for Using Acoustic Technology of Thermal Habitat Shifts Management and Recovery Lisa Izzo James Morley Robert Schroeder

10:40 AM How Evolution Impacts the Stock Population Dynamics and Marine Species Distribution Shifts Coral Reef Community Structure in Assessment Models Used to Inform Management of White Sturgeon in on the U.S. Northeast Continental La Parguera Natural Reserve Ten Fisheries Management Decisions the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Shelf Under Continued Ocean Years after the Last Mass Erin S. Dunlop Basin Warming Mortalities Shannon Blackburn Kristin Kleisner Miguel Figuerola

11:00 AM Thirty-Five Experimental Fisheries Recruitment and Overwinter Shifting Species, Shifting Relative Resilience Potential and Reveal the Mechanisms of Survival of Juvenile Gulf Sturgeon in Fisheries? Climate Vulnerability of Coral Reefs Selection and the Influence of the the Apalachicola River, FL Katherine E. Mills Along the West Coast of Hawai’I Environment Nathaniel Hancock Island Sebastien Nussle Eric Conklin

11:20 AM Consequences of Behavior- Residents, Migrants, or Both? Adaptation of Fish and Fishing Challenges to the Effective Selective Fishing: Reduced Evaluating Population Dynamics Communities to Rapid Climate Management of Akumal Reef in Cannibalism Propensity in Eurasian and Movement of Paddlefish Change - Evidence and Knowledge Mexico: Different Tools, Partial Perch Polyodon Spathula in a Regulated from Transdisciplinary Research Answers Laura Hӓrkӧnen System Eva Papaioannou Ana Lilia Molina-Hernández Chelsea Gilliland

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Fisheries Feedbacks from Harvest- Status of Atlantic Sturgeon in Species Migration and the Socioeconomic Monitoring through Mediated Coevolution Georgia Implications for Social Impacts Noaa's National Coral Reef Zachary Wood Adam Fox within Fisheries Management in the Monitoring Program (NCRMP) Southeastern Region of the US Matthew Gorstein Michael Jepson

1:20 PM Recreational Fisheries Induced Occurrence and Movements of Moving Targets: Should Fisheries Integrative Complexity and Evolution: Searching for Evidence Atlantic Sturgeon in the St. Marys Management be Revised to Meet Management of Acceptable Among Offspring of Fished and River, Georgia the Challenges of Climate Tradeoffs in Coral Reef Unfished Wild Largemouth Bass Adam Fox Change? Ecosystems Jason Vokoun Susan Farady Mary Allen

76 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 14 Room 15 Room 16 Room 18 Time Bass Diversity II Fish and Extreme Events Social Science in Fisheries Offshore Resources and Cassandra Glaspie, Moderator Manageme nt Fisheries

9:40 AM Florida Largemouth Bass Stocking Fishes Around Small Oil and Gas Achieving Efficient and Fair Fishery Introductory Remarks in Tennessee Reservoirs Platforms in the Northern Gulf of Allocation--New, Practical Methods Debra J. Murie Frank Fiss Mexico's Hypoxic Zone: Changes in Christopher Dumas Relative Abundances and Depth Distributions David Reeves

10:00 AM A Uniquely Texas Perspective on Modeling Suggests Hurricanes Using Social Network Analysis to Monitoring Marine Sand & Gravel Black Bass Management Accelerated the Florida Bahamas Evaluate the Socioeconomic Extraction: The UK Approach

Craig Bonds Lionfish Invasion Impacts of Rights-Based Joni Backstrom August 22 Matthew W. Johnston Management Tuesday Andrew Ropicki

10:20 AM Black Bass Management - Some A Series of Disturbances in Florida Small-Scale Fishers’ Habitat Preferences and Alternative Perspectives Tests the Resilience of Coastal Perceptions about the Performance Seasonality of Coastal Sharks Gene Gilliland Fisheries of Seasonal Closures in the Associated with a Large Sand Philip Stevens Commonwealth of Puerto Rico Shoal Complex at Cape Canaveral, Juan Agar Florida: Insights from a Multi-Year Longline Survey Eric Reyier

10:40 AM An Angler’s Perspective: Kayak Numerical Response of an Apex Fishery Management Councils and Use of Acoustic Telemetry to Fishing Wild Waters for Black Predator, the Tiger Shark, to Economic Analysis Examine Habitat Preferences, Bass Ecosystem-Scale Seagrass Loss Matthew Freeman Seasonality, and Movement of Drew Gregory Robert Nowicki Managed Fish Species Associated with a Large Sand Shoal Complex at Cape Canaveral, Florida Stephanie Watwood

11:00 AM One Man's Pest Is Another’s Shift in Coastal Fishing Catches in Applying Social-Ecological Systems Utilizing Acoustic Telemetry to Trophy the Everglades National Park As a (SES) Analysis to Unassessed Characterize Site Fidelity of Olaf L. F. Weyl Function of an Extreme Cold Event Fisheries Neonate and Juvenile Scalloped Rolando Santos Tracy Yandle Hammerhead in a Nursery Off Cape Canaveral, Florida Douglas Scheidt

11:20 AM The Native Black Bass Initiative North Pacific Chinook Salmon The Expanded Use of Social Do You Have Your Exit Buddy?: Vance Crain Habitat Quality in Response to Indicators within Fisheries Using Acoustic Telemetry to Climate Regime Shifts Management in the Southeastern Examine Red Drum Dyad Travel Cassandra Glaspie Region of the US Distance, Duration, and Stability Off Michael Jepson Cape Canaveral, Florida Bonnie Ahr

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Development of a Rangewide The Legacy of Tropical Storm An Elusive Consensus: Habitat Use and Residency of the Conservation Plan for Guadalupe Agnes: Ecological Catastrophe, Heterogeneity Across Fishery Smooth Butterfly Ray in a Coastal Bass Population Decline, and Fisheries Stakeholder Engagement, Ridge and Swale System Following Preston Bean Crisis in an Altered Ecosystem Dependence, and Social Objectives Dredging Activity Rochelle Seitz Makes Catch Shares a Hard Sell in Daryl C. Parkyn the Gulf of Alaska Mike Downs

1:20 PM Development of an Detecting the Gulf of Mexico’s Sustainability Assessment, The Seasonal Occurrence of Interjurisdictional, Rangewide Response to Hurricane Katrina Via Ecosystem Management and Atlantic Sturgeon in Relation to the Management Plan for Shoal Bass a Suite of Ecosystem Indicators Caribbean Reef Fisheries: The Use and Development of Offshore Steven Sammons Mandy Karnauskas Impact of Shore-based Activities on Resources in the Mid-Atlantic the St. Croix Fisheries Region Brent Stoffle Carter Watterson

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 77 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 19 Room 20 Room 21 Room 22 Time Fish Welfare - Symposium Freshwater Fisheries Deepwater Horizon and Cooperative Fisheries Research Craig Watson, Moderator Manageme nt I Fisheries II II

9:40 AM How Fish Became Warm-Blooded Development of a Fish-Based IBI The Need for Surveying before More Collaboration + More Data + in the U.S for Lakes in Eastern South Dakota Exploitation: Post Hoc Analysis after More Trust = Better Management - Craig Watson Daniel Nelson Deepwater Horizon Reveals Building an Equation for Enhancing Exceptional Deep-Pelagic Federal Fisheries Management Biodiversity and Endemicity in the Using a Citizen Science Approach Deep Gulf of Mexico Amber Von Harten Tracey Sutton

10:00 AM Diversity and Distribution of Fish Faunal Composition and How to Attract and Keep Species in Lake Asejire Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Tuna Volunteers: Understanding Mabel Ipinmoroti (Family: Scombridae) Early Life Motivations and Barriers to Stages in the Oceanic Gulf of Participation in a Volunteer Angler Mexico Data Program Nina Pruzinsky Chelsey Crandall

Tuesday Tuesday 10:20 AM Fish Welfare: A Producers View Diversity and Growth Performance Spatial and Temporal Patterns of Using Volunteers As a Capability August 22 August John MacMillan of Fish Species in a Dredged Billfish Distribution and Abundance Multiplier Rivers Niger and Benue, Kogi State, in the Gulf of Mexico after the James Reed Nigeria Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Samuel Awolumate Michael A. Dance

10:40 AM Using Volunteers As a Capability Behavioral Response of Mahi-Mahi Trophycatch: Florida's Trophy Bass Multiplier (Coryphaena hippurus) and Bicolor Citizen-Science Program James Reed Damselfish (Stegastes partitus) to Jessica Feltz Olfactory Cues Following Crude-Oil Exposure from the Deepwater Horizon Event Lela S. Schlenker

11:00 AM What Do You Call It When You Kill Utilizing a Bus Route Creel Survey Evidence of Petrocarbon in Upper Evaluation of Florida's Trophycatch a Fish? to Characterize Recreational Trophic Levels of Northern Gulf of Program Kathleen Hartman Fishing at Lake Mattamuskeet in Mexico Food Web Via Radiocarbon Andrew Dutterer 2014 Analysis Kevin Dockendorf Beverly K. Barnett

11:20 AM Post-Release Survival and The Diet of the Spotted Seatrout A Sea of Saws: Sourcing Movement of Lake Trout Stocked at after a Large Ecosystem Morphometric and Genetic Data Four Historical Spawning Sites in Disturbance, the Deepwater from Citizen Science, Museum Lake Michigan Horizon Oil Spill Archives and Professional Matthew S. Kornis Drew Rosati Collaborations to Improve Conservation Efforts of the Highly Threatened Sawfishes Jeff Whitty

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Proactive Approaches to Fish Interactions Between Fluctuating Acute and Chronic Impacts of the Mobilizing Citizen Scientists to Welfare - Examples from the Hypoxic Zones and Commercial Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill on Red Inform Management of the Data- Recreational Fishing Realm Trap Netting Activity in the Lake Erie Snapper in the Northern Gulf of Poor Horseshoe Crab Fishery in Steven J. Cooke Yellow Perch (Perca flavescens) Mexico Florida Fishery William F. Patterson III Savanna Barry Derek Chamberlin

1:20 PM Is Culvert Darkness a Behavioral How Resilient Are Gulf of Mexico Engaging Anglers to Provide Barrier to Topeka Shiner Passage? Shelf Fish Communities to Large- Scientifically-Based Recreational Britney Mosey Scale Disturbances? Fisheries Data in Support of Steven Muraws ki Assessment and Management: Successes and Next Steps Brett Fitzgerald

78 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 23 Room 24 Room 25 Room 3 Time Sustaining diverse fisheries in Outreach, extension and Marine Ar tificial Reef I Integration of Technologies tropical rivers I stakeholder engageme nt I Bill Lindberg, Moderator For Next Generation Marine Gregory W. Stunz, Moderator Observation Systems and Steve Schroeter, Moderator Fisheries Independent Surveys II

9:40 AM Influences of Conservation Units Challenges and Successes of Sustainable Fisheries on Artificial Envisioning the Future of Aquatic and Local Management Systems on Stakeholder Engagement in Federal and Natural Reefs Depend on the Animal Tracking: Technology, Fish Biomass in Clear and Black Fisheries Management Conservation of Critical Habitats in Science, and Application Water Rivers of the Brazilian Emily Muehlstein the Surrounding Ecosystem Robert Lennox Amazon John Caddy Renato Silvano

10:00 AM Are Landscape Components Stakeholder Engagements Drive Spatial and Temporal Reproductive August 22

Structuring Fish Assemblages in Policy and Management in Behaviors of Cynoscion Nebulosus Tuesday Amazonian Floodplain Lakes? Cambodia’s Inland Fishery in an Aggregation Site: A Multiyear Carlos Freitas Vittoria Elliott Telemetry Study Katherine Zarada

10:20 AM Mekong River Fish Ecology The Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Keynote Discussion Development and Application of Full Information Gap Assessment and Institute’s Fisheries for Fishers Steve Schroeter Spherical Camera Technology for Capacity Building in Laos Program Monitoring Fish Stephen J. Walsh LeRoy Creswell Ryan Caillouet

10:40 AM Diadromous Fishes in the Mekong Advancing Freshwater Biodiversity Habitat Is Habitat - How Temperate Are Limited Field of Views Limiting River: A Review Conservation through Public Marine Fishes Move Around Artificial Elasmobranch Conservation Vi An Vu Aquarium Collaboration and Natural Reefs Efforts? Implications for Baited Karen J. Murchie Christopher Lowe Remote Underwater Video Surveys James Kilfoil

11:00 AM FISH Migration in Tropical River of Working with the Fisheries Implications of Habitat Selection Integrating Unclassified Military Indonesia Profession to Prevent the Selective Theory for Artificial Reefs in Technologies into Fisheries Arif Wibowo Spread of the Asian Jumping Worm Fisheries Management Surveys (Amynthas spp) By Anglers through Bill Lindberg Chris L. Gardner Bait and Their Recreational Activities Samuel Chan 11:20 AM Determining Migration Corridors for Making a Splash with Freshwater The Rio Grande Valley Reef: Automated Image Analysis and Key Commercial, Subsistence and Education Programs Incorporation of Low-Profile Nursery Classification Tool Based on Conservation Freshwater Fish in Craig N. Roghair Areas into Artificial Reef Design Computer Vision Deep Learning Irrawaddy River Basin, Myanmar Richard J. Kline Technologies John Conallin Michael Piacentino

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Movements of Large Catfish Florida Fish and Wildlife Is Creating The Charleston Deep Reef-South Online Fish Behavior Analysis with Upstream and Downstream of Four the Next Generation That Carolina's Artificial Reef Marine Remotely Operated Vehicles Big Dams, before and after Cares Protected Area Rui Nian Impoundment, in the Brazilian Kathryn Guindon Melvin Bell Amazon Lisiane Hahn 1:20 PM Development of Fishway Design Outreach, Extension and A Comparison of Fish Community Panel Discussion Criteria for Floodplain Species of Stakeholder Engagement in Structure at Mesophotic Artificial the Lower Mekong Basins Fisheries: Lessons Learned Reefs and Natural Banks in the Douangkham Sinhanouvong, Garry Kai Lorenzen Western Gulf of Mexico Thorncraft, Oudom Jennifer J. Wetz Phonekhampeng, Lee Baumgartner and Tim Marsden Douangkham Singhanouvong

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 79 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 4Room 5Room 6Room 7 Time Nutrient Cycling and Energy Emerging Anthropogenic Linking Inland Fisheries to The Power of Diversity and Flow Pollution and its Effects on our Global Policies in Sustainable Inclusion Daniel Weaver, Moderator Aquatic Resources II Development I Elizabeth Tristano, Moderator Joseph Zydlewski, Moderator 9:40 AM “Closing the Loop” The Effects of Pollution from Global Inland Fisheries and Their A Truly Inclusive Environment - Anadromous Sea Lamprey Hydraulic Fracturing to the Natural Contribution to Development and Managing Unconscious Bias in the Carcasses Influence Larval Resources in Two Texas Streams the Achievement of the Sustainable Workplace Conspecifics Greg Conley Development Goals Tony Chatman

10:00 AM Linking Aquatic-Terrestrial Habitats A Never-Ending Cocktail Hour for Inland Fisheries - Invisible but Harnessing the Power of Diversity through Resource and Process the Ouachita River, Arkansas Integral to the UN Sustainable and Inclusion - Game Changing Subsidies: Insights from Too Few Jason Olive Development Agenda for Ending Solutions for Enhancing Diversity Salmon and Too Many Carp Poverty By 2030 and Inclusion in the Fisheries Scott F. Collins Abigail J. Lynch Profession Richard Merrick

10:20 AM Impacts of Silver Carp Present and Future with Inland Fisheries As the Driver of Green 2.0 Decomposition on Nutrient Dioxins: Deadly Bidirectional Fisheries Sector in India - Erika West Pathways in Native Communities Arrows Occurring in the Rivers, Analyzing Its Contribution in Tuesday Tuesday

August 22 August Elizabeth Tristano Seas, in Living Organisms and in Addressing Nutritional Security of Our Homes the Country Ryszard Traczyk Piyashi DebRoy

10:40 AM Variation in Resource Subsidies Assessment of Synthetic Dye Inland Fisheries Support Promoting Diversity and Inclusion in Along Ecological and Latitudinal Wastes on the Histopathology of Sustainable Development and Fisheries Science: From Stats to Gradients in Alaska Tilapia Zillii in Lower Ogun River, Conservation Aims - a Case-Study Action Steps Mark Wipfli Abeokuta, Nigeria from the Mekong Brooke Penaluna Mabel Ipinmoroti Vittoria Elliott

11:00 AM Effects of Land-Based Nutrient Considering Sublethal Impacts Characterization of Inland Fishery Connecting Diversity Efforts in AFS Pollution on Coral Reef When Investigating Monetary Value Chains in Southeast Asia and Christine Moffitt Ecosystems Revealed By Long- Losses the Laurentian Great Lakes to Term Monitoring at Looe Key, Thomas Bigford Increase Benefits from Inland Florida Fisheries Rachel Brewton So-Jung Youn

11:20 AM Does What Go up Also Come Assessment of Sportfish Dessication and Fisheries Harnessing the Power of Diversity Down? Balancing Recruitment with Assemblage, Abundance, and Rehabilitation in the Aral Sea and Inclusion: Strategies and Nutrient Budget for Alewife Community Structure in Relation to Region Initiatives Across NOAA Fisheries, Betsy Barber Agricultural Land Use in the Andy Thorpe West Coast Region Strawberry River Watershed, Melanie Okoro Arkansas Brett Timmons

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

Conservation Measures Achieved Through Law Enforcement Matthew Walia, Moderator Richard Chesler III, Moderator 1:00 PM Sustainability Challenges for Trends and Comparisons in the Key Considerations for Sustainable The Alaska Arctic Policy Artisanal Fisheries in the Azorean Texas Parks and Wildlife Inland Fisheries: Perspective of an Partnership: A Mechanism for Islands Part of Unesco’s Department’s Kills and Spills International NGO Facilitating Greater Diversity and Biosphere Reserves: What Team Advanced Fish Kill Training Michael S. Cooperman Inclusion in Natural Resource and Happens When Fisher’s Find Events over the Years Fisheries Management Fisheries Management Lacking Greg Conley Sorina Seeley Legitimacy and Resist Complying? Ana Fraga

1:20 PM Assessing the Risk of the Triploid The Ecology of Rodeo Lagoon, Human Work on Inland Waters and A Comprehensive, Integrated Grass Carp Supply Chain in Ohio Golden Gate National Recreational Its Influence on the Pattern: River - Educational Framework for Bryan Kinter Area, California, and Factors Sea - Ocean; Development of Recruiting and Training of Contributing to Fish Kills Inland Fisheries Hope for Reversing Underrepresented Minorities in Frederick Feyrer Warming Marine and Fisheries Sciences Ryszard Traczyk Paulinus Chigbu

80 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 8Room 9 Time NFHP Film Fest: Protection, Asian Carp - Contributed Papers Restoration and Enhancement Ryan Roberts, Moderator

9:40 AM A Century of Conservation Response of Juvenile Bighead and (Arkansas Game and Fish Silver Carps Following Exposure to Commission) Conspecific and Heterospecific Alarm Chemicals Jared Wilson

9:55 AM What is going on with Salmon in Lake Michigan (Michigan DNR)

10:00 AM "FLOW" The Chipola River Story Avoidance of Elevated Carbon (Florida Fish and Wildlife Dioxide in Flowing Water By an Commission) Invasive Fish Species, Hypophthalmichthys nobilis Caleb Hasler August 22 Tuesday

10:08 AM Free the Snake: Restoring America's Greatest Salmon River (Patagonia)

10:17 AM Undamming the Elwha, the Documentary (PBS)

10:20 AM Reproductive Potential of Silver and Bighead Carp in the Upper Mississippi River Allison Lenaerts

10:40 AM Diet Analysis of Piscivorous Fish in Pools 19 and 20 of the Upper Mississippi River with Contrasting Habitats and Asian Carp Abundance Rebekah Anderson

NFHP Film Fest: Conservation Science

11:00 AM Grape Creek, CA Environmental Correlates of Asian Restoration (NFHP) Carp Lateral Habitat Use in Starved Rock Pool, Illinois River, USA Jen-Luc Abeln

11:05 AM The Restoration of Aaron Run, MD (NFHP)

11:09 AM Road to Recovery (Bull Trout) (US FWS)

11:20 AM Boone River Watershed: How Quantification of Daily Otolith Bioreactors make a difference Increments in Young of Year Asian (TNC) Carp Emily A. Szott

11:24 AM Blueheads and Bonnevilles (WNTI/DFHP)

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch

Film Festival: Recreational Angling

1:00 PM Chrome (Conservation Hawks) Age and Growth Demographics of Asian Carp in the Upper Mississippi River Cortney Cox

1:12 PM Cold Waters (Conservation Hawks)

1:20 PM Assessing Movement of Adult Silver Carp and Bighead Carp in the Upper Illinois Waterway System Using GPS Satellite Transmitters Andrew T. Mathis

1:23 PM Life Beyond Walls (Montana Wild)

Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 10 Room 11 Room 12 Room 13 Time Redefining Darwinian Fisheries Sturgeon and Paddlefish II Marine Species on the Move II Large-scale Coral Reef Michael Kinnison, Moderator Ecosystem Manageme nt Stephanie Carlson, Moderator Matthew Johnson, Moderator Laura Jay Grove, Moderator Tauna Rankin, Moderator 1:40 PM MPAs Provide Protection Against Atlantic Sturgeon Recruitment in the A Case Study in Documenting Healthy Reefs for Healthy People: Harvest Selection Savannah River, Georgia Shifts in Atlantic Fish Stocks and Collaborative Reef Monitoring, Stephanie Carlson Alex Exploring Adaptive Management Reporting and Ma n agement in the Options Mesoamerican Reef Patrick Campfield Melanie McField

2:00 PM There and Back Again; Multiple Eastern Lake Superior Lake Incorporation of Climate NOAA Habitat Focus Areas: A Factors Influence the Process of Sturgeon Acoustic Telemetry Considerations into an Ecosystem Model Ecosystem Approach to Feralization in Introduced Tropical Project- What It Is and Why It Is Approach to Fisheries Coral Reef Conservation Poeciliids Proving Useful Management Tauna Rankin Quenton Tuckett William Gardner Richard Seagraves

2:20 PM Fish Evolutionary Responses An Overview of Lake Sturgeon Panel Discussion Managing an MPA Network in Exacerbate Prey Community Rehabilitation Efforts Along the Northeast Puerto Rico Using the Ecological Responses to Higher South Shore of Lake Superior Ridge-to-Reef Approach Sharon V. Rayford Antares Ramos à Tuesday Tuesday

August 22 August David Fryxell

Diadromous Fishes I 2:40 PM Demographic and Evolutionary Seasonal Paddlefish Movement Streambed Drawdowns for Ridge-to-Reef Approaches to Coral Impacts of Size Selection at Patterns in Missouri Three Large Downstream Chinook Salmon Reef Ecosystem Management: Fishways on Atlantic Salmon Reservoirs Passage at Fall Creek Reservoir, West Maui George Maynard Dustin Broaddus Willamette Basin, Oregon Bernardo Vargas-Angel

Christina Murphy

3:20 PM Causes and Consequences of Life Physiological Influences on The Influence of Culverts and Land Watershed Planning for Coral Reef History Divergence in a Partially Anadromous Sturgeon Early Life Use Changes on Spatio-Temporal Ecosystem Conservation in Migratory Fish History Movements Fluctuations in Utilized River Southeast Florida Suzanne Kelson Peter Allen Herring Spawning Habitat within the Kurtis Gregg Albemarle Sound Watershed Steven M. Lombar do

3:40 PM Genomic Evidence of Rapid A Look Back in Time: Can Fin Ray The Salmonid Population Viability The Role of Reef Zone and Light Adaptation to Novel Environments Microchemistry be Used to Interpret Project: Modeling Trout Viability in a Acclimation in the Performance of Mark R. Christie Environmental Life Histories of Lake Desert Landscape Corals Under Restoration Sturgeon in the Hudson Bay Doug Leasure Kathryn Lohr Drainage System? Alison Loeppky 4:00 PM Changing Connectivity and Genetic The Development of the Stress International Year of the Salmon - a Community-Based Low-Tech Coral Diversity: Quantifying the Effects of Response in Lake Sturgeon Celebration of Salmon and Their Reef Rehabilitation Impacts on Hatchery Trucking on the Portfolio Madison Earhart Ecosystems Culebra Island HFA Fish Effect in Salmon Kimberly Damon-Randall Assemblages: A BACI Approach Allison Dedrick Edwin A. Hernandez-Delgado

4:20 PM Risks and Returns of Genetic Influence of Temperature, Velocity and Dominance Affect Prey- Acropora Spp. Restoration Effects Rescue: Testing the Effects of a Dissolved Oxygen and Substrate on Capture and Microhabitat Selection on Fish Community Response in Manipulation of Gene Flow in the Development of Metabolic in Juvenile Chinook (Oncorhynchus Twin Palm, St. Croix Isolated Headwater Populations Phenotypes in Lake Sturgeon tshawytscha) Sandra Schleier Sarah Fitzpatrick (Acipenser fulvescens) Gary Grossman Gwangseok Yoon 4:40 PM Human-Induced Evolution in Fishes: Behavioural and Physiological Isotopic Composition of Otoliths of Scaling-up Coral Reef Restoration Communicating the Implications to Responses of Age-0 Lake Chum Salmon (Oncorhynchus Tom Moore Decision-Makers and Society Sturgeon, Acipenser fulvescens , to keta) in Northeast China Jeffrey Hutchings Acute Seasonal Increases of Jilong Wang Aquatic pCO2 Luke Belding 5:00 PM Using Otolith Microchemistry to Mainstreaming Coral Restoration in Infer Habitat Use of American Shad the Caribbean: Interconnecting Prior to Dam Removal in the Ridges to Reefs through Penobscot River, Maine Interdisciplinary, Transboundary, Kevin Job and Non-Traditional Partnerships Maya Trotz 5:20 PM Concluding Remarks

82 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 14 Room 15 Room 16 Room 18 Time Bass Diversity II Fish and Extreme Events Social Science in Fisheries Offshore Resources and Cassandra Glaspie, Moderator Manageme nt Fisheries

1:40 PM A Range-Wide Threat Assessment Resilience and Biological Response Fishing Behavior Across Space and The Ability of Acoustic Telemetry to for Shoal Bass from the Impacts of of a Sub-Tropical Sport Fish Time: With Application to Gulf of Inform Coastal Resource Introgressive Hybridization Population to a Severe Cold Mexico Reef Fish Management Decisions Michael Tringali Mortality Event Larry Perruso Michael Arendt Alexis Trotter

2:00 PM A Collaborative, Range-Wide Linking Low Oxygen to Fisheries: Variability in Fish Assemblages on Genetic Structure Survey to Inform Effects of Hypoxia-Induced Habitat Sand Shoals Off Cape Canaveral, Management and Conservation of Loss on the Gulf of Mexico Shrimp Florida, in Relation to Dredging the Shoal Bass Fishery Activity Andrew T. Taylor Kevin Craig Debra J. Murie August 22 Tuesday Monitoring and Methods I 2:20 PM In-Stream Factors Influencing Measuring Performance of Nature Lessons Learned from Tarpon - a Shoal Bass Nesting Habitat in the Based Solutions for Risk Reduction Citizen Science Success Story Chipola River to Demonstrate Multiple Benefits for Kathryn Guindon Jennifer A. Bock Fish and People Alison Bowden

Contaminants and Toxicology Marine Fisheries Manageme nt I 2:40 PM Sampling Challenges and High Intensity Lights to Treat Harnful Does Sexually Dimorphic Growth Development of an Angler-Driven Strategies for Shoal Bass Algal Blooms Influence the Harvest Regulation Program Supporting Genetic Management in Georgia Kevin Owen Choice for Spotted Seatrout Assessment and Management of Patrick O'Rouke Cynoscion Nebulosus? Alabama Trophy Bass Populations Justin Procopio Lauren Davis

3:20 PM Developing Effective Sampling Assessment of Heavy Metals in An Assessment of Catch-and- Handling Time Bias in Boat Strategies for Stream Centrarchids Ologe Lagoon, Their Release Mortality for Spotted Electrofishing Catch per Unit Effort Shannon K. Brewer Bioaccumulation By Aquatic Seatrout in Cedar Key, FL Benjamin Marcy-Quay Macrophyte {Eichhnornia Grant Scholten Crassipes} and the Socio- Ecological Implications Prince Emeka Ndimele 3:40 PM Hybridization Levels in Stream Salinity Gradient Impacts on the Evaluating the Use of VMS Data for Determining Optimal Boat Populations of Bartram’s Bass Phototoxicity of Dicloran on Creating Relative Abundance Time Electrofishing Settings for Fish Micropterus Sp. Cf. Cataractae Silversides Series in the Gulf of Mexico Vertical Community Sampling Jean Leitner Emily Vebrosky Line Fishery: A Comparative Bradley Hartman Approach Nicholas Ducharme-Barth 4:00 PM Does Disturbance Facilitate in Atlantic Goliath Grouper Novel Use of Hook Timers to A Diel Comparison of Pulsed DC Hybridization of Endemic Bartrams (Epinephelus itajara): Sources, Quantify Changing Catchability over Electrofishing Methods in the Lower Bass with Non-Native Alabama Bioaccumulation Patterns, and Soak Time in Longline Surveys Wabash River Bass? Potential Impacts to Population Cassidy Peterson Eric C. Hine Mark Scott Recovery Christopher Malinowski 4:20 PM Nesting Microhabitat Use of Mercury Accumulation and Effects Does Predation Make a Difference? Performance of a Statistical Catch- Bartram's Bass in the Upper in the Brain of Atlantic Sharpnose Contrasting Biomass and Mortality at-Age Analysis for Inconsistent Savannah River Ba sin Sharks (Rhizoprionodon of Atlantic Menhaden Using Simple Electrofishing Samples from Inland Brandon Peoples terraenovae) Fishing- Only and Predator-Prey Fisheries Samantha Ehnert Models Troy M. Farmer Jim Uphoff Jr. 4:40 PM Informing Conservation of Fluvial Exposure to Copper during Cataloguing Marine and Estuarine Bias in Catch Curve Analysis of Age- Black Bass Species with Range- Embryogenesis Caused Increased Species Interactions for Coastal Frequency Data from Fish Surveys Wide Species Distribution Models Tolerance in Subsequent Managers, and Fisheries Scientists Gary Nelson Andrew T. Taylor Generations, in the Three-Spined with Globi and Gomexsi Stickleback James Simons Lauren Laing 5:00 PM Black Bass Diversity: A Paradigm Management Implications Related Shift for Fisheries Managers to Spatial and Temporal Trends of Wes Porak Sportfish Distribution in a Midwestern Reservoir Keith Koupal

5:20 PM

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 83 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 19 Room 20 Room 21 Room 22 Time Fish Welfare - Symposium Freshwater Fisheries Deepwater Horizon and Cooperative Fisheries Research II Craig Watson, Moderator Manageme nt I Fisheries II

1:40 PM Panel Discussion Length- Relationship of Ecosystem Impacts of DWH Fishsmart: Application of Hepsetus Odoe in Lapai-Agaie Evaluated Using an Atlantis Stakeholder Engagement for the Reservoir, Niger State, Nigeria Ecosystem Model Research, Conservation and Baba usman Ibrahim Cameron Ainsworth Management of Marine Recreational Fisheries Andrew Loftus 2:00 PM Atlas of Fisheries, Fish Craft and Using Otoliths to Examine Vectors Community-Based Cooperative Fishing Gears of Some Selected of Oil Exposure: An Experimental Fisheries Research: Small Scales, Water Bodies in Northern Nigeria Approach Big Implications Baba usman Ibrahim David Jones Owen Nichols

Fish Health 2:20 PM Effects of Air Exposure on Survival The Effects of Teaching Styles on Did Exploratory Behaviour By GOM The Function of Collaboration and Fitness of Yellowstone Student Learning and Satisfaction in Fishers Confer Resilience to DWH Networks for Ecosystem-Based

Tuesday Tuesday Cutthroat Trout an Introductory Fisheries and Impacts? Fisheries Management August 22 August Daniel J. Schill Wildlife Course Shay O'Farrell Amanda Guthrie Molly Good

2:40 PM Non-Lethal Estimation of Proximate Inter-Catchment Variability in An Analysis of Factors Contributing Successes, Challenges and Pitfalls Body Composition of Channel Growth of Walleye (Sander vitreus) to Success in a Commercial of the Citizen-Science Approach to Catfish Using Bioelectrical 1991-2010 Fishing Fleet after Deepwater Fisheries Research in Cambodian Impedance Analysis Justin Hulbert Horizon Closures Freshwater Fisheries Julie Sharp Marcy Cockrell Vittoria Elliott Advancing MSE I Daniel Goethel, Moderator Aaron Berger, Moderator Patrick Lynch, Moderator Sean M. Lucey, Moderator 3:20 PM Differential Gene Expression Rock Bass Population Assessing the Relative Selectivity of Roadmap to More Sustainable Associated with Epizootic Shell Demographics in Missouri Ozark Multiple Sampling Methods for Fisheries: A Step-By-Step Guide to Disease Infection in Wild-Caught Streams Managed Reef Fishes in the Implementing the Management American Lobster Edward Sterling Eastern Gulf of Mexico Strategy Evaluation Approach Jared Homola Heather M. Christiansen Ashleen J. Benson

3:40 PM Hudson River Rainbow Smelt Population Characteristics of What Is Ocean Baseline Data, and (Osmerus mordax) Infestation By Striped Bass in North Carolina Why Don’t We Ever Seem to the Microsporidian Parasite Glugea Reservoirs Have Any? Hertwigi Stephen W. Parker Philip Hoffman Mark T. Mattson

4:00 PM Assessing the Influence of An Evaluation of Wappapello Lake Discussion Unraveling the Recruitment Environmental Stressors on Sex Crappie Regulations Problem: A Review of Differentiation in Two Ornamental Quinton Phelps Environmentally Informed Fishes Forecasting Shane Ramee Jon Brodziak

4:20 PM Evaluating Live Feed Alternatives Concluding Remarks Does the Benefit of Inclusion for the Culture of Four Outweigh the Cost of an Incorrectly Commercially Valuable Ornamental Assumed Environmental Predictor Teleosts of Recruitment? Taylor Lipscomb LaTreese Denson

4:40 PM Evaluating cGnRH IIa for Spawning Induction of Two Freshwater Ornamental Fish Species Michael Sipos

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84 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 23 Room 24 Room 25 Room 3 Time Sustaining diverse fisheries in Outreach, extension and Marine Ar tificial Reef I Ten Years of Science-Based tropical rivers I stakeholder engageme nt I Bill Lindberg, Moderator Manageme nt in U.S. Fisheries: Gregory W. Stunz, Moderator Progress and the Road Ahead - Steve Schroeter, Moderator Symposium

1:40 PM How Low Do We Go. the Challenge The International Live Food Trade Regional Differences in Reef Fish Ten Years of Science- of Passing Juvenile Fish Upstream and Asian Swamp Eels Assemblage Structure Between Based Management in U.S. in Tropical Systems (Synbranchidae) Artificial and Natural Reefs in the Fisheries: Introduction to the Tim Marsden Leo G. Nico Eastern Gulf of Mexico Symposium Sean F. Keenan Jacob Kritzer

2:00 PM Understanding Development Predicting Successful Invasion of “Rigs-to-Reefs” in the Evolution of the MSA: Nature, Impacts to Mekong Migration and Non-Native Freshwater Fishes in Western Gulf of Mexico: Sampling Science and the Law Population Structure Florida: Stage-Based Models and Considerations, Fisheries Impacts, Michael Sissenwine August 22

Vittoria Elliott Application to and Design Recommendations Tuesday Katelyn Lawson Matthew J. Ajemian

2:20 PM Tonle Sap Great Lake- Cambodia, Distribution, Spread, and Habitat The Spatial Context of the Evaluating the Effectiveness of Fish Heart of Cambodia, Is Under Predictability of a Small, Invasive, Attraction/Production Debate, Red Stock Rebuilding Plans in the USA Severe Threats Piscivorous Fish in an Important Snapper Distribution on Artificial Patrick J. Sullivan Senglong Youk Estuarine Fish Nursery Reefs, Oil Rigs and Natural Marin Greenwood Habitats John F. Walter III

2:40 PM The Importance of Fisheries and Salinity Tolerance of Invasive Blue Attraction Versus Production in a Problems with Using Fisheries Research for Livelihoods Catfish and Implications for Grand Artificial Reef Experiment: “Harvest” in Myanmar Dispersal in the Chesapeake Bay Red Snapper in the Gulf of Mexico “Harvesting” Maung Maung Lwin Region John F. Walter III James A. Bohnsack Vaskar Nepal KC

3:20 PM River Fisheries Yields Decline with Evaluating the Effects of an Designing Artificial Reefs to Manage Science-Based Management of Floodplain Deforestation Invasive Zooplanktivore (Alosa Fisheries U.S. Shark Fisheries: Challenges, Leandro Castello aestivalis) on a Southeastern US Stephen Bortone Gains and a Path Forward Reservoir Robert E. Hueter Patrick Anderson

3:40 PM Fisheries Challenges after Dams Potential Impacts of Non-Native Determining Long-Term Biological Meeting the Needs of Science- Built in Cascade in Madeira River Pike Killifish on Juvenile Common Performance of a Large Artificial Based Management and Spurring Basin, Amazon Snook Reef in Southern California: The Innovation through Data-Limited Carolina Doria Geoffrey H. Smith Jr. Wheeler North Artificial Reef As a Approaches Test Case Helen Takade-Heumacher Steve Schroeter 4:00 PM An Overview of Fisheries Systems Effective Conductivity-Based Production and Resource Use on How Science-Based Management in the Xingu River, Brazilian Standardization of Electric Barrier Paired Artificial- Keeps the Alaska Fisheries Amazon, Under the Complex Output and Electrofishing for Nile Christopher Stallings Sustainable Effects of the Construction of Belo Tilapia Diana Evans Monte Hydroelectric Dam F. Michael Holliman Victoria J. Isaac 4:20 PM Hydropower and Fish in the Video Observations on the Using an Integrated, Quantitative Commercial Fishermen - Mekong Predation of Non-Native Tiger Model to Assess Potential Businessmen, Scientists, Oudom Phonekhampeng Shrimp (Penaeus monodon) By a Socioecological Effects of Artificial Stewards, and Suppliers Native Estuarine Predator, Red Reef Implementation Jason DeLaCruz Drum (Sciaenops ocellatus) Ed Camp Brian Klimek 4:40 PM The Changing Ecohydrology of a Socioeconomic Impacts of Marine Artificial Reef Symposium: Dammed Amazon Basin Nonnative Fish in Florida, a Mixed Overview, Discussion and David Kaplan Bag Concluding Remarks Kelly Gestring Tom 5:00 PM

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American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 85 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 4Room 5Room 6Room 7 Time Conservation Measures Emerging Anthropogenic Linking Inland Fisheries to The Power of Diversity and Achieved Through Law Pollution and its Effects on our Global Policies in Sustainable Inclusion Enforcement Aquatic Resources II Developme nt I Matthew Walia, Moderator Richard Chesler III, Moderator 1:40 PM Enforcement and Individual Fishing On-Site Seafood Species Do Development Priorities Conflict Lessons Learned in Human Quota Programs As a Symbiotic Identification Using Real-Time PCR or Complement Each Other When Diversity: Year 1 Partnership Amanda Naaum Aquaculture and Wild Fisheries Co- Gabe Sheoships Jeffrey Pulver Occur? Lessons from Lake Victoria Sarah Glaser 2:00 PM Applications of a Vessel Monitoring Development of a Fully-Integrated Fish Production and Ecosystem Diversity and Inclusion: The System Program to Aid in Environmental DNA Sampling and Health in Lakes of Central China Meaning of Inclusion, an Conservation of Bluefin Tuna Detection System Rui Wang Experimental Analysis Thunnus thynnus Austen Thomas Kaja Brix Matthew Walia

2:20 PM Watching the Bluefin Tuna: A Applications of Real-Time The Role of Aquatic Animal Disease NOAA Education Pathways into Partnership Between OLE and the Quantitative PCR (qPCR) Species Management in Achieving Fishery Fisheries & Aquatic Sciences Tuesday Tuesday

August 22 August Pop Identification for Environmental Sustainability Todd Christenson Kenneth Keene Monitoring Mohamed Faisal Robert Hanner

2:40 PM "Train-Maintain-Operate, Improving A Novel Method for Detection of Bridging the Gap Between Humans, Alaska Native Science & Enforcement Partner Effectiveness Low Density New Zealand Mudsnail Water and Fish; An Integrated Engineering Program through Training" Populations Model of a Coupled Inland Fishery Elizabeth Spangler Richard Chesler III Mieke Sinnesael System to Direct Development Policies Sui Chian Phang 3:20 PM Establishing Trust Between Fishery FIELD DETECTION OF Inland Fisheries in Mexico: Issues The Diversity Joint Venture: How Observers and Law Enforcement to AQUACULTURE PATHOGENS and Opportunities to Improve the Private and Public Sector Is Reduce Occurrences of USING A HANDHELD QPCR Management Coming Together to Change the Harassment Type Violations SYSTEM Felipe Amezcua Jr. Face of Conservation Jaclyn Smith Phong L. Nguyen Sangita Chari

3:40 PM Development of a Protocol to Fishery Co-Management AFS Demographics By Membership Increase the Sensitivity of Aquatic Experiences in Ayeyarwaddy Delta - Profile Environmental DNA (eDNA) Myanmar Zach Penney Monitoring Bobby Bobby Breanna Caton

4:00 PM Panel Discussion Can Fisheries Management in The Effect of Social Capital on Inland Water Bodies Contribute to Underrepresented Minority Students Achieving the UN Sustainable in Graduate Level Marine Science at Development Goals? the University of Washington Ian G. Cowx Brian Tracey

4:20 PM Panel Discussion

4:40 PM

5:00 PM

86 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Tuesday, August 22 Room Room 8Room 9 Time Film Festival: Recreational Asian Carp - Contributed Papers Angling

1:40 PM Blood Knot (TwoFisted Heart Habitat Use and Movement of Productions) Juvenile Silver Carp in the Illinois River (1:33 PM showing) Cory Anderson

2:00 PM Trout in Plain Sight (Patagonian Using Microchemistry and Stable Base Camp Lodge) Isotopes to Determine Natal Origin and Movement of the Emerging (2:08 PM showing) Asian Carp Population in Pools 16- 19 of the Mississippi River Charmayne Anderson 2:20 PM Asian Carp Removal Project in the Upper Illinois River August 22 Tuesday Justin Widloe 2:40 PM Assessing the Impact of Asian Carp Removal in the Upper Illinois River on a Native Planktivore (Dorosoma cepedianum) Nathaniel J. Lederman

Film Festival: The Memory of Fish

3:20 PM The Memory of Fish Economic Solutions to Asian Carp Jennifer Galvin Control? Kevin Irons

Endemic Species Conservation I

3:40 PM A Hierarchical Approach to Mussel Conservation: From Niche Modeling to Field Monitoring Kayla Key

4:00 PM Validation of Environmental Flow Standards Cody A. Craig

4:20 PM Larval Fish Community Survey of Pools 17, 18, and 19 of the Upper Mississippi River Boone La Hood

4:40 PM Relative Abundance of Gravel Obligate Imperiled Fish in Escambia River Chelsea Myles-McBurney

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American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 87 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 10 Room 11 Room 12 Room 13 Time Data Poor Methods for Stock Sturgeon and Paddlefish III Empirical Dynamic Modeling for Characterizing Recreational Assessme nt I Fisheries Prediction and Fisheries for Reef Fishes Manageme nt Tiffanie Cross, Moderator

9:40 AM Are Data-Limited Approaches a Conservation Stocking Dilemma of Ecosystem-Based Forecasts of The Challenge of Characterizing Suitable Substitute for Data-Rich Long-Lived Aquatic Species Menhaden Recruitment Using Reef Fisheries in the Gulf of Mexico Assessments to Set Catch David Deslauriers Empirical Dynamic Modeling Gregg Bray Targets?: A Case Study Using Ethan Deyle Northeast US Fish Stocks John Wiedenmann 10:00 AM The Refined ORCS Approach: A Determining Sex and Stage of Population Dynamics Model Improving Catch Estimates in Catch-Based Method for Estimating Maturity of Hatchery Origin White Development for Yellow Croaker Charter and Private Recreational Stock Status and Catch Limits for Sturgeon in the Lower Columbia (Larimichthys Polyactis) Along the Snapper Grouper Fisheries in the Data-Poor Fish Stocks River, Canada Coast of China South Atlantic U.S Christopher Free Paige Maskill Qiuyun Ma Michael Errigo

10:20 AM Development and Application of a Guiding Conservation Propagation Evaluation of Several Approaches Louisiana Recreational Statistics Length-Based Integrated Mixed of Pallid Sturgeon through the Use to Bayesian Updating of Pre- Program--La Creel Survey Design Effects (LIME) Assessment Method of Food Webs Season Indicators of Run Strength Jason Froeba for Data-Limited Fisheries Addie Dutton in Pacific Salmon Fisheries Merrill Rudd Ben Staton

10:40 AM Simulation-Testing the Robin Hood Selective Predation By Predicting Population Dynamics Via Rolp: A Permit to Improve Offshore Approach to Fisheries Stock Reintroduced Juvenile Lake Spatial Gaussian Process Effort Estimates within the La Creel Assessment: Can We Steal from Sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens ) in Nonlinear Forecasting Program the Data-Rich and Give to the Data- Ft. Loudoun Reservoir, Tennessee Jin Gao Jason Adriance Poor? (USA) Samuel D. N. Johnson J. Brian Alford

11:00 AM Scoring the Reliability of Life History Population Estimation of Growing the Biphasic Framework: Development of a Specialized August 23 August

Wednesday Wednesday Data Reintroduced Lake Sturgeon Techniques and Recommendations Survey to Directly Estimate Angler Linda Lombardi (Acipenser fulvescens) in Fort for Fitting Emerging Growth Models Trips That Target Reef Fishes from Loudoun and Watts Bar Reservoirs, Andrew Honsey Private Recreational Boats in Tennessee Florida Daniel Walker Tiffanie Cross

11:20 AM Are US National Standards Phaeohyphomycosis in White Inferring Priors of Stock-Recruit La Creel: Lessons Learned Attainable for Grouper-Snapper Sturgeon (Acipenser Steepness from the Unfished Jason Froeba Fisheries Using Simplified Harvest transmontanus Richardson) Spawning Biomass per-Recruit and Control Rules? Cultured in California from 2006 to a Relationship Between Maximum William Harford 2015 Due to Veronaea Botryosa Recruit Survivals and Asymptotic Joseph M. Groff Lengths: Application to the Atlantic Croaker and Spot Populations in the U.S. Atlantic Ocean Joseph Munyandorero

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Determining the Best Inputs for A Gregarious Mix: Body Size Does Can Recruitment Estimates from Monitoring Regulatory Discarding of Data Limited Assessment Methods Not Influence Resource Holding Nonparametric Modeling Inform Red Snapper in Recreational Kate I. Siegfried Potential Nor Risk Tolerance in Stock Assessment? Fisheries Operating Off the Atlantic Juvenile Lake Sturgeon William Harford and Gulf of Mexico Coasts of Forrest Bjornson Florida Beverly Sauls

1:20 PM Estimation of Life History Applications of Nonlinear Comprehensive Approach in Parameters Using Stepwise Forecasting Models to Single Assessing Release Mortality of Stochastic Simulations for Data- Species, Fish Community and Targeted and Non-Targeted Reef Poor Florida-Caribbean Fisheries Ecosystems Fishes in the Gulf of Mexico Multispecies Reef Fisheries Hui Liu Laura Stewart Molly Stevens

88 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 14 Room 15 Room 16 Room 18 Time Multispecies and Watershed Physiological and behavioral Fish Movement and Biotelemetry Progress Towards EBFM Approaches to Conservation I effects of fossil fuels on marine fish Lela Schlenker, Moderator Rachael Heuer, Moderator 9:40 AM Introductory Remarks Foraging Behavior and Olfactory Comparative Movement Patterns of The Long Path of Ecosystem- Capacity of Mahi-Mahi (Coryphaena Satellite Tagged Sailfish Based Fisheries Management hippurus) Exposed to Crude Oil (Istiophorus platypterus) and Other Jason S. Link from the Deepwater Horizon Event Istiophorids in the Western North Lela S. Schlenker Atlantic Walter Bubley 10:00 AM Multispecies Conservation: Bringing Impacts of Oil Exposure on Mahi- Horizontal Target Strength of Implementing Ecosystem-Based Efficiency to the Science of Native Mahi: From the Subcellular and Gizzard Shad Dorosoma Fisheries Management (EBFM): An Fish Conservation Molecular Level through Populations Cepedianum Overview of the NOAA Fisheries Jack E. Williams and Ecosystems Garrett Johnson EBFM Road Map Martin Grosell Kenric Osgood

10:20 AM The Really Big Picture of Habitat: One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Diel Movement and Habitat Use of Building Effective Fishery The Conceptual Underpinnings and Dead Fish Sub-Adult Smallmouth Bass in an Ecosystem Plans: The Lenfest Vision for the National Fish Habitat Robert (Joe) Griffitt Ozark Stream Fishery Ecosystem Task Partnership - National Fish Andrew D. Miller Tim Essington Habitat Assessment Gary Whelan

10:40 AM Applications of the 2015 National Metabolic Implications of Fossil Fuel Assessment of Smallmouth Bass Strategies for Operational Wednesday August 23 Assessment of Stream Fish Exposure in an Adult Pelagic Spawning Movements and Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Habitats: Information for Enhanced Predatory Fish Species: Mahi-Mahi Associated Environmental Management on Georges Bank Decision Making (Coryphaena hippurus ) Conditions in an Intermittent Boston Michael Fogarty Wesley Daniel John D. Stieglitz Mountain Stream Jacob H Martin

11:00 AM Human Stressors and Their Environmental Implications of Fossil Investigating the Role of Long Introducing the Ecosystem Impacts on Freshwater Fish Fuel Usage on Respiratory Distance Dispersal in the Approach to Fisheries in Tobago: Communities - a Cross- Performance and Behavior in Response of Stream Fishes to An Investigation of Two Sites Continental Comparison of Marine Fish Urbanization Kerton Jobe European and United States River Andrew Esbaugh Andrea Davis Basins Maria Üblacker 11:20 AM Spatial Prioritization of Hawaii's Downstream Impacts of CO2 Using Agent Based Modeling to Role of Gulf Menhaden in the Stream Ecosystems for Native Compensation on Marine Fish Predict Fish Movement Patterns in Structure and Functioning of the Species Conservation in the Rachael M. Heuer the Florida Everglades Northern Gulf of Mexico Ecosystem Context of Changing Climate John Gatto Matthew Nuttall Ralph W. Tingley III

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Quantifying Fish Assemblages and Understanding the Effects of Ocean Where Did All the Trout Go? The Mid-Atlantic Fishery Population Dynamics in the Face of Acidification on the Behavior of Combining Multiple Measures of Management Council’s a Changing Landscape Marine Organisms Fish Movement to Gain Insights into Framework for Incorporating Stephen Jones Danielle Dixson Brook Trout Population Species, Fleet, Habitat, and Climate Connectivity Interactions into Fishery Shannon White Management: Initial Risk Assessment Sarah K. Gaichas 1:20 PM An Analytical Approach to Fish Blinding Nemo? the "pH"Ingerprints Ecosystem Modeling to Improve Conservation Prioritization of Ocean Acidification on Fisheries Management in the Gulf of Nicky M. Hahn Neurosensory Dysfunction in Mexico Orange Clownfish (Amphiprion David Chagaris percula) Andrij Z. Horodysky

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 89 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 19 Room 20 Room 21 Room 22 Time Fish Health in Florida I Side Scan Sonar Applications Observer Contributions to Advancing MSE II Roy Yanong, Moderator Fisheries Jan Landsberg, Moderator Lee Benaka, Moderator Theresa Tomas Cody, Moderator Jane DiCosimo, Moderator

9:40 AM Hatchery-Reared Juvenile Snook As Relationships Between Eastern Findings of an Independent Confronting Red -Induced Fish Ecological Probes for Habitat Oyster Density and Seabed Metrics Observer Safety Program Review Kills through Harvest Control Rule Quality in Southwest Florida Derived from Multibeam Sonar Jane DiCosimo Design Ryan Schloesser David Bruce William Harford

10:00 AM What Toll Does PaV1 Exact from Morgan Shoal: Underwater Mapping Versatility and Proficiency; How Implications of Time-Varying Natural the Caribbean Spiny Lobster and the Fishes of Chicago’s Observers on the West Coast of Mortality on Sustainable Harvest Population in Florida? Forgotten “Coral Reef” the US Contribute to the Strategies for Atlantic Cod (Gadus Donald Behringer Philip Willink Conservation and Scientific morhua) and Pacific Herring Research of Protected Species (Clupea pallasaii) in Canada Jon McVeigh Sean P. Cox

10:20 AM Health Management Plan Using Side Scan Sonar to Estimate Improving Discard Mortality A Model-Based Operational Kathleen Hartman Abundance of Harlequin Darters Estimates for the Gulf of Mexico Management Procedure for the (Etheostoma histrio) Reef Fish Fishery Western Central Pacific Tropical Kate Harriger Jeffrey Pulver Purse Seine Fishery Robert Scott

10:40 AM Water Quality Changes at an Automated Substrate A Summary of Seabird Interactions Investigating the Interaction Outstanding Florida Water: Characterization Using Low-Cost in the Hawaii Deep and Shallow Set Between Biological Heterogeneity Influence of Stochastic Events and Sidescan Sonar: Challenges and Longline Fisheries in 2016 and Regional Harvest: How Do Climate Variability Opportunities John Peschon Spatially-Varying Demographics Mark Hoyer Daniel Buscombe and Selectivity Influence Catch August 23 August

Wednesday Wednesday Apportionment Daniel Goethel 11:00 AM Essentials of “Pigmented†Findings from Landscape Level in- Maximizing the Utility of Beta Evaluating Impacts of Stock Spatial Fungal Infections, with Relevance to Stream Habitat Mapping Using Side Testing for Fisheries Dependent Structure on the Management of the Aquatic Animals Scan Sonar in Florida Data Collection Technologies: A Southeast US Spiny Lobster Stock Salvatore Frasca Jr. Cameron Bodine Case Study in the Pacific Islands Nan Yao Region Observer Program Ereporting Project Joshua Lee 11:20 AM Histopathological Synopsis of the Validating the Use of Low-Cost Side Back Deck Tech: Enhanced Data A New Spatially-Disaggregated Pathology of the American Lobster Scan Sonar to Monitor the Collection for West Coast Agent-Based Simulation Modelling Salvatore Frasca Jr. Distribution and Abundance of Groundfish Fisheries Observers Tool for Use in Fisheries Large-Bodied Gulf Sturgeon Jason Eibner Management Strategy Evaluation Adam Kaeser Jeremy McKenzie 11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Protecting Animal Health By Mapping Shoal Bass Nesting Observing in a Complex Integrating Biological Mechanism Understanding Adverse Effects of Habitat in the Chipola River Using a Environment in Alaska: How North and Spatiotemporal Complexity Chemicals: Lessons Learned from Suite of Novel in-Stream Habitat Pacific Observers Resolve Using an Environmentally-Explicit the Largemouth Bass Variables Challenging Sampling Situations at Individual-Based Model Chris Martyniuk Jennifer A. Bock Sea Linsey Arnold Raul Ramirez

1:20 PM US Listed and Emerging Diseases Applying Low-Cost Sonar Tools for The Regulatory Approach: Tools to Evaluating Data Collection in Commercial Fish Production Mapping Diverse Lakes and Rivers Improve Observer Data Quality in Strategies for the Florida Goliath Katharine Starzel Across the Continent Alaska Grouper Brandon Jensen Alicia M. Miller Claudia Friess

90 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 23 Room 24 Room 25 Room 3 Time Sustaining diverse fisheries in Climate Change Impacts on Fish Marine Ar tificial Reef II Practical applications of HD I tropical rivers II and Fisheries I

9:40 AM Fish Assemblage Variation during Decadal Changes in Larval Subtidal Reef Restoration on Palos Importance-Satisfaction the Construction of Three Small Abundance and Larval Mortality Verdes Shelf, Los Angeles County, Perceptions of Georgia Trout Hydropower Plants at Guanhaes Rates of 16 Gulf of Maine Fishes California Anglers River, Eastern Brazil Christopher W.D. Gurshin David Witting Hailey Yondo Felipe Talin Normando

10:00 AM New Management Actions for Old The Value of Incorporating Enhancement of Georgia's Inshore Influence of Tipping Points and Challenges: Will We Preserve the Groundwater and Precipitation Artificial Reefs Using the Eastern Scientific Uncertainties in the Migratory Fish Fauna of South Dynamics in Stream Temperature Oyster, Crassostrea Virginica, to Success of International Fisheries America? Modeling for Achieving Resilient Create Essential Fish Habitat Management: An Experimental Paulo Pompeu Salmonid Management in a January Murray Approach Changing Climate Jules Selles Andrew Carlson 10:20 AM Pitfalls of Using Molecular Tools to A New NOAA Research Initiative for Age and Growth of Gray Triggerfish Dispersed Beach Fishing Use Evaluate Man-Made Barriers to the Seasonal Prediction of Living in the Alabama Artificial Reef Zone Monitoring Using GPS for a National Migration of a Mega Diverse and Marine Resources Amanda Jefferson Seashore: Proof of Concept Poorly Understood Ichthyofauna Heather Archambault Karl Brookins Andrey L. F. Castro

10:40 AM Integrating Aquaculture and Climate Change Induced Shifts in A High Definition Snapshot of Catch and Stocking Related Angler Wednesday Managed Floodplain Fisheries: Can Migration Timing of Adult Alewife Balistes Capriscus Populations on Attitudes of Hybrid Striped Bass on August 23 the Amazon Learn from the (Alosa psuedoherengus) in Four Artificial Reefs in the Six Florida Waterbodies Mekong? Massachusetts Natal Streams Northwestern Gulf of Mexico Nicholas G. Feltz David McGrath Michelle D. Staudinger Adam Lee

11:00 AM Stock Assessment Methods for Temporal Changes in Spawning of Gray Triggerfish Movement Management Implications of Angler Tropical River Fisheries American Shad and Striped Bass in Patterns, Residency and Mortality Perceptions in the Southern Lake Kai Lorenzen the Hudson River Estuary on Artificial Reefs in the Northern Michigan Fishery Christopher C. Nack Gulf of Mexico Elizabeth Golebie Megan McKinzie

11:20 AM Overcoming River Development Reconstructing Growth and California - Creating a Statewide Enlarging Rather Than Shifting the Challenges and Sustaining Environmental Histories of Atlantic Artificial Reef Plan Human Dimension Toolbox Productive Fisheries in the Mekong Cod in the Gulf of Maine Eric Wilkins Mark Duda River Lisa A. Kerr Lee Baumgartner

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Barriers to Migration: The Impacts Long-Term Oceanographic Conducting a Pilot Trap Survey to Beyond Descriptive Statistics: of Barotrauma on the Physiology of Variability and Its Impact on Inform the Development and Using Multivariate Approaches in a Commercially Important Species Vermilion Snapper in the U.S. South Fishery Management of New Human Dimensions Surveys (Prochilodus lineatus) Atlantic Jersey's Artificial Reefs John Taylor Luiz G. M. Silva Tracey Smart Douglas Zemeckis

1:20 PM Automation of Pressure Control in a Assessing Surface Water Priority Effects in Commercial Fish Extending Knowledge Gained from Pneumatic Hipo-Hiperbaric Chemistry Suitability for Coldwater Traps Used to Survey New Jersey's Human Dimension Surveys Using Chamber to Evaluate Barotrauma Fisheries in Tributaries of Kezar Artificial Reefs Geospatial Analysis Tools on Fish Lake, Maine Mattea Berglund John Taylor Leonardo A. Mozelli Jacob W. Riley

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 91 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 4Room 5Room 6Room 7 Time Tim King tribute Non-natives & Climate Change Linking Inland Fisheries to Innovative techniques and Jesse Blanchard, Moderator Global Policies in Sustainable technologies for control of non Development II indigenous fish

9:40 AM Conservation Genetics of Tarpon - Predicting Distributions of Non- Pressing the Reset Button: Global The History and Legacy of the Sea a Summary of Research Native Freshwater Fish: A Role for Policy Settings for Making Inland Lamprey Control Program of the Conducted By Texas Parks and Climate Indicators? Fisheries Sustainable Great Lakes Wildlife Department Allison Durland Donahou Peter Bridgewater Scott A. Grunder Rocky Ward

10:00 AM Genetic Characterization of the Climate Match Fails to Explain Choosing Our Legacy - Inland A Novel Way to Deliver Antimycin-a Clubshell Species Complex Variation in Establishment Success Fisheries Sustainability or Ultimate to Selectively Control Bighead and (Pleurobema clava and P. oviforme) of Non-Native Freshwater Fishes in Collapse Silver Carp for Enhanced Conservation a Warm Climate Region William W. Taylor Jon J. Amberg Cheryl L Morrison Jeffrey E. Hill

10:20 AM Conservation Genetics of the The Interaction Between Panel Discussion Eradication of Invasive Aquatic American Horseshoe Crab (Limulus Experimentally-Elevated Winter Species Using Liquid Ammonia polyphemus): Allelic Diversity, Pond Temperature and Biotic Kimberly Dibble Zones of Genetic Discontinuity, and Resistance; Implications for Fish Regional Differentiation Invasion and Climate Change Eric Hallerman Quenton Tuckett

10:40 AM Fine-Scale Analysis of a Genetic Black Carp (Mylopharyngodon An Overview of Non-Indigenous Discontinuity in the American piceus) Reproduction in the Middle Predatory Fish Control By the Horseshoe Crab (Limulus Mississippi River Upper Colorado River Endangered polyphemus) Wesley Sleeper Fish Recovery Program Jane Brockmann Kevin McAbee

11:00 AM Population Genetic Characterization Evidences of Fish Invasions Effects of YY-Male Stocking and of Silver Carp Invasion Fronts Facilitated By Water Transfer in Manual Suppression for Eradication August 23 August

Wednesday Wednesday Approaching the Great Lakes Lakes Along the East Route of of Non-Native Brook Trout Carol Stepien South-to-North Water Transfer Populations Project Daniel J. Schill Jiao Qin

11:20 AM A Re-Visitation of Maryland Brook Divergence in Life History Traits Developing New Genetic Control Trout Genetics during Range Shifts: Examples Tools for Invasive Fish Raymond P. Morgan II from Crayfish Introductions Carolyn Malecha Lindsey Reisinger

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch

Thermal Mapping and Behavioral Responses to Heat Douglas Bradley, Moderator Daniel Giza, Moderator Andrew Todd, Moderator Jonathan Black, Moderator 1:00 PM Understanding the Genetic Controlling the Spread of Invasive Use of Drones for Imaging Thermal Use of Rotenone for Characteristics of Wild Brook Trout Zebra and Quagga Mussels with Plumes at Power Plants Biomanipulatoin of Iowa Lakes Populations in North Carolina KCl Daniel Gessler, P.E., Ph.D, Mark Flammang Thanks to the Guidance of Dr. Tim Christine Moffitt D.WRE. King Jacob M. Rash

1:20 PM Next-Generation Restriction Site- Drought Facilitates Longitudinal Thermal Modeling - Simple to The Use of Food Attractants and Associated DNA Sequencing to Recovery of Thermal Regimes in Complex and Beyond Auditory Stimuli As Part of an Identify Species Diagnostic SNPs Regulated Rivers but May Remove Andrew Thuman Integrated Pest Management Among Cisco and Deepwater Cisco Barriers to Warm-Water Fish Strategy for the Control of Species (Coregonus sp.) from the Invasion Bigheaded Asian Carps Great Lakes Kimberly Dibble Katelyn Lawson Wendylee Stott

92 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 8Room 9 Time Science Communication with Non-fishing impacts in fisheries Policymakers manageme nt John Boreman, Moderator Tom Bigford, Moderator Kara Meckley, Moderator 9:40 AM Distilling without Distorting: Understanding the Importance of Speaking the Language of Policy Addressing Non-Fishing Impacts in with the Credibility of Science Support of Ecosystem-Based Ben Shouse Fisheries Management Tauna Rankin

10:00 AM Can Existing Authorities Exert Greater Influence and Impact on Coastal Zone Habitat Protection? Jessica Coakley

10:20 AM Science to Policy: Perspectives Successful Fisheries Management: from a Current Knuass Fellow The Role of Habitat Conservation at Emily Argo the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission Lisa Havel Wednesday August 23 10:40 AM Plain Language for Project and Legal Barriers to Addressing Non- Policy Communication Fishing Impacts to Coastal Leanne Roulson Fisheries Habitat in an Era of Climate Change Sean Dixon

11:00 AM From Knowledge to Action - Diadromous Fish Restoration and Perspectives on Knowledge the Importance of Fishing Vs. Other Mobilization to Inform Aquatic Policy Drivers: Tractability Matters and Practice John R. Waldman Steven J. Cooke

11:20 AM AFS’s New Approach to the Coastal Zone Modifications and Science, Management, Policy Fish Habitat Contiuum Constance Karras Thomas Bigford

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Story Time: Embracing the Plot Working with Recreational Anglers Twists in Fisheries Science to Incorporate Habitat Evaluation Michael J. Moore into Management Strategies JoEllen Wilson

1:20 PM The @Drfishsg Is in: #Outreach Working to Protect Our Waters, and #Scicomm in the Great Lakes Protecting the Waters We Work: Titus Seilheimer Habitat Advocacy By Commercial Fishermen Sarah Schumann

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 93 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 10 Room 11 Room 12 Room 13 Time Data Poor Methods for Stock Sturgeon and Paddlefish III Empirical Dynamic Modeling for Characterizing Recreational Assessme nt I Fisheries Prediction and Fisheries for Reef Fishes Manageme nt Tiffanie Cross, Moderator

1:40 PM Discussion History of the Farm Bill Describing Three Decades of Using "Smart" Devices As Data James Cummins Fisheries Regime States in the Gulf Collection Tools for the Private of Mexico Using an Ecosystem- Recreational Fishing Sector Level Analysis Tara Topping Approach Joshua Kilborn

2:00 PM Status of the 2018 Farm Bill Letting the Data Speak: Structural Understanding the Effects of Andrew Schmidt Models and Model-Free Estimation Measurement Error on Estimation in Fisheries Assessment and of Catch for Voluntary Angler Management Reporting Using Electronic Michael Fogarty Devices Benjamin Williams

2:20 PM Easement-Based Programs in the Discussion Catch Shares in Recreational Farm Bill Fisheries Ariel Alberti Wiegard Jessica Stephen

2:40 PM Working Lands Conservation Characterizing Recreational Programs in the Farm Bill Fisheries for Reef Fishes: John Larson Discussion and Conclusions

August 23 August Chip Collier Wednesday Wednesday

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94 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 14 Room 15 Room 16 Room 18 Time Multispecies and Watershed Physiological and behavioral Progress Towards EBFM Approaches to Conservation I effects of fossil fuels on marine fish Lela Schlenker, Moderator Rachael Heuer, Moderator 1:40 PM Understanding Influences of Carbon Dioxide and Freshwater Conceptualizing the Benefits of Landscape on Aquatic Fauna Fish: Insights from Barrier Conceptual Models in an Integrated Across the Central and Southern Applications Ecosystem Assessment Appalachians Cory D. Suski Framework Daniel Hanks Robert J. Gamble

2:00 PM Can Brook Trout Survive Climate Using Power Plant Cooling Lakes Using Ecosystem Models to Change in Large Rivers? If It Rains As Replicated Model Systems to Evaluate Inevitable Trade-Offs Eric R. Merriam Examine the Effects of Climate Howard Townsend Change in Freshwater Ecosystems Dalon White

2:20 PM Scale As a Driver for Fish Science to Support Ecosystem- Conservation: An Australian Based Fisheries Management of Perspective Coral Reef Ecosystems Across the Jarod Lyon U.S. Pacific Islands Russell 'Rusty' Brainard 2:40 PM Little Tennessee River Basin Native Fish Conservation Partnership: Aquatic Conservation on a Wednesday

Landscape Scale August 23 Fred Harris

3:20 PM Partnering on Multispecies Aquatic Assessments to Inform Efficient Conservation Delivery Daniel Dauwalter

3:40 PM Establishing Freshwater Conservation Priorities with Consideration of Existing Conservation Networks Joanna Whittier

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 95 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 19 Room 20 Room 21 Room 22 Time Fish Health in Florida I Side Scan Sonar Applications Observer Contributions to Advancing MSE II Roy Yanong, Moderator Fisheries Jan Landsberg, Moderator Lee Benaka, Moderator Theresa Tomas Cody, Moderator Jane DiCosimo, Moderator

1:40 PM Examination and Health Movement Behavior and Habitat An Innovative Sampling Approach to A Comparison and Validation of Assessment of the Long-Spined Use of Shoal Bass in Two Reducing Halibut Bycatch Mortality Simulated Eastern and Western Sea Urchin, Diadema Antillarum Chattahoochee River Tributaries on Alaska Trawlers Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Distributions Ruth Francis-Floyd Amy Cottrell Andrew Kingham Benjamin Galuardi

2:00 PM Finding Nemo's Picornavirus Mapping Lake Sturgeon Spawning Optimized Scientific Reporting with Incorporating Ecosystem Services, Elizabeth Scherbatskoy Habitat in the Upper Tennessee Reproducible Research By the Fisher Behavior, and Spatial River Using Side-Scan Sonar North Pacific Observer Program Recruitment Complexity in a Daniel Walker Jane Sullivan Management Strategy Evaluation for Chesapeake Bay Oysters Michael Wilberg

2:20 PM Applications for Metabolomics in New Technology and Old Using Observer Data to Develop Designing a General Ms e Coral Biology and Restoration Infrastructure: Using High and Monitor Marine Mammal Framework for a Movement-Based Joshua Patterson Resolution Imaging Sonar to Study Bycatch Reduction Measures Metapopulation Assessment Fish Behavior at Passages Lisa White System Christopher Rillahan Jon Brodziak 2:40 PM An Investigative Approach to a Pile Using Side-Looking Hydroacoustics Data-Based Protection of Deep- A Framework to Account for of Pelicans from Tampa Bay to Study Relationships Between Sea Coral and Sponge Habitat Uncertainty in the Movement of Lisa Shender Fish Abundance and Changing Across U.S. Waters Pacific Halibut When Evaluating River Conditions, Including Dam Heather Coleman Robust Harvest Policies Removal Allan Hicks Constantin Scherelis August 23 August Wednesday Wednesday 3:20 PM

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96 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 23 Room 24 Room 25 Room 3 Time Sustaining diverse fisheries in Climate Change Impacts on Fish Marine Ar tificial Reef II Practical applications of HD I tropical rivers II and Fisheries I

1:40 PM Swim Bladder Biomechanics: New Hydrologic and Thermal Regime Inshore and Offshore Artificial Reef The Efficacy of a Joint Approach to Approach to Evaluate Barotrauma Relationships to Coho Salmon Comparison of Population Fisheries Law Enforcement in the Susceptibility in Fish Spawning in the Smith River Dynamics of the Heavily-Fished Great Lakes Basin Bernardo Beirao Watershed, Oregon Lutjanus Campechanus, Poey, Molly Good Mackenzie Baxter 1860, in the Northwestern Gulf of Mexico Catheline Y.M. Froehlich 2:00 PM GIS Approach Contributions to Multi-Faceted Responses to Impacts of a New Artificial Reef on Economic Impacts of Angling: A Fishery Management and Spatial Climate Change: Northern Shrimp Red Snapper and the Associated Survey of Small South Dakota Planning: A Lower Amazon Case in the Gulf of Maine Fish Community: Evidence of Lakes Keid Nolan Silva Sousa Anne Richards Enhanced Production Aaron Sundmark Matthew K. Streich

2:20 PM Towards Sustainable Hydropower: Impacts of Hypoxia in Warming A Decade of Monitoring Fish The Effect of License Prices and A GIS-Based Framework to Waters: Otoliths As Recorders of Populations at the Texas Clipper Senior Discounts on Fishing Improve Planning and Fish Environmental Stress and Artificial Reef: How Long Is Participation Conservation Physiological Effects Enough? Richard Melstrom Luiz G. M. Silva Karin E. Limburg David W. Hicks 2:40 PM Linking Stream Temperature Panel Discussion Wednesday Modeling with Decision-Support August 23 Tools for Resilience-Based Salmonid Management in a Changing Climate Andrew Carlson

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American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 97 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 4Room 5Room 6Room 7 Time Tim King tribute Non-natives & Climate Change Thermal Mapping and Innovative techniques and Jesse Blanchard, Moderator Behavioral Responses to Heat technologies for control of non Douglas Bradley, Moderator indigenous fish Daniel Giza, Moderator Andrew Todd, Moderator Jonathan Black, Moderator

1:40 PM The Continued Evolution of Atlantic Knocking Back Invasions: Variable Effect of Flow Reduction on Roomba of the Sea: Lionfish and Shortnose Sturgeon Genetics Resistance and Resilience to Thermal Dynamics of Streams Sucking ROVs and Other Privately

Kimberly Damon-Randall Multiple Cold Spells in Native and Ryan Andrews Operated Non-Indigenous Fish Nonnative Fishes Removal Projects Jesse Blanchard Patrick B. Cooney

2:00 PM Integrating Conservation Genetic Discussion Ambient Thermal Experience of Exploiting Dietary Differences to

and Demographic Perspectives for Juvenile Fish in the Hudson River Develop Species-Specific Control Imperiled Fishes Estuary Exceeds Preferred, of Common Carp Using Toxic Food David C. Kazyak Avoidance, and Upper Incipient Pellets Lethal Temperatures from Joshua Poole Laboratory Studies Mark T. Mattson 2:20 PM Combining Technologies to Improve Thermal Plume Characterizations Doug Bradley

2:40 PM Innovative Stream Temperature, Intermittency, and Conductivity Logger Offers Distinct Advantages in Assessing Aquatic Ecosystems Ben McGee August 23 August Wednesday Wednesday 3:20 PM Demersal Fish Response to Thermal Dynamics in Power Plant Receiving Waters of Southern California, U.S.A Eric Miller 3:40 PM

98 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Wednesday, August 23 Room Room 8Room 9 Time Science Communication with Policymakers

1:40 PM Are We Speaking the Same Language? Communicating Fisheries Science Across the Globe Julie Claussen

2:00 PM Bringing Your Science to the Hill: Perspectives from a Former Knauss Legislative Fellow Zach Penney

2:20 PM Effective Science Communication for Policy Impact Takes Skill, Patience and a Recipient Audience Vittoria Elliott Wednesday August 23 2:40 PM

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American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 99 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 10 Room 11 Room 12 Room 13 Time Data Poor Methods for Stock Biotelemetry, Survival Modeling Sustaining Commercial and Habitat Science and EBFM Assessme nt II Mark D. Bowen, Ph.D., Moderator Recreational Fisheries in an Tony Marshak, Moderator Steven T. Lindley, Moderator Increasingly Complex World Rebecca Peters, Moderator Vaskar Nepal, Moderator Quinton Phelps, Moderator Mary C. Fabrizio, Moderator 8:00 AM Standardized Catch Rates for Data- What Goes up: Unexpected Conflict and Conservation: Habitat Science Is an Essential Limited Species and Fisheries in Impediments to Restoration of Fisheries Management for Native for Ecosystem-Based the Northwest Atlantic American Shad (Alosa sapidissima) and Invasive Species Fisheries Management Alexander Hansell in the Charles River Revealed By Thomas J. Kwak Tony Marshak Biotelemetry Ben Gahagan 8:20 AM Working Towards a Framework to Use of Newly Available Habitat Estimation of Population-Level Describing Habitat Use and Provide Catch Advice in the US Following Dam Removal: Tracking Consumption of Native Species By Connectivity of Grouper Species Caribbean Using Data-Limited American Shad in the Penobscot Introduced Blue Catfish in within the Western Sambo Approaches River Virginia’s Tidal Rivers Ecological Reserve, Florida Keys, Nancie Cummings George Maynard Corbin D. Hilling USA Jeffrey Renchen

8:40 AM Empirically Identifying Historical A Decision Making Tool for Promoting Harvest of Invasive Blue Do Gulf of Maine Closed Areas Periods of Relative Stability for Data- Evaluating Biological and Statistical Catfish: Risks to Consumers from Promote Healthy Age Structure in Limited Fisheries in Puerto Rico Thresholds for Survival Analysis Contaminant Exposure Commercially Important Groundfish Adyan Rios Alejandro Molina Moctezuma Troy D. Tuckey Stocks? Julian Chawarski

9:00 AM Mutispecies Sustainability Risk Survival of Downstream Migrating Putting the Genie Back in the Bottle: Large Mangrove Forest Area Assessment of Florida's Coral-Reef Adult American Eel through the A Case Study of Invasive Blue Increases the Frequency of Fisheries Penobscot River, Maine Catfish in the Chesapeake Bay Occurrence for 59 Fishes on the Jerald S. Ault Berlynna Heres Region Florida Reef Tract Mary C. Fabrizio Geoffrey Shideler

9:40 AM Assessment and Management of Understanding Fish Passage in a The Closure of the Shovelnose Modeling to Assess Spatial Data-Limited Fisheries in Indonesia, Changing System- Lessons from Sturgeon Commercial Fishery in Distributions and Abundance of Sri Lanka, and the Western Pacific Restoration Efforts in the the Middle Mississippi River Estuarine Species in Charlotte Using the New LB-SPR Penobscot River Quinton Phelps Harbor, Florida Assessment Approach Joseph Zydlewski Peter Rubec Jeremy Prince

10:00 AM Developing Standardized Multi-Gear Modeling the Impacts of Dams and Comparing Commercial and Remote Sensing Approach to Red Sampling Protocols for Large Stocking Strategies on Atlantic Recreational Harvest Grouper Habitat Affinity on an Rivers with Unknown Population Salmon Smolt Outputs from the Characteristics of Paddlefish in the Artisanal Fishing Ground in Sizes: Lessons Learned from Penobscot River, Maine, USA Middle Mississippi River Yucatan Three Ohio River Catfish Species Justin R. Stevens Ryan Hupfeld Joaquín Rodrigo Garza-Pérez Devon C. Oliver

10:20 AM Estimating Catch of Blueline Tilefish Effects of a Micro Acoustic Tribal and Recreational Fisheries: Tipping Points in Coastal Fisheries: in the Mid-Atlantic Region Using a Transmitter on Swimming Managing for Resource Protection, An Investigation in Barataria Bay, Modified Delphi Process Performance, Survival, and Equity, and Differing Values Louisiana, USA Andrew Loftus Transmitter Retention of Juvenile Mark Luehring Kristy Lewis American Eels Robert Mueller 10:40 AM Shrimp Fishery Bycatch Estimates Downstream Migration of Silver Eel Effects of Recreational and Habitat Influences on the for Recent Sedar Gulf of Mexico and Salmon Smolts in the Rivers Commercial Fishing on Lake Composition of Reef Fish Stock Assessments: Challenges, Rhine and Meuse with Special Sturgeon Recovery Efforts Assemblages on the Southeastern Current Approaches and Attention to Effects of Passing Kyle Bales U.S. Atlantic Continental Shelf Recommendations Hydropower Stations and Weirs Dawn Glasgow Xinsheng Zhang André W. Breukelaar

11:00 AM Using a Non-Equilibrium Mean The Effects of Three Rock Barriers Understanding the Recreational Are We There Yet? Linking Habitat

Thursday Thursday Length Estimator to Develop on Migrating Anadromous Salmonid Sector: Motivations, Behavior, and Improvement Actions to Population August 24 August Overfishing Limits for Data Poor Juveniles in the Sacramento-San Value Response with a Life-Cycle Model Species Joaquin River Delta (CA) Andrew M. Scheld Shubha Pandit Meaghan Bryan Mark D. Bowen

11:20 AM A Comparison of Age and Size Use of Telemetry and Tagging in The Atlantic Goliath Grouper and Ecological Quality Assessment of Structured Assessment Models Survival Studies to Evaluate the the Politics of Managing Protected Czech Reservoirs Based on Fish Applied to a Cisco Stock in Thunder Benefits of a Physical Barrier at the but Controversial Species Communities Bay, Ontario Head of Old River (CA) Geoffrey Shideler Petr Blabolil Nicholas Fisch Patricia Brandes

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Optimal Formation of Accurate Behavior of Smolts and Predators When Maximum Sustainable The Use of Management Strategy Juvenile Abundance Indices in Around Temporary Barriers Access Vies with Maximum Evaluation to Explore Habitat Area Stock Assessments of South Measured with Fine-Scale Acoustic Sustainable Yield: The Curious of Particular Concern Designations Atlantic Fisheries: A Case Study Telemetry Case of the Red Snapper in the Gulf of Mexico Julia Reynolds Samuel V. Johnston Clay Porch Claire Roberts

1:20 PM Discussion Innovative Methods and Examples Role of Coastal Small-Scale and Using Species Distribution Modeling for Measuring Survival of Barriers to Recreational Fisheries in the As a Tool for Designing Smolt Migration Management of Billfish in the West Assessment Surveys for Samuel V. Johnston Indian Ocean Region Threatened and Endangered Nelly Isigi Kadagi Rockfish in Puget Sound Robert Pacunski

100 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 14 Room 15 Room 16 Room 18 Time Multispecies and Watershed Marine Fisheries Manageme nt II Freshwater Fisheries Fish Ecology II Approaches to Conservation II Manageme nt II

8:00 AM Restoring and Preserving Native Improving Bird Bycatch Analysis Introducing Florida Largemouth Influence of Water Temperature on Fishes By Spawning River Using a K-Aggregated Bass: A Success Story? Feeding Performance and Conservation Advocates Transformation Sean Lusk Competition of Spring-Associated Timothy Birdsong Can Zhou and Riverine-Associated Fishes Jeremy D. Maikoetter

8:20 AM Native Fish Conservation Areas in Tools to Facilitate Communication Growth Potential and Mortality of Prey Species- and Size-Specific the Chihuahuan Desert of Texas with Fisheries Stakeholders: A Largemouth Bass in Lake Erie's Consumption By Lake Michigan Gary Garrett Simulation Model Applied to Western Basin Piscivores Common Snook Alex Benecke Benjamin Leonhardt Juliane Struve

8:40 AM Conservation of Native Fishes in the Synthesizing Trade Data and Within-Population Associations Response of Fish Population Colorado River Basin, Texas Fishery Conservation Status Between Growth and Natural Dynamics to Mitigation Activities in Stephan Magnelia Ian Page Mortality in Two Alabama Reservoir a Large Regulated River Largemouth Bass Stocks Carson Watkins Matthew J. Catalano

9:00 AM Texas Native Fish Conservation Modeling the Spatiotemporal Habitat Habitat Hypotheses and the Simulation Models of the Predator- Areas Network Distribution of Spiny Dogfish Implications on Largemouth Bass Prey Interaction Between Striped Ben Labay (Squalus acanthias) By Sex in Production Bass and Blueback Herring in the Coastal Waters of the Northeastern Calvin Rezac Connecticut River United States Justin P. Davis Andrea Dell'Apa 9:40 AM Watershed-Scale Conservation of Ecosystem Modeling and Larval What Have We Learned after Thirty Rainbow Smelt Interactions with Native Fishes in the Brazos River Dispersal: How Depth Distributions Years of Bed Fishing Research? Reservoir Forage and Sportfish Basin, Texas of Larvae in the Gulf of Mexico John Hargrove Species Kevin Mayes Affect Management Strategies Nicholas Kludt Kelly Vasbinder

10:00 AM Watershed-Based Conservation The New Zealand Orange Roughy Exploring Largemouth Bass Food Web Feedbacks and Assessments and Planning to Fishery: Journey from Overfishing Tournament Impacts in Two Compensation in Trophic Guide Range-Wide Conservation of to Certification Connected Tidal Rivers in Virginia Cascades Driven By Zooplankton Guadalupe Bass Robert Trumble Aaron Bunch Size Structure Preston Bean Thomas Detmer

Fluvial Fishes SDM and Macroecology Emmanuel A. Frimpong, Moderator

10:20 AM A Multidisciplinary Approach to The Caribbean Billfish Project: Introductory Remarks Calcium Carbonate Diversity in Fish Developing the Science and Public Exploring Innovative Approaches to Otoliths: Evolutionary and Support Needed to Maintain Managing Highly Migratory Microchemical Perspectives Instream Flows in the Devils River Recreational Fisheries Brenda Pracheil Basin, Texas Leah Baumwell Sarah Robertson Freshwater flows and coastal

fisheries August 24 Thursday Rolando Santos, Moderator 10:40 AM Instream Flow Restoration and The Influence of Catch Share Presence-Absence Input Data for Water Management, Not Watershed Conservation in the Management on MSC Assessment Sdms Are Bayesian Probabilities Overharvest, Contributed to the Cypress Basin, Texas Scores Determined By Method: A 2012-2013 Apalachicola Bay Oyster Ryan Smith Graeme Parkes Simulation Study Fishery Collapse Emmanuel A. Frimpong Christopher Stallings

11:00 AM Building Intragency Collaborative Quantifying the Trans-Boundary A Stream Classification System for Do Nearshore Salinity Conditions Partnerships to Implement Mixing Rates of Atlantic Bluefin the Conterminous United States Affect Lucania Parva Abundance? Watershed-Based Conservation Tuna Ryan A. McManamay Joseph Serafy Megan Bean Hui Liu

11:20 AM Implementation of Watershed-Scale Broad and Fine-Scale Movement Does Stream Geophysical Diversity Use of Rivers By a Large, Management of Riparian Invasive Ecology of Yellowtail Snapper Predict Fish Biodiversity? Euryhaline Fish (Common Snook) Plants: Case Studies Across the (Ocyurus chrysurus) within a Christopher DeRolph Varies Along a Latitudinal Gradient Privately-Owned Texas Landscape Marine Protected Area in the U.S. Philip Stevens Monica McGarrity Virgin Islands Ashleigh Novak

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Collaborative Restoration of Spatial Variability in the Individual A Framework for Modeling the Risk Freshwater Inflows and Juvenile Westslope Cutthroat Trout into 100 Growth of Sheepshead of Biological Invasions Pink Shrimp: Nearshore Habitat Km of Cherry Creek, a Madison (Archosargus probatocephalus) in Melissa Oubre Limitations, Associations, and River, Montana Tributary the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic: Spatiotemporal Density Trends Bradley B. Shepard Implications for Assessment and from 10 Years of Monitoring in Management Biscayne Bay, Florida Grant Adams Ian Zink 1:20 PM Annual Mortality of Atlantic Tripletail Determinants of Establishment Potential Interacting Effects of in Coastal Georgia and Florida: Success and Spread of Non-Native Freshwater Inflow, Climate Change, Implications for Managing the Stream Fishes in the Eastern US and Habitat Restoration on Juvenile Recreational Fishery Brandon Peoples Salmonid Entry into a Low Survival Alex Cummins Migration Pathway of a Large West Coast USA Estuary Marin Greenwood

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 101 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 19 Room 20 Room 21 Room 22 Time Fish Health in Florida II Using electronic tags to estimate Fish and Shellfish Biology II Advancing MSE III vital rates in fishes

8:00 AM Coral-Microbe Interactions: The Listening for Mortality: Estimating Fecundity, Egg Biochemical Linking Multiple Ecopath Models for Good and the Bad Vital Rates Using Electronic Tags Composition, and Early Life an Ms e Operating Model Cory Krediet Joseph E. Hightower Development of Coho Salmon Sean M. Lucey (Oncorhynchus kisutch) Kari Dammerman

8:20 AM The Aquatic Animal Health/ Disease Folliculogenesis, Oocyte Growth Lessons Learned from Data- Diagnostic Network in Florida and Ovulation in the Florida Bass, Limited Evaluations of Data-Rich Roy Yanong Micropterus Floridanus Reef Fish Species in the Gulf of Harry Grier Mexico: Implications for Providing Fisheries Management Advice for Data-Poor Stocks Skyler Sagarese

8:40 AM Phylogenomic Characterization of a Fate Determination Using Radio Nutritional Evaluation of Novel Complexity Versus Parsimony in Novel Megalocytivirus Lineage from Telemetry in Freshwater Fish Genotypes of Freshwater Prawn, Setting up OM Designs: What Is Archived Ornamental Fish Janice Kerns Macrobrachium Vollenhovenii Essential When Using the Samples (Herklots, 1857) for Enhanced Food Assessment Model to Set up an OM Samantha Koda Security for an Ms e? Oyediran Olusegun Oyebola Rishi Sharma

9:00 AM Response of Clarias Gariepinus Bayesian Hierarchical Modeling of The Effect of Water Temperature Using an Individual-Based Model to Juvenile to Jatropha curcas Meal As Movement and Mortality Based on a on the Fecundity of Northern Evaluate Effectiveness of Maine Replacement for Soya Bean Tagging Experiment Shrimp, Pandalus Borealis, in the Lobster Fishery Management Mabel Ipinmoroti Can Zhou Gulf of Maine Mackenzie Mazur Hsiao-Yun Chang

9:40 AM An Overview of Two Emerging To Tag or Not to Tag? Effects of Validating Blueline Tilefish Ages in Simulated Vs. Actual Control Rule Bacterial Pathogens within the Fish Condition and Surgical the U.S. South Atlantic Using Bomb Performance: Lessons Learned Ornamental Fish Industry Outcomes on Survival Estimates Radiocarbon from New England Groundfish Johnny Shelley Christa M. Woodley Adam Lytton John Wiedenmann

10:00 AM Widespread Coral Disease Use of Acoustic Telemetry to Status of Thiamine Deficiency Outbreaks Along the Florida Reef Assess over-Winter Survival of Complex in Lake Ontario Tract: A Case Study of Grecian Gizzard Shad Salmonines Rocks Hilary Meyer Matt Futia Vanessa Brinkhuis

Advancing MSE - session 2 Sean M. Lucey, Moderator John F. Walter III, Moderator Daniel Goethel, Moderator 10:20 AM Epitheliocystis Infection in Juvenile Winter Severity Influences Spotted Site Fidelity and Growth Rate of Getting on the Same Page, or at Striped Bass (Morone saxatilis) Seatrout Mortality in a Southeast US Juvenile Black Sea Bass, Least in the Same Library: Lessons from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Estuarine System Centropristis Striata, in the in Communication from a River Delta Timothy A. Ellis Maryland Coastal Bays Using Mark- Stakeholder Driven MSE for Joseph M. Groff Recapture Northeast US Atlantic Herring Rebecca Peters Jonathan Deroba

10:40 AM Phylogenomic Characterization of a Estimating Weakfish Mortality Growth of Captive Juvenile Atlantic Demystifying Ms e: Communication Novel Seahorse Poxvirus from Rates Using a Combined Telemetry Tarpon (Megalops atlanticus) from Tools to Engage Stakeholders in Formalin-Fixed Paraffin-Embedded and Conventional Tagging the Mississippi Sound Estuary the Process Tissues Approach James S. Franks Shana Miller Joseph M. Groff Jacob R. Krause Thursday Thursday

August 24 August 11:00 AM Annual Occurrence of Ulcerative Estimating Mortality of Southern Age and Growth of Channel Catfish Fifty Years of Management Strategy Mycosis Caused By the Oomycete, Flounder Using a Combined Populations below R. L. Harris Dam Evaluation at the International Aphanomyces Invadans, in Telemetry and Conventional on the Tallapoosa River, Alabama Pacific Halibut Commission Florida’s Estuarine Fish Tagging Approach M. Clint Lloyd Allan Hicks Theresa T. Cody Trevor K. Scheffel

11:20 AM Microcystins in Selected Fish and Direct Estimates of Red Drum What Your Momma Gave You: A MSE for an Endangered Salmon Invertebrates in the St. Lucie (Sciaenops ocellatus) Mortality in Importance of Maternally Invested Population Incorporating Droughts Estuary, Florida Following the 2016 Coastal Alabama Nutrients for Larval Performance of and Abundance Forecasts: Cyanobacteria Blooms T. Reid Nelson Southern Flounder Engaging Stakeholders WITHIN a Jan H. Landsberg Corinne Burns Fishery Management Council Process Michael O'Farrell 11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Composition, Connectivity, and Mortality Estimates for Red The Use of Ultrasound and Plasma Bristol Bay, Alaska Commercial Health on Shallow and Mesophotic Snapper in the Northern Gulf of Sex Steroids to Determine Sex and Salmon Fishery Ms e: Accounting Coral Reefs Mexico Maturity in Wild Burbot for Variable Production Regimes Joshua Voss Laura Jay Grove Lauren McGarvey and the Importance of Industry and Harvester Participation Curry Cunningham

1:20 PM Using a Large-Scale Telemetry Oocyte Atresia in Captive Common Eliciting Preferences for Alternative Array to Resolve Uncertainty in Snook, Centropomus Undecimalis Harvest Strategies through Survival and Site Fidelity for Carole Neidig Participatory Workshops: A Case Threatened Gulf Sturgeon Study on Herring in Haida Gwaii Acipenser Oxyrinchus Desotoi Kristin N. Marshall William Pine III

102 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 23 Room 24 Room 25 Room 3 Time Fishery Genomics - John Gold Climate Change Impacts on Fish Stable IsotopesPractical applications of HD II Symposium and Fisheries II

8:00 AM Welcoming Remarks Using an Individual-Based Model A Multi-Faceted Approach to with Physiological Constraints to Stakeholder Engagement on Investigate Fish Distribution in Orange Lake Chesapeake Bay Ryan Hamm Benjamin Marcek

8:20 AM Vertebrate Chitin: A Genomics- Using Energetics to Predict the Fish-Based Isoscapes for Heterogeneity in the Economic Inspired and Curiosity-Driven Tale Impacts of Climate Change on Continental-Shelf Waters of the Value Gained from a Cultural Chris Amemiya Tropical Freshwater Fishes and Entire Gulf of Mexico Service Fisheries Ernst B. Peebles Nicholas Cole Michael S. Cooperman

8:40 AM It's Always about the Fish: Science Predicting Ecological Responses to Validation of the Use of Fish Eye Using Qualitative Site and Policy Climate Variability with a Dynamic Lenses to Record Trophic Changes Characteristics Data in Marine Chara Ragland Bayesian Network Model over Time Recreational Fishing Models: A New Neda Trifonova Jennifer E. Granneman Site Aggregation Approach Jesse Backstrom

9:00 AM John Gold’s Influence and Forecasting the Effects of Climate Lifetime Changes in Trophic Level, Fishing, Faith, and the Future: Contributions to Freshwater Fish and Land-Use Change on Fish As Determined from Compound- Analyzing the Role of Religion in Conservation in Texas Recruitment in Lake Erie Specific Amino Acid Analysis of Sustainable Fisheries Management Gary Garrett David A. Dippold δ13C and δ15N within Isolated Eye- on Lake Tanganyika, East Africa Lens Layers Benjamin Lowe Amy A. Wallace 9:40 AM Transcriptomics of Hybridization in Projecting Potential Responses of Diet-Driven Nitrogen Isotopic Exploring Constituent Use and Species of Cyprinella Freshwater Fish to Climate Change Change in the Organic Matrix of Understanding of a Regulations Richard Broughton in the Mobile River Basin Otoliths: Micromill Sampling in a Publication through Focus Group Michelle VanCompernolle Diet Switch Experiment with Atlantic Conversations Croaker (Micropogonias Corey A. Jager undulatus ) Jessica Lueders-Dumont 10:00 AM Are Genetically Distinct Sensitivity of Yield per Recruit Northwest Atlantic Mackerel Oral Histories: Preserving Populations of the TX Endemic Curve to Global Warming Effects: A (Scomber scombrus ) Population Knowledge and Addressing Gaps in Plateau Shiner Cyprinella Lepida Link Using Temperature and Natural Structure Evaluated Using Otolith Fisheries Science Also Morphologically Distinct? Mortality Stable Isotopes Margaret Allen Kevin W. Conway Carlos Freitas S. Gray Redding

10:20 AM The “Gold Performance of Alaskan Groundfish The "Carbon Bump" Phenomenon Stakeholder Driven Process to Standard” and Units of Harvest Control Rules Under in Reef-Fish Eye Lens δ13C Update Florida Largemouth Bass Biodiversity in Southwestern Climate Change Given Recruitment- Reconstructions: An Indicator of Regulations Fishes: From Population Genetics Environmental Linkages in Stock Ontogenetic Trophic Shifts? Allen Martin to Conservation Genomics Assessments Julie L. Vecchio Marlis R. Douglas Ashley Weston

10:40 AM Genetics and Demography Climate Change and Fisheries Backcountry Habitat Dependence, Evaluation of Stakeholder

Intersect in Conservation Planning Livelihoods: Designing for Ontogenetic Habitat Shifts, and Engagement Efforts Leading to a August 24 for “Big-River” Fishes of the Resilience through a Stakeholder Foraging System Fidelity of Atlantic Regulation Change Thursday Colorado River Basin Co-Learning Process Tarpon (Megalops atlanticus) Nia Morales Thomas Turner Sarah Schumann Benjamin Kurth

11:00 AM Conservation, Procreation and Economic Impacts and Adaptation Foraging Strategies of Marine Fish Linking the Value of Recreation Introgression in Sturgeons of the Strategies for Fishing Communities Driven By Sex, Size or Distribution? Fishing at Inland Lakes to Fish Genus Scaphirhynchus in the Facing Climate-Driven Species a Case Study of Lizard Fish, Abundance and Water Quality Mississippi and Missouri River Changes Saurida Tumbil of South China Sea Frank Lupi Basins Bradley Franklin Yunrong Yan Edward Heist 11:20 AM Genomics and Fisheries Social-Ecological Vulnerability of The Importance of Low Salinity Marine Fisheries Management in Management: Studies in the Northeast U.S. Fishing Habitat to Red Drum Florida: Expert Authority to Co- Northern Gulf of Mexico Communities to Climate Change Louisa Torrance Management David Portnoy Katherine E. Mills Jessica McCawley

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Genome-Wide Differentiation and Vulnerability of Fisher Folks Consistent Trophic Ontogenies New Approaches for Place-Based Adaptation of Atlantic Cod Ecotypes Operating in Peri-Urban Lakes and Among Local Populations Despite Participatory Management of in the Gulf of Maine Adaptations to Climate Change in Geographic Heterogeneity in Diets Common Snook Fisheries in Gemma Clucas South West Nigeria, and in the Christopher Stallings Florida Upper Manyame Catchment, Jynessa Dutka-Gianelli Zimbabwe Bernadette Fregene 1:20 PM Something Fishy Going on in Japan: Investigating Movement of Hogfish Integrating the Social Sciences into Effects of Radiation from the (Lachnolaimus maximus) Using Management of North Disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi Eye-Lens Stable Isotopes Carolina’s Mountain Trout Nuclear Power Plant Meaghan Faletti Resources Timothy Mousseau Kerry J. Linehan

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 103 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 4Room 5Room 6Room 7 Time Effects of Sound on Fishes Life History Variability Florida RESTORE Centers of Monitoring and Methods II Amy Scholik, Moderator Robert Ellis, Moderator Excellence - Synthesis of Fish Eric MacMillan, Moderator Jameal Samhouri, Moderator and Wildlife to Date Scott Hamilton, Moderator Elizabeth Fetherston-Resch, Moderator

8:00 AM An Introduction to the Sonic World Spatial Demographic and Life Using Autonomous Underwater Seeing Creel Data in a Whole New of Fishes: Sound Production, History Variation in a Predatory and Gliders to Map Fish in the Eastern Light Perception, and Potential Influences Commercially-Valuable Marine Fish Gulf of Mexico Keith Hurley of Anthropogenic Noise on Fish Jameal Samhouri Chad Lembke Ecology and Behavior Aaron Rice 8:20 AM How Fish Hear An Analysis of Spatial Variability in Improving the Use of Products Adjusting for Bias in Gear David Zeddies Size Structure, Growth, and Derived from Monitoring Data in Modification Studies: A GLM Juvenile Recruitment of Spotted Gulf of Mexico Ecosystem Models Approach Seatrout in Florida Suggests Elizabeth Babcock Laura M. Lee Revisions to the Current Management Scheme Are Needed Elizabeth Herdter

8:40 AM Assessing the Effects of Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity Egg and Larval DNA Barcoding to Evaluating the Size Selectivity of Anthropogenic Sound on Protected in Life History and Productivity Support Gulf Reef-Fish Stock Mid-Water Trawls for Sampling and Managed Fishes: The NMFS Trends of Atlantic Weakfish Assessments Kokanee Regulatory Perspective (Cynoscion regalis) and Makenzie Burrows Zachary Klein Jacqueline Meyer Implications for Fisheries Management Allison White 9:00 AM Effects of Noise on Fishes, Sound Really, Size Doesn't Matter: Sex- Estimation of Biological Indicators Indexing Juvenile Red Drum Production, and Reproduction Specific Differences in Growth and for Assessing Recreational Abundance in NC Estuaries: Joseph Luczkovich Longevity of the Ruby Snapper Fisheries Evaluating the Potential for Bias in a (Etelis carbunculus) Steven G. Smith Long-Term Survey Ryan Nichols Frederick Scharf

9:40 AM The Impact of Bridge Crossings on From Pest to Plate: Understanding Monitoring Oil Spill Effects and Feasibility of a Hook and Line Aquatic Soundscapes the Reproductive Biology of Jonah Recovery in Large Deep-Sea Survey to Assess Tautog (Tautoga Daniel Holt Crabs, Cancer borealis , in the Mid- Fishes onitis) Abundance in Buzzards Bay Atlantic Bight to Improve R. Dean Grubbs Massachusetts Management Robert Glenn Noelle Olsen

10:00 AM Effects of Shipping Noise on Spatial Variance in Life History An Ecosystem-Based Approach to Use of a Fishery-Independent Rod Chorusing Behavior in Freshwater Characteristics of the Waved Evaluating Impacts and and Reel Survey to Evaluate Size Drum Whelk (Buccinum undatum) in the Management of Invasive Lionfish in and Age Structure of Tautog in Aaron Rice Mid-Atlantic the Northern Gulf of Mexico Massachusetts Sarah Borsetti David Chagaris Tiffany Vidal

10:20 AM Failing to Detect Movement: The Variability in the Life History of Hardbottom Mapping and A Comparison of Methods for Rearing Soundscape Impacts the Finetooth Sharks, Carcharhinus Community Characterization of the Estimating Catch at Age of Western Development of a Larval Fish isodon, from the Western North West-Central Florida Gulf Coast Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Species Atlantic Brian Walker Lisa E. Ailloud Cecilia Krahforst Jeremy M. Higgs

10:40 AM Hear No Evil? Auditory Function of Living on the (shelf) Edge: Ecosystem Responses to the Sampling the Stream Landscape: Mid-Atlantic Living Marine Assessing Spatiotemporal Installation of Artificial Reefs: From An Ecoregion-Level Capture Resources in an Era of Variability in Fish Community Phytoplankton to Fishes Probability Model for Stream Anthropogenic Effects Structure on Southeastern US William Patterson III Fishes Andrij Z. Horodysky Atlantic Continental Shelf-Edge Robert Mollenhauer Reefs Todd Kellison 11:00 AM Effects of Acoustic Overstimulation Estimating the Age and Size Informing Fishery-Independent Reef Developing an Electronic Logbook on Auditory Hair Cells in Fishes Dependency of Spawning Fish Surveys through Advanced to Census Guided Sport Fishing Michael E. Smith Frequency in Gag and Scamp Survey Techniques Angler-Trip Effort, Catch and Grouper Off the Southeastern U.S. Allison White Harvest in Alaska

Thursday Thursday to Improve Population Models James J. Hasbrouck August 24 August Keilin Gamboa-Salazar Peer review in fisheries Stephen K. Brown, Moderator David Sampson, Moderator David J. Die, Moderator 11:20 AM A Summary of the Exposure Study How Varying Degrees of Aging Bias Center for Independent Experts The US Fish and Wildlife Services Series: Effects of Impulsive Pile Affect Apparent Growth Curves in NOAA Fisheries Peer Review Aquatic Invasive Species Early Driving Sounds on Fishes Blueline Tilefish Program Detection and Monitoring Program Michele Halvorsen Joseph Ballenger Stephen K. Brown for Lake Michigan: A Summary Cari-Ann Hayer

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Behavioral Response of Fish to Pile Distribution, Abundance, and National Standard on Scientific Best Practices for Integrating Driving and Sonar - Case Studies of Habitat Selection of Porgies (family Information for Marine Fisheries Scientific Outcomes into Fisheries Tagged and Penned Fish - Part 1 Sparidae) in the Eastern Gulf of Management in the United States Policy and Management Joseph Iafrate Mexico William Michaels Paul Simonin Amanda J. Tyler-Jedlund

1:20 PM Behavioral Response of Fish to Pile Comparison of Growth Parameters Peer Review of High Profile Estimating Abundance of Dolly Driving and Sonar - Case Studies of of Vermilion Snapper Benchmark Stock Assessments in Varden in Northern Alaska Using Tagged and Penned Fish - Part 2 (Rhomboplites aurorubens) from the New England and Mid-Atlantic Aerial Surveys Joseph Iafrate the Gulf of Mexico and South Regions: SAW/SARC Process Brendan Scanlon Atlantic Bight James Weinberg Trevor Moncrief

104 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 8Room 9 Time Fish CultureFish and Shellfish Biology I

8:00 AM Largemouth Bass Fingerling Acoustic Vector and Tonal Features Production in Kansas: Where of Red Hind Grouper Vocalizations We've Been and Where We're Cameron Matthews Going Josh Jagels

8:20 AM Comparing Post-Stocking Survival Autotransplanted Gonads Produce and Contribution of Pellet-Reared Functional Gametes and Rescue and Live-Reared Florida Bass, Growth of Tilapia (Oreochromis Micropterus Floridanus mossambicus) Nick Trippel Sandip Bhatta

8:40 AM Delineating Hatchery-Reared Vs. Identification and Frequency of Sub- Wild-Produced Channel Catfish in Annual Increments in Sagittal Reservoirs: An Otolith Otoliths of Alligator Gar: Microchemical Approach Implications for Age Estimation Cory Becher David Buckmeier

9:00 AM Advanced Fingerling Largemouth Daily Age Estimation Reveals Bass Production Costs and 180 Extreme Growth of Young-of-Year Day Post Stocking Survival in Alligator Gar in the Wild Arkansas Small Reservoirs Nate Smith Jeff Buckingham

9:40 AM Effect of Stocking Density on Sex-Specific Dynamic Rates in Physiological Functions and Muscle Alligator Gar: Implications for Quality of Blunt Snout Bream Managing Exploited Populations Megalobrama Amblycephala Daniel Daugherty Juveniles Rong Tang

10:00 AM The Role of Indispensable and Sibship Reconstruction for Inferring Dispensable Amino Acids the Effective Number of Breeders of Supplementation in the Reduction Alligator Gar from the Trinity River, of Dietary Protein Content in Texas Channel Catfish Ictalurus Punctatus Brian Kreiser Diets Shimaa M.Salem 10:20 AM Virulent Aeromonas Hydrophila 15 Years of Nursery Habitat Studies (vAh) - Not Just Another “Hole- on the Alaska Skate in the Eastern in-the-Head” Bering Sea Bradley Richardson Gerald R. Hoff

10:40 AM Conditioning Endangered Bonytail Characterization of Vitellogenesis in August 24 Thursday and Razorback Sucker to Avoid the Bonnethead Shark Sphyrna Predation: Implications for Post- Tiburo in the Northwestern Atlantic Stocking Survival Ocean Kristopher Stahr Kat Mowle

11:00 AM Fish Skin Microbiome As a Tool Diet of Larval Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Toward Understanding and Thunnus Thynnus from the Central Improving Fish Welfare Gulf of Mexico Galit Sharon Jason D. Tilley

11:20 AM Stress in Aquaculture: It’s Time Diet of Yellowfin Tuna (Thunnus to Control albacares) in the Northern Gulf of Ahmed Mustafa Mexico Dyan P. Gibson

11:40 AM Lunch Lunch

1:00 PM Immersion of Fry in 17-Alpha Age, Growth, and Reproduction of Methyltestosterone Can be Highly Gulf of Mexico Yellowfin Tuna Effective for Sex Reversal in Ashley Pacicco Rainbow Trout Gregory Weber

1:20 PM Fat Detection and Evaluation for Influence of Hydrology on the Age- Digital Physiological Flatfish Via Specific Abundance and Growth of Online Sequential ELM Freshwater Drum and Gizzard Rui Nian Shad from Lotic and Lentic Habitats John Dattilo

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 105 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 10 Room 11 Room 12 Room 13 Time Endemic Species Conservation II Biotelemetry, Survival Modeling Sustaining Commercial and Habitat Science and EBFM Mark D. Bowen, Ph.D., Moderator Recreational Fisheries in an Tony Marshak, Moderator Steven T. Lindley, Moderator Increasingly Complex World Rebecca Peters, Moderator Vaskar Nepal, Moderator Quinton Phelps, Moderator Mary C. Fabrizio, Moderator 1:40 PM Assessment of the Stream Fish Virdct: A New Model for Cost- The Commercial-Recreational Using Habitat Quality As an Community Structure in the Upper Effective Estimations of Dam Continuum: Investigating the Indicator of Reef Fish Recruitment Red River of Texas and Oklahoma Passage Survival of Acoustic- and Decision-Making and Preferences and Abundance David Ruppel Radio-Tagged Fish of U.S. East Coast Atlantic Bluefin Christopher Fulton Ryan Harnish Tuna Fishermen William M. Goldsmith

2:00 PM Range Contractions of Three Native From a Graph to a Multi-State Biological Impacts of Contrasting Using GIS to Predict Nearshore Cyprinids Are Associated with Non- Release-Recapture Model Economic Goals for Commercial Substrate Composition in Lakes Native Northern Pike Expansion Richard Townsend and Recreational Marine Fisheries Douglas Zentner Allison Stringer Richard D. Methot Jr.

2:20 PM The Distribution of Rare Endemic Fish Passage for Tropical Macrofaunal Utilization of Restored Minnows in Central California Potamodromous Fish: Is "the Mo re, Oyster Reefs: The Effects of Matthew Young the Better" Always True? Habitat Complexity and Luiz G. M. Silva Environmental Conditions Melissa A. Karp

2:40 PM Genetic Status of Galaxiid Fishes Large Reservoirs As Ecological Identification of Persistent Benthic Threatened By Non-Native Barriers: Insights from Radio- Assemblages in Areas with Introductions Telemetry in a Tropical System Different Temperature Variability Sofia Consuegra Paulo Pompeu Patterns through Broad-Scale Mapping N.David Bethoney

3:20 PM Endangered and Threatened Fish Passage Efficiency at a Rock Discussion Indigenous Diadromous Tropical Arch Rapids Nature-like Fishway on Fishes of the United States a Large Coastal River R. Grant Gilmore Jr. Joshua Raabe

3:40 PM Identifying Limiting Conditions for Movement and Survival of Bighead Intolerant Prairie Fishes in Streams Carp Exposed to a Carbon Dioxide Kathryn Schlafke Deterrent Barrier David L. Smith

4:00 PM Upper Columbia Redband Trout: A Study of Fish Injury and Survival Conservation for the Future at the High Head Bypass at Green Bryan Jones Peter Dam, Oregon Fenton Khan

4:20 PM Population Structure of Even-Year Pink Salmon from Prince William Sound, Alaska

Thursday Thursday Wei Cheng August 24 August

106 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 14 Room 15 Room 16 Room 18 Time Multispecies and Watershed Marine Fisheries Manageme nt II Fluvial Fishes SDM and Freshwater flows and coastal Approaches to Conservation II Macroecology fisheries Emmanuel A. Frimpong, Moderator Rolando Santos, Moderator

1:40 PM It's Not Easy to Save a River Migratory Movements and Fishing Rarity, Risk, and Uncertainty: Sampling Uncharted Waters to Sky Jones-Lewey Mortality of the Louisiana Blue Crab Evaluating Vulnerability and Define a Threatened, Inflow- Spawning Stock Exposure of Stream Fishes to a Responsive Forage Fish’s Helen Olmi Changing Climate and Landscape Rearing Habitat in a Large West in the Pacific Northwest, USA Coast USA Estuary Meryl Mims Lenny Grimaldo

2:00 PM Panel Discussion Queen Conch Growth and Ecological Flows and Rare Species Seasonal and Decadal Changes in Management in Belize Distributions Fish Community Structure in the James Foley James E. McKenna Jr. Crocodile Sanctuary of Northeastern Florida Bay: Implications for Spatial Management of Recreational Fishing Kerry Flaherty-Walia Fish Ecology I

2:20 PM Estuarine Fish Communities Along Vessel Dynamics of the Snow Crab Using Species Distribution Models Applying a Sportfish Performance

a Spatial Urbanization Gradient (Chionoecetes opilio) Fishery in the to Identify Negative Threshold Measure to Estuarine Restoration Jessica L. Valenti Gulf of St. Lawrence and Impacts Responses to Coal Mining Chris Kelble on Snow Crab Population Stressors in Appalachian Stream Kate Christie Fishes Zachary Martin 2:40 PM Abundance of Ichtyofauna and A Quasi-Stationary Approach to Distributions of Fluvial Fishes Fish and Invertebrate Habitat Physicochemical Parameters of Estimating Effective Effort in the Across the Conterminous United Analysis; The Confounding Effects Egbe Reservoir, Ekiti State, Nigeria Maine American Lobster (Homarus States: Supporting Conservation of Spatial Scale and Covarying Adebola Oluwatoyin americanus) Fishery over Large Spatial Extents Environmental Gradients Robert Boenish Dana M. Infante Brianna C. Michaud 3:20 PM Fish Communities in Ethiopian How Shifting Baselines, Counter- Drivers of Fish Assemblage Evaluating Potential Upstream Highland Reservoirs: Effects of Factual Trends, and Imprecise Structure and Dynamics in Atlantic Freshwater Withdrawal Effects on Altitude-Related Gradients, Objectives Complicate Program Coastal Plain Streams the Distribution and Abundance of Drystand Regimes and Dispersal Evaluation: Examples from Two Rebecca Scott Juvenile Fishes in the St. Johns Limitation Catch Share Programs River Estuary Mekonen Teferi Jill Swasey Steven J Miller

3:40 PM A Comparison of Fish Communities Landings, Discards, and Fleet Impact of Water Fluctuation and Influence of Freshwater Inflow on in Contiguous Backwater and Movement Across Time and Space Intermittency on Stream Fish the Distribution, Abundance, and Vegetated Impounded Areas of Pool in Multispecies Fisheries: An Community Structure Community Structure of Estuarine 19, Upper Mississippi River Application to the Gulf of Mexico Isabel Faith Papraniku Nekton in Florida Estuaries Eli G. Lampo Reef Fish Fishery Timothy C. MacDonald Quinn Weninger 4:00 PM Wild Juvenile Trout Nursery Habitat Testing Robustness of the Northern Fish Assemblage Patterns in Small What Is the Role of Individual August 24

in an Intermittent Tributary and Gulf of Mexico Trophic Dynamics Rivers: An Approach to Evaluate Variation in Tracking Temporal Thursday Second Order Stream of a Using Social Network Analysis Site Occupancy, Mesohabitat Use, Heterogeneity? Hydroscapes and Southeastern US Tailwater Robert T. Leaf and Detection Everglades Common Snook Tyler Farling Kasey Pregler Jennifer Rehage

4:20 PM Using USGS Streamstats to Colonization and Extinction of an Getting Mechanistic with Fish Evaluate Relationships Between Indicator Species: A Occupancy Spatial Patterns and Managing for Fish Populations and Flow Approach to Assessing Response Resilience to Disturbance: An Regime to Environmental Variation Overview of a Long-Term Snook Larissa Lee Seth Fopma River Use-Study Ross Boucek 4:40 PM Population Characteristics of Yellow Discussion The Relationship of Freshwater

Perch in Dead Lakes, FL Inflow Regime and the Spatial Scott Bisping Ecology of the Nekton of the Brazos River Estuary, Texas George Guillen

5:20 PM Concluding Remarks

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 107 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 19 Room 20 Room 21 Room 22 Time Fish Health in Florida II Using electronic tags to estimate Fish and Shellfish Biology II Advancing MSE - session 2 vital rates in fishes Sean M. Lucey, Moderator John F. Walter III, Moderator Daniel Goethel, Moderator

1:40 PM Use of Rotenone to Improve Growth An Integrated Tagging Model to Otolith Chemical Analysis for From Complex Models to Harvest of Sport Fishes Estimate Mortality Rates of Southern Flounder: Contributions to Recommendations: Engaging Ben C. Neely Albemarle Sound-Roanok e River an Understanding of Broad-Scale Stakeholders in Lake Erie Percid Striped Bass Patterns of Population Structure Management Julianne E. Harris and Connectivity in U.S. South Lisa Peterson Atlantic Waters Verena H. Wang 2:00 PM The Effect of Large Scale Density Acoustic Telemetry-Based Development of a Decision Support Reductions on Movement Patterns Assessment of Post-Release Tool for Gulf of Mexico Red of Brown Trout (Salmo trutta) Mortality and Behavior By Walleye Snapper: Initiating Feedback in the Travis R. Rehm and Sauger: No Clear Relationships Ms e Feedback Loop with Stress Yuying Zhang Christopher Somers

2:20 PM If You Sink It, Some Will Come: Post-Release Survival of Atlantic Developing Harvest Strategies for Strategies for Artificial Habitat Use Bluefin Tuna Incidentally-Caught By the Western Central Pacific Tuna Zach Siders the United States Pelagic Longline Fishery Fishery in the Northern Gulf of Robert Scott Mexico Eric S. Orbesen 2:40 PM A Five Year Evaluation of a Size Evaluating the Efficacy of Facilitating Success: Using a Regulation for Black Crappie at Descender Devices in Increasing Stakeholder Workgroup Process to Lake Griffin, Florida the Survival of Deepwater Groupers Develop Management Brandon Thompson Using Telemetry Recommendations for Chesapeake Brendan Runde Bay Oysters Michael Wilberg

3:20 PM Stocking Saugeye to Improve Estimating Discard Mortality in a Evaluating Monitoring and Crappie Size Structure: Deep-Water Reef Fish: An Management Strategies for Reevaluating a Southern Reservoir Evolution in Fate Assignment Using Macquarie Island Patagonian Management Strategy Acoustic Telemetry Toothfish Dray Carl Judson M. Curtis Gavin Fay

3:40 PM Mixed-Effect Growth Model of Preliminary Results of Electronic Panel Discussion Walleye (Sander vitreus) in Lake Tagging of Cobia (Rachycentron Erie canadum) in the South Atlantic Qiuyun Ma Karl Brenkert

4:00 PM Estimating Lake Erie Walleye Habitat Utilization and Seasonal Natural Mortality Based on an Patterns of Cobia (Rachycentron Integrated Bayesian Hierarchical canadum) in the Southeast United Model States Based on Acoustic Can Zhou Telemetry Matt Perkinson 4:20 PM Evaluating Multisystem Scale Integrating Side-Scan Sonar and Length Limits Acoustic Telemetry to Estimate the Thursday Thursday

August 24 August Andrew Shamaskin Annual Spawning Run Size of Atlantic Sturgeon in the Hudson River David C. Kazyak 4:40 PM The Restoration and Rebound of Discussion Lake Trafford, Florida Lee Grove

108 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 23 Room 24 Room 25 Room 3 Time Fishery Genomics - John Gold Climate Change Impacts on Fish Stable IsotopesPractical applications of HD II Symposium and Fisheries II

1:40 PM Population Structure and Patterns Does Traditional Knowledge Affects Recruitment Sources of Silver Carp Asking the Right Questions: of Connectivity of Southern Ecosystems and Should It be in the Ohio River Basin Strategic Planning for Iowa’s Flounder, Paralichthys Lethostigma, Revisited? Aaron Schiller Urban Fisheries Program Using in the Gulf of Mexico and U.S South Muruganandam Muthiah Combined Survey and GIS Data Atlantic Rebecca M. Krogman Shannon O'Leary

2:00 PM Dispersal and Connectivity in an Lessons Learnt from Restoring Stable Isotope Ecology of the Adult-Sedentary Reef Fish with Stream Beds, Connectivity and Fish Invasive Lionfish (Pterois volitans Extended Pelagic Larval Phase, the Habitat Structures in Europe and P. miles) in Bermuda and Gray Triggerfish Balistes Juergen Geist Insights Towards Demersal Capriscus Community Structure Eric Saillant Corey Eddy

2:20 PM Understanding Species Monitoring of a Missouri River Examining Aspects of NGOM Small Composition, Diversity, and Shallow Water Habitat Project: Demersal Reef Fish Ecology with Population Genetics of Entire Potential Implications for Future Stable and Radio Isotopes Communities through River Restoration Projects Gracie Barnes Metagenomics Ryan Hupfeld Carol Stepien 2:40 PM Concluding Remarks Multi-Scale Examination of Potential Resource Partitioning and Niche Attributes Associated with Habitat Overlap in Northern Gulf of Mexico Selection of Juvenile Southern Demersal and Benthic Fishes Flounder (Paralichthys lethostigma) Inferred from Diet and Stable within a North Carolina Estuary Isotope Analyses Lisa Hollensead Miaya Glabach

3:20 PM Size-Specific Nursery Habitat Use Discussion By Red Drum in a Northeastern Gulf of Mexico Estuary: Results from a Long-Term Monitoring Survey David Gandy

3:40 PM Performance of Agricultural Plantings on Reservoir Mudflats Giancarlo Coppola

4:00 PM Cover in the Mudflats of a Reservoir

Structures Fish Assemblages Hunter Hatcher August 24

4:20 PM Integrating Landscape and Local Thursday Perspectives of Aquatic Communities to Understand Restoration Effectiveness in the Riverscape David Schumann 4:40 PM Influences of Trophic State, Macrophytes, and Woody Debris on Age-0 Largemouth Bass Catch and Recruitment in Michigan Lakes Joe Nohner

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 109 Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 4Room 5Room 6Room 7 Time Effects of Sound on Fishes Life History Variability Peer review in fisheries Monitoring and Methods II Amy Scholik, Moderator Robert Ellis, Moderator Stephen K. Brown, Moderator Eric MacMillan, Moderator Jameal Samhouri, Moderator David Sampson, Moderator Scott Hamilton, Moderator David J. Die, Moderator

1:40 PM Underwater Radiated Noise: Factors Affecting Estimates of Size The Importance of Peer Review for Exploring Causal Factors of Research Vessel Certification at Age and Growth in Gray Sedar Stock Assessments Spawning Stock Mortality in a Compliance Triggerfish from the Northern Gulf of Julia Byrd Riverine Striped Bass Population Jesse Spence Mexico Kyle T. Rachels William Patterson III

2:00 PM A Sound Approach to Assessing the Age, Growth and Mortality of Lane Peer Review and Science Advice in An Assessment of PIT Tag Impact of Underwater Noise on Snapper (Lutjanus synagris) from Canada Retention in Two Common Turtle Fishes the Eastern Gulf of Mexico Jake Rice Species in Southeast Iowa Arthur Popper Jessica Carroll Chad Dolan

2:20 PM Discussion Effect of Three Environmental The Northeast Atlantic Experience Through the Fish’s Eye: Using Parameters on Age-0 Red Drum with Peer Review of Fish Stock Inexpensive He mispherical Length Assessments Photography to Assess Riparian Gary C. Matlock Henrik Sparholt Canopy Zachary C. Nemec

2:40 PM Variability in Size and Age at First Improving Fisheries Science and Spawn of American Shad Management Via Peer Review: An Genine McClair Australian Perspective Cathy Dichmont

3:20 PM Life History Diversity in Science Peer Review: What, Anadromous Post-Spawn Female When, Where, and How Should We Steelhead Trout Assessed Using Review for Cost-Effectiveness? Plasma Estradiol-17B: Relationship Martin Cryer with Growth and Energy Reserves Laura Jenkins

3:40 PM Peer Review in Regional Fisheries Management Organizations, the Example of Iccat David Die

4:00 PM Peer-Review of Fisheries Management in the Commission for the Conservation of Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) Keith Reid

4:20 PM The Role of Peer Review in Providing Assuranc e in MSC Certification David Agnew Thursday Thursday August 24 August

4:40 PM

110 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Schedule of Oral Presentations—Thursday, August 24 Room Room 8Room 9 Time Fish CultureFish and Shellfish Biology I

1:40 PM How Does Brand Affect Demand for Crustacean Age Determination Seafood in the United States? An Using Ossicular Growth Records: Analysis of Store-Based Scanner An Australian Synthesis Data Jesse Leland Uttam Deb

2:00 PM Consumer's Willingness to Pay for Spatial and Temporal Trends in American Farm-Raised Vs Natural Mortality of Eastern Oyster Imported Catfish and Catfish like in Chesapeake Bay, Maryland Products: An Analysis of Store- Kathryn Doering Based Scanner Data Uttam Deb

2:20 PM Reproductive Indices for Stone Crab, Menippe mercenaria, throughout the Florida Fishery Claire Crowley

2:40 PM Age and Development of Atlantic Tarpon, Megalops atlanticus , Leptocephali from the Mississippi Sound Estuary Patrick Graham

Diadromous Fishes II 3:20 PM Ecology of American Eel in the First Insights to the Reproductive Roanoke River Above and below a Ecology and Nesting Behaviours of Hydroelectric Dam the Pouched Lamprey Jesse R. Fischer Cindy Baker

3:40 PM Spawning Season River Flow and Habitat Characteristics of Grotto American Shad Recruitment in the Sculpin Nest Sites in Hypogean St. Johns River, Florida Stream Systems

Reid Hyle Sindupa De Silva August 24 Thursday

4:00 PM Trends in Abundance and Fishing Foraging of Juvenile Crappies: The Mortality of American Eel on the Difference Is Black and White Atlantic Coast of the United States Sara Andree Desmond Kahn

4:20 PM Comparing Otoliths and Scales As Structures Used to Estimate Ages of Largemouth Bass: Consequences of Biased Age Estimates Stephen Tyszko 4:40 PM

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 111 Poster List

For space-saving reasons, only the title and authors are P-5 Antibacterial Activities of Neem Leave shown. Abstracts are available on the mobile app. (Azadirachta indica) Extracts on African Mud CatfishClarias Gariepinus (Burchell, 1822) P-numbers refer to regular posters; Ayofe Mutalib Hammed1, Folalu Adekunle Awe2, E-numbers refer to e-posters. Oluwatobi Amosu3 and Prince Emeka Ndimele1, (1) Lagos State University, Ojo, Lagos, Nigeria, (2)Lagos State University, Ojo, (3)Adeniran Ogunsanya College Advancing Side Scan Sonar Applications in Education, Ijaninkin Aquatic Research and Conservation P-6 Effect of a Prolonged Cold Shock on Brook Trout Hatching, Emergence and Survival P-1 Regional Trends in Hard Bottom Distribution Stephen Slongo, Lakehead University throughout the Northern West Florida Shelf Kate Overly1, Chris L. Gardner1, Jennifer Walters1 P-7 Early Observations on Bonefish Collection, and Doug A. DeVries2, (1)National Marine Fisheries Acclimation to a Captive Environment, and Service, Southeast Fisheries Science Center, Riverside Ultrasonography Technologies Panama City Lab, (2)National Marine William Halstead III1, Annie Page-Karjian1, Jon Fisheries Service Southeast Fisheries Science Center Shenker2, Christopher Robinson1, Matthew J. Panama City Lab Ajemian1, Richard Baptiste1 and Paul Wills1, (1)Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute - FAU, (2)Florida Institute of Technology Aquaculture and Health P-8 Captive Culture and Larval Development of the P-2 Using of Ideal Essential Amino Acids on Nile Melanurus Wrasse, Halichoeres Melanurus Tilapia Diets Formulation Oreochromis Niloticus Elizabeth Groover, Matthew DiMaggio, Micah Alo, Shimaa M.Salem, Tarek I.Mohamed and Ola Jon Digidio, Shane Ramee and Taylor Lipscomb, A.Orma, Mansoura University University of Florida

P-3 Artificial Breeding and Hybridization of P-9 Effect of Extender pH on Rainbow Trout African Mud Fish Clarias Gariepinus and (Oncorhynchus mykiss) Sperm Motility Heterobranchus LongifilisUNDER Indoor María de los Ángeles Peralta-Martínez1, Michael Recirculatory Hatchery Condition Kjelland2 and Humberto González-Márquez1, (1) Baba usman Ibrahim, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa, University (2)U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center, Environmental Laboratory P-4 Nutritional Quality of Smoked Clarias Gariepinus in Lapai, Niger State, Nigeria P-10 Trochophore Larvae Cryopreservation of the Baba usman Ibrahim, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida Hard Clam Mercenaria Mercenaria University Natalie Simon and Huiping Yang, University of Florida

112 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting P-11 Molluscan Shellfish Aquaculture and Captive Propagation of Imperiled Aquatic Restoration Program Organisms Huiping Yang, University of Florida P-15 Ease of Use: Methods for Pacific Lamprey (Entosphenus tridentatus) Egg Incubation Biology and Management of Aggregating Alexa Maine1, Mary L. Moser2 and Aaron Jackson1, Species in Freshwater and Marine Systems (1)Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, (2)National Marine Fisheries Service, E-1 and Fatty Acid Profiles during the Northwest Fisheries Science Center Reproductive Cycle in Bonefish (Albula vulpes) Oocytes P-16 Freshwater Mussel Decline in the Middle Fork Sahar Mejri1, Cameron Luck1, Marty Riche1, Paul River, Oregon Wills1, Réjean Tremblay2, Matthew Ajemian1, Aaron Alexa Maine1, Donna Nez1 and Christine O’Brien2, Adams1, Jon Shenker3, Justin Lewis4, Christopher (1)Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Robinson1 and William Halstead III1, (1)Harbor Reservation, (2)Browns River Environmental LLC Branch Oceanographic Institute - FAU, (2)Université du Québec À Rimouski, (3)Florida Institute of Tech- nology, (4)Bonefish & Tarpon Trust Cooperative Fisheries Research: Lessons Learned, Continuing Collaborations and P-12 Movement and Habitat Use of Yellowtail Future Applications Snapper, Ocyurus Chrysurus, in the Dry Tortugas, Florida P-17 Cooperative Partnerships to Maximize Jennifer Herbig, Jessica Keller, Danielle Morley, Commercial Shellfish Production in Southwest Kristen Walter, Paul Barbera and Alejandro Acosta, Florida Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Angela Collins1, Bruce Barber2, Curt Hemmel3, Barry Hurt4, Chuck Adams5 and Aaron Welch6, P-13 Preliminary Analysis of Reproductive (1) University of Florida, (2) Gulf Shellfish Institute, Hormone Progression in Wild Bonefish,Albula (3)Bay Shellfish Co., (4)Placida Gold Aquafarms, Vulpes (5) Florida Sea Grant, (6)Two Docks Shellfish Co. Cameron Luck1, Sahar Mejri1, Justin Lewis2, Matthew Ajemian1, Aaron Adams1, Jon Shenker3, Christopher P-18 First Year Results from a Hook and Line Robinson1, William Halstead III1, Marty Riche1 and Survey to Understand Spatial Population Dynamics Paul Wills1, (1)Harbor Branch Oceanographic of Black Sea Bass Institute - FAU, (2)Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, Eleanor Bochenek1, Jason Morson1, Olaf Jensen1, (3)Florida Institute of Technology Thomas Miller2, Joel Fodrie3 and Reed Brodnik4, (1) Rutgers University, (2)Univresity of Maryland Center P-14 Fine-Scale Dispersal of Eggs from a Nassau for Environmental Science, (3)University of North Grouper (Epinephelus striatus) Spawning Carolina at Chapel Hill, (4)University of Maryland Aggregation Center for Environmental Science Brian C. Stock1, Andrew Mullen1, Paul Roberts1, Jules Jaffe1, Christy Pattengill-Semmens2, Croy McCoy3 and P-19 Monkfish Research Set-Aside Program- Brice X. Semmens1, (1)Scripps Institution of Lessons Learned from Collaborative Research on Oceanography, UC San Diego, (2)Reef Monkfish Biology and Life History Environmental Education Foundation (REEF), A.K. Johnson, National Science Foundation, (3)Department of Environment, Cayman Islands University of Maryland Eastern Shore Government

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 113 P-20 The Great Goliath Grouper Count: A State- Empirical Dynamic Modeling for Fisheries wide Citizen Science Approach Prediction and Management Bryan Fluech1, Angela Collins2, Elizabeth Staugler2, 2 2 2 Joy Hazell , Libby Carnahan and John Stevely , P-23 Adaptive Management of Fisheries: Oyster (1)University of Georgia, (2)University of Florida Reefs As “Reservoirs of Resilience” in an Oyster Meta-Population Context P-21 Capitalizing on Local Capacity to Develop a Michael Kjelland, Candice Piercy and Todd Statewide Volunteer Water Monitoring Program Swannack, U.S. Army Engineer Research and Shelly Krueger and Lisa Krimsky, Florida Sea Grant Development Center, Environmental Laboratory

P-22 An Overview of NOAA Fisheries’ Citizen P-24 Diagnosing Uncertainty in Stock Assessment Science and Crowdsourcing Efforts Reference Points Using Multivariate Approaches; a Laura Oremland, NOAA Fisheries Critical Analysis of a Failed Rebuilding Plan Elizabeth Herdter, University of South Florida and Michael Drexler, Ocean Conservancy Emerging Anthropogenic Pollution and its Effects on our Aquatic Resources: Recent Advances in Fish Kill and Pollution Event Fish as Food: Exploring Subsistence Har- Investigations vests and Consumption of Aquatic Living Resources E-2 Concrete Riverbeds Dumping the Fresh Water, Sands to the Currents of the Sea Triggers Barren E-5 Subsistence Fishing and Contaminant Risk Lands, Unproductive Aquatic Reservoirs, Pollution Perception in Tyrrell County, North Carolina and Are More Harmfull to World Than Volcanoes Liz Brown-Pickren and Alex Manda, East Carolina Ryszard Traczyk, University of Gdansk University

E-3 Heavy Metals in Two Chub Species and Their Potential Threats to Pallid Sturgeon Via Prey Fish Ecology Ingestion Sindupa De Silva1, Quinton Phelps2, John Kraemer1 E-6 Growth, Fecundity, and Diet of Oriental and Cynthia Choo1, (1)Southeast Missouri State Weatherloach Misgurnus Anguillicaudatus in the University, (2)Missouri Department of Conservation Chicago Area Waterways Kristin Norris, Grand Canyon University, Western E-4 Variation in Biotic Diversity and Food Web Illinois University, John Belick, Loyola University, Structure Along a Stream Receiving Mine Drainage Philip Willink, John G. Shedd Aquarium, and Ingestion Timothy Spier, Murray State University Joseph Shostell, University of Minnesota Crookston E-7 The Utility of Using Dorsal Spines As a Sec- ondary Ageing Structure in Bluefin Tuna,Thunnus Thynnus, to Aid in Assessments Michelle Duncan1, Robert Allman1 and Ashley Pacicco2, (1)NOAA Fisheries, (2)NOAA Fisheries Contractor-Riverside Technology, Inc.

114 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting E-8 A Survey of Shark Abundance on Northeast P-30 Diet of the Bonnethead Shark (Sphyrna ti- Florida Beaches buro) in Middle Tampa Bay, FL Clark Morgan and Jim Gelsleichter, University of Alex Bockhorst1, Samantha Rucker2, Mackenzie An- North Florida derson1, Sarah Rheinsmith1 and Bryan Franks1, (1)Florida Southern College, (2)Hawaii Pacific P-25 Recreational Trophy, Commercial Fisheries University Savior, or Apex Predator? Blue Catfish in Atlantic Coastal Rivers P-31 Testing the Role of Turbidity and Diet on the Aaron Bunch1, Jason Emmel2, Mary C. Fabrizio3, Reproductive Traits of an African Cichlid Fish Bob Greenlee1, Corbin D. Hilling2, Yan Jiao2, Joseph Tiffany Atkinson and Suzanne Gray, The Ohio State Schmitt2 and Donald J. Orth2, (1)Virginia University Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, (2)Virginia Tech, (3)Virginia Institute of Marine P-32 Alosa Pseudoharengus Spawning Run Science Estimate in Lake Mattamuskeet, Hyde County North Carolina P-26 Stomach Content Analysis of Stocky Allison Stewart Mulligan and Roger A. Rulifson, East Hawkfish (Cirrhitus pinnulatus) in Laie Bay, Oahu, Carolina University Hawaii Daxton Brooks, Katie Niedererr and Brad Smith, P-33 Overview of Abundance and Run Timing of Brigham Young University–Hawaii Spawning Salmon in Henshaw Creek, Kanuti National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska P-27 Assessing the Diets of Red Drum in Tampa Nicole Farnham, Tanana Chiefs Conference Bay, Florida Page Vick, Kevin Thompson, Kerry Flaherty-Walia, P-34 Individual Based Modelling Approach to Brent Winner and Theodore Switzer, Florida Fish and Thermal Refuge Use By Migrating Adult Salmon Wildlife Conservation Commission and Steelhead Marcia Snyder1, Joe Ebersole1, Nathan Schumaker1, P-28 Preliminary Examination of Spotted Seatrout Randy Comeleo1, Jason Dunham2, Matthew Keefer3, (Cynoscion nebulosus) Feeding Ecology in Coastal Scott A. Heppell4, Dru Keenan1 and John Palmer1, Mississippi (1)US Environmental Protection Agency, (2)U.S. Christopher M. Butler and Justin P. Lewis, The Geological Survey, Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem University of Southern Mississippi, School of Ocean Science Center, (3)University of Idaho, (4)Oregon Science and Technology, Gulf Coast Research and State University Laboratory P-35 Precision of Saugeye Age Estimates Obtained P-29 Trophic Overlap Among Juveniles of Two from Three Hard Structures Targeted Fishery Species and a Non Targeted Fish Jeff Koch, Ben Neely and Bryan Sowards, Kansas Species Cohabiting a Large Estuary in South Department of Wildlife, Parks, and America Gabriela Blasina1, Juan Molina2 and Andrea Lopez Cazorla1,2, (1)Instituto Argentino de Oceanografía (IADO), CONICET/UNS, (2)Universidad Nacional del Sur (UNS)

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 115 P-36 Validating Aging Structures in Asian Carp P-42 The Development of Electronic Data from the Lagrange Reach of the Illinois River and Acquisition for Fisheries Independent Groundfish Known-Age Asian Carp from China Surveys Charmayne Anderson, Western Illinois University, Gerald R. Hoff, Heather Kenney, Alison Vijgen and James T. Lamer, Western Illinois University, Robert Lauth, NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Department of Biological Sciences, Brent Knights, Service Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Jun Wang, Shanghai Ocean P-43 Data Collection: a Critical Component in University, Levi Solomon, Illinois River Biological Supporting a Successfully Operating Fishway Station, Illinois Natural History Survey, Havana Field Bryan Sojkowski, P.E., U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Office and Andrew F. Casper, Illinois Natural History Survey Fisheries Management P-38 Development and Evaluation of Regional Standard-Weight Equations for Brook, Brown, and P-44 An Evaluation of Morphometrics and Meris- Rainbow Trout: Do Spatial Trends Exist in tics for Stock Identification of Hickory Shad “Plumpness” (Alosa mediocris) Richard Hanks1, Yoichiro Kanno1 and Jacob M. Rash2, Jordan Smith and Roger A. Rulifson, East Carolina (1)Clemson University, (2)North Carolina Wildlife University Resources Commission P-45 Hickory Shad Stock Identification P-39 Annual and Seasonal Patterns of Fish Body Ryan MacKenzie and Roger Rulifson, East Carolina Growth in South Carolina Piedmont Streams University William Hobbie, Daniel Jones, Ryan Martin, Alexander Michaeli, Edward Stello, Kasey Pregler, P-46 Factors Regulating Year-Class Strength of Seoghyun Kim and Yoichiro Kanno, Clemson Silver Carp throughout North America University Christopher J. Sullivan1, Carlos A. Camacho1, Michael J. Weber1, Clay Pierce2, David H. Wahl3, Quinton P-40 Towards Standardization of Age and Growth Phelps4 and Robert E. Colombo5, (1)Iowa State Methods and Terminology for American Eel: A University, (2)United States Geological Survey, Review and Comparison of Historical and (3)Illinois Natural History Survey, (4)Missouri Contemporary Approaches Department of Conservation, (5)Eastern Illinois T. Gardner Spencer1, Jesse R. Fischer1, Thomas J. University Kwak 2 and R. Wilson Laney3, (1)North Carolina State University, (2)U.S. Geological Survey, (3)U.S. Fish and P-47 Explaining and Predicting Recruitment of Wildlife Service University, (2)Illinois Department of Yellow Perch in North American Inland Lakes Natural Resources, (3)Le Moyne College Using a Systems Dynamics Approach Melissa Wuellner1, Ben Turner2, Dan Dembkowski3 and Hector Menendez III1, (1)South Dakota State Fisheries Data Management Skills and University, (2)Texas A & M Kingsville, (3)Wisconsin Techniques Cooperative Fishery Research Unit

P-41 A Novel Method of Field Identification of Skates Egg Cases Gerald R. Hoff, NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Service

116 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting P-48 Ciguatoxin Detection and Model Predictions Freshwater Fish Life Histories, for Use in Fisheries Management in Puerto Rico Populations, and Communities Henry Raab1, Joseph Luczkovich1 and Wayne 2 Litaker , (1)East Carolina University, (2)NOAA P-54 Current Status and Biodiversity of Coldwater Beaufort Laboratory Springs in Taiwan Yuh-wen Chiu, National Cheng Kung University, P-49 Effects of the Long-Term Marine Closure and Da-ji Huang, Chia Nan University of Pharmacy and Reopening of an Area of the Coastal Florida Science, Bao-sen Shieh, Kaohsiung Medical University Everglades on Fishes and Recreational Fisheries and Shih-hsiung Liang, National Kaohsiung Normal David Stormer and Jennifer Rehage, Florida Interna- University tional University P-55 Shared Morphologies of Spring-Associated P-50 Catch Share Management in the Northeast Fishes of the Edwards Plateau Multispecies Fishery: Have the Theorized Benefits Cody A. Craig, Alex Sotola and Timothy H. Bonner, Been Realized in New Hampshire? Texas State University Rachel Feeney, New England Fishery Management Council P-56 Life-History Characteristics and Diversification within Freshwater Fishes of North P-51 Evaluating an Ecosystem-Based Fishery America Management Procedure for Georges Bank Using Cody A. Craig, Jeremy D. Maikoetter and Timothy H. Ceilings on System Removals Bonner, Texas State University Amanda Hart, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, School for Marine Science & Technology P-57 Relationships Between Fish Assemblages and and Gavin Fay, University of Massachusetts Acid-Base Chemistry in Streams of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park P-52 Sea Lion Predation Impacts on Salmon and Barry P. Baldigo, U.S. Geological Survey, Matt Kulp, Steelhead in the Lower Columbia River, a Growing National Park Service and John Schwartz, University Problem of Tennessee Douglas Hatch, John M. Whiteaker and Robert Lessard, Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish P-58 Will Decreases in Acid Deposition Help or Commission Harm Brook Trout Populations in Streams of the Adirondack Mountains, New York? P-53 The Other “EBFM”: Designing Ecosystem- Barry P. Baldigo and Scott George, U.S. Geological Based Fisheries Marketing Strategies to Survey Complement Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management P-59 The Impacts of a Low Water Crossing on Fish Kate Masury, Eating with the Ecosystem Communities in Ozark National Scenic Riverways, Missouri Jeff Williams, National Park Service, Heartland Inventory and Monitoring Network, Missouri State University and Hope Dodd, National Park Service, Heartland I&M Network

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 117 P-60 Distribution, Abundance, and Life History of P-69 Latitudinal Trends in Population Dynamics of the Prairie Chub Freshwater Drum Along the Mississippi River David Ruppel and Timothy H. Bonner, Texas State Josh Abner, Southeast Missouri State University and University Quinton Phelps, Missouri Department of Conservation P-61 Life History of the Plains Killifish in the Upper Red River Drainage of Texas and Oklahoma P-70 Fish Community Response to Changes in Lauren Chappell, David Ruppel and Timothy H. Environmental Attributes in the Upper Mississippi Bonner, Texas State University River Kyle Bales1, Quinton Phelps2, Melvin Bowler1, Travis P-62 Life History of the Creek Chub in an Urban Kueter1 and Dave Bierman1, (1)Iowa Department of Stream Natural Resources, (2)West Virginia University Ashley Fredricks and Peter Sakaris, Georgia Gwinnett P-71 Fish Diversity and Density Along an Open P-63 Distribution of Mussels and the Role of Host Water-Tidal Wetland Interface in the Upper San Fish in the Colorado River Basin, Central Francisco Estuary, California, USA Zachary Mitchell and Astrid Schwalb, Texas State Oliver Patton1, Fred Feyrer2 and Matthew Young2, (1) University US Geological Survey, (2)USGS

P-64 Clear Lake: A Hitch Story Ethan Clark, Fred Feyrer, Matthew Young and David From Oil Spills to Global Climate Change: Ayers, USGS How our Interactions with Fossil Fuels Impact Ecosystems through Neurosensory, P-65 Variation in Population Demographics Among Gizzard Shad Populations: The Role of Behavioral, and Metabolic Effects in Impoundment Size and Productivity Marine Fish Paul H. Michaletz, Missouri Department of Conservation P-72 NOAA’s Ocean Acidification Program - Fund- ing Studies of Species’ Responses to Ocean Acidifi- P-66 Patterns of Fish Assemblage Change in cation Western South Dakota’s Rivers and Streams Erica Ombres1, Shallin Busch2, Dwight Gledhill1 and Stephen Jones, Katie Bertrand, Brian Graeb and Chad Elizabeth Jewett1, (1)NOAA/OAR, (2)NOAA Kaiser, South Dakota State University Northwest Fisheries Science Center

P-67 Are Exotic Redear Sunfish Negatively Affecting Native Pumpkinseed Sunfish in Michigan Genetics Lakes? Marcos Garcia Holland and Mary Tate Bremigan, E-9 Temporal Genetics of Lake Sturgeon in the Michigan State University Mississagii River, Ontario Tyler Plum, Lauren Schumacher, Darren Wood, Tom P-68 Black Crappie Population Dynamics in the Rounsville and Amy Welsh, West Virginia University Upper Mississippi River Tyler Ham, Southeast Missouri State University and Quinton Phelps, West Virginia University

118 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting P-73 Genetic Structure of Spotted Seatrout Popula- Habitat tions in North Florida Bay Benjamin VanDine1,2, James D. Austin2 and Chris P-78 Habitat Contraction and Fragmentation in an Kelble1, (1)NOAA/AOML, (2)University of Florida Intermittent Coast Range Stream in Central California P-74 Conservation Genetics of Two Fish Species Jordan Wingenroth1, Michael T. Bogan2, Robert Leidy3 from the Doce River Basin: Molecular Taxonomy, and Stephanie Carlson1, (1)University of California, Population Connectivity and Restoration Berkeley, (2)University of Arizona, (3)US Environ- Implications mental Protection Agency (EPA) Izabela Santos Mendes1, Júnio Damasceno Souza1, Redelvim Dumont Neto2, Fabio Henrique Rezende3, P-79 Creating Bathymetric Maps for Small Yuri Simões Martins4, Felipe Talin Normando4, Reservoirs Using Data Collected during Low-Cost Bruno Vilaça Campos Gomes2,5 and Daniel Cardoso Side Scan Sonar Surveys Carvalho1, (1)Postgraduate Studies in Biology, Amberle Jones, Arizona Game and Fish Deparment Pontifical Catholic University of Minas Gerais, PUC- Minas, (2)BIOCEV Smart Projects, (3)Guanhães P-80 Unusually Deep Habitat Use By Northern Pike Energy, (4)Opyta Environmental Solutions, (5)CARE (Esox lucius) in an Oligotrophic Lake Engineering and Environmental Services Jiří Peterka1, Ivana Vejříková1, Lukáš Vejřík1, Martin Čech1, Vladislav Draštík1 and Jari Syväranta2,3, (1) P-75 Genetic Variation Associated with Morpho- Biology Centre CAS, Institute of Hydrobiology, (2) logical Differences in Body Shape in Populations Aarhus University, (3)University of Eastern Finland of Eastern Mosquitofish,Gambusia holbrooki, in Florida Waterways P-81 Lined Seahorse (Hippocampus erectus) Habitat Natalia Belfiore, Emily Williams, Mark McRae and Preferences in a Bahamian Saltwater Lake William Klingbeil, University of Tampa Breeann Roberts, University of Tampa

P-76 Genetic Structure of Largemouth Bass Popula- P-82 Gamefish Habitat Suitability Spatial Analysis tions in the Native Intergrade Zone Between Two of the Lake Worth Lagoon, FL Estuarine System Subspecies in Georgia from 2000–2015 Keisuke Teramura1, Kota Okuda1, Bryant Bowen2, Manuel McIlroy, Florida Atlantic University Timothy Bonvechio3, John Hargrove4, Mike Allen4, James D. Austin4, Keisuke Takata5 and Tadao P-83 Taxonomic Diversity of Mollusk Association Kitagawa1, (1)Kindai University, (2)GA - DNR, (3) of Soft Bottoms at Archipelago Espiritu Santo, Cali- Wildlife Resources Division, (4)University of Florida, fornia Gulf, Mexico (5)Shinshu University Alejandro Bosch, Interdisciplinary center of marine sciences P-77 Construction of Genetic Linkage Maps of the Largemouth Bass Keisuke Teramura1, Mike Allen2, Stephen J. Walsh3, Shane Ruessler3, John Hargrove2, James D. Austin2, Wes Porak 4, Nick Trippel4, Keisuke Takata5, Taiga Yodo6, Noboru Okuda7 and Tadao Kitagawa1, (1) Kindai University, (2)University of Florida, (3)U.S. Geological Survey, (4)Florida Fish and Wildlife Con- servation Commission, (5)Shinshu University, (6)Mie University, (7)Research Institute for Humanity and Nature American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 119 Harnessing the Power of Diversity and Integration of Technologies for Next Inclusion—Game Changing Solutions for Generation Marine Observation Systems Enhancing Diversity and Inclusion in the and Fisheries Independent Surveys Fisheries Profession E-11 Characterization of Sea Turtle Population and E-10 Crash Course: Evaluation of Free Short Habitat Using a Camera Based Assessment Survey Course on Ecological Statistics System (CBASS) Lynn Waterhouse, Scripps Institution of Heather Broadbent, University of South Florida Oceanography, UCSD, Brian C. Stock, Scripps I nstitution of Oceanography, UC San Diego and E-12 Using Multibeam Sonar to Expand a Joshua Stewart, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Regional-Scale Fishery-Independent Survey University of California San Diego Sampling Universe David Berrane and Warren Mitchell, NOAA Fisheries

Impacts of Deepwater Horizon and other E-13 A Video Trawl Survey for Atlantic Cod Large Oil Spills on Fish and Fisheries in (Gadus morhua) in New England Nicholas Calabrese, Kevin D.E. Stokesbury and Travis the Gulf of Mexico Lowery, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, School for Marine Science and Technology P-84 Spatial Distribution, Abundance, Life History Characteristics, and Resilience of Several Demersal E-14 Fishin’ for Drones? Applications of UAVs in Fish Species in the Gulf of Mexico Remote, Alaskan Rivers Greta Helmueller and Steven Murawski, University of Brian McKenna, Tanana Chiefs Conference South Florida E-15 A Photo Guide to Aid in the Identification of P-85 Temporal Effects of the Deepwater Horizon Priority Fishes from Underwater Video Oil Spill on Red Drum Growth Assessments of the Snapper-Grouper Complex of Debra J. Murie, Geoffrey H. Smith Jr., J. Andrew the Southeastern US Rosati, Alicia Breton and Daryl C. Parkyn, University Scott B. Van Sant and Christina M. Schobernd, of Florida NOAA NMFS

P-86 Spatiotemporal Growth in the Estuarine- P-88 Establishing Baselines for Benthic Habitat and Dependent Spotted Seatrout in Louisiana Following Fish Populations on the West Florida Shelf By Com- the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill bining Towed Video with Acoustic Water Column Debra J. Murie, Alicia Breton, J. Andrew Rosati, and Benthic Analysis Geoffrey H. Smith Jr. and Daryl C. Parkyn, University Chad Lembke1, Steven Murawski1, Stan Locker2, Sar- of Florida ah Grasty1, Matthew Hommeyer1, Edmund Hughes1, Heather Broadbent1, Gerardo Toro-Farmer1, John P-87 Sheepshead Growth Following the Deepwater Gray1, Jennifer Brizzolara1, Alex Silverman1, Katie Horizon Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico Davis1 and Alexander Ilich1, (1)University of South Debra J. Murie, Amanda Croteau, Geoffrey H. Smith Florida, (2)United States Geological Survey Jr., Alicia Breton and J. Andrew Rosati, University of Florida

120 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting P-89 Comparing Diver to Camera Sled Surveys: P-94 Impacts of the Invasive Round Goby on Will This be the Future for Queen Conch Benthic and Pelagic Prey in Lakes Assessment in Puerto Rico? Susan Cushman and Noland Michels, Hobart & Wilmelie Cruz-Marrero and Bradley Stevens, William Smith Colleges University of Maryland Eastern Shore P-95 A Balanced Conservation—Economic P-90 Using Didson Imaging Sonars to Track North Approach to the Fishery of Invasive Paiche Pacific Rockfish Movements in Response to (Arapaima gigas) in the Bolivian Amazon Underwater Survey Vehicles Fernando Carvajal-Vallejos1, Paul Van Damme1 and Emmaleigh Wilson, Pacific States Marine Fisheries Joachim Carolsfeld2, (1)Associacin Faunagua, (2) Commission, W. Waldo Wakefield, NOAA Fisheries World Fisheries Trust Northwest Fisheries Science Center, J. Christopher Taylor, NOAA National Ocean Service, Beaufort Laboratory and Kevin M. Boswell, Florida Landscape Conservation Cooperatives and International University Fish Habitat Partnerships Facilitate Networks and Tools for Ecologically Connected Landscapes and Seascapes International Flats Fishing Symposium E-18 Best Practices Using Reef Balls for Living P-91 A Computational Approach to Explore Shorelines Multiple Impacts on Recruitment and Mortality of Jim McFarlane, Reef Innovations / Reef Ball Founda- Bonefish in the Florida Bay tion, McFarlane’s Research Geraldine Klarenberg, Robert Ahrens and Mike Allen, University of Florida E-19 Habitat Fragmentation Induced Morphological Differentiation, but No Genetic, Among Resident Fish Hemiculter Leucisculus in Invasive/Non-native Species Liangzi Complex of the Middle Yangtze Fei Cheng1, Shuaibing Zhao1, Bjorn Schmidt1, Eric P-92 Modeling Ballast Water Management Hallerman2 and Songguang Xie1, (1)Institute of Hy- Strategies for Slowing the Secondary Spread of Non- drobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, (2)Virginia Indigenous Species on the Great Lakes Tech Jake Kvistad, University of Toledo

P-93 The Presence of Young-of-Year Asian Carp in Life History Variability in Marine Fishes Diets of Native Fishes in Lower Pool 19 of the Upper Mississippi River E-19 Binomial Model Selection for Estimating Fish Charmayne Anderson1, James T. Lamer2, Katie Age and Size at Maturity: An Application with Mainor1, Ashley Stanley1 and Brent Knights3, Different Stocks of Winter Flounder (1)Western Illinois University, (2)Western Illinois (Pseudopleuronectes americanus) University, Department of Biological Sciences, Richard S. McBride, National Marine Fisheries (3)Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center, Service U.S. Geological Survey

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 121 Marine Artificial Reef Research and P-101 Estimating Recreational Fishing Effort on Development: Integrating Fisheries Artificial Reefs Using Florida’s Gulf Reef Fish Management Objectives Survey Tiffanie Cross, Rachel Germeroth and Beverly Sauls, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission E-21 Boat Visitation Rates from Acoustic Detections on Paired Artificial‐Natural Reefs P-102 Measuring Human Use of Artificial Reefs: Christopher Stallings1, Peter Simard1,2, Carrie Wall3, Questions Asked and Methods Used in Florida’s Kara Wall 1 and David Mann4, (1)University of South Largest Artificial Reef Project Florida, (2)Eckerd College, (3)University of Colorado, Alexander Fogg, Florida Fish and Wildlife (4)Loggerhead Instruments Conservation Commission, Division of Marine Fisheries Management and Keith Mille, Florida Fish E-22 Database Tools for Artificial Reef Management and Wildlife Conservation Commission and Research Bradley Ennis, Christine Kittle and Keith Mille, P-103 The Economic and Social Benefits (Return Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission on Investment) of Artificial Reef Use in Japan Kenta Suda, Okabe Inc/Water Gremlin Co. P-96 Artificial Reefs As Juvenile Fish Habitat in a Marina Allison Patranella1, Kirk Kilfoyle1, Sylvain Pioch2 and Richard Spieler1, (1)Nova Southeastern University, Marine Fish Population Dynamics and (2)Universit´e Paul-Val´ery Montpellier Communities

P-97 Fine-Scale Movements of Red Snapper at the P-104 Does Freshwater Life History affect Marine Corpus Christi Nearshore Reef, TX Survival Rate of Coho Salmon? Kesley Gibson, Jason Williams, Judson M. Curtis, Grace Ghrist and Darren Ward, Humboldt State Jennifer J. Wetz and Gregory W. Stunz, Texas A&M University University—Corpus Christi P-105 The Influence of Environmental and P-98 A Comparison of the Ichthyofaunal Trophic Biological Factors on the Freshwater and Marine Ecology at Selected Limestone Artificial Reef Sites Survival of Chinook Salmon in Two Southeastern and Adjacent Natural Reef Sites Alaska Rivers Joseph Hornbeck, Nova Southeastern University Stephanie Berkman1, Trent M. Sutton1, Franz Mueter1 and Brian Elliott2, (1)University of Alaska Fairbanks, P-99 PCB Analysis of Fish Associated with the (2)Alaska Department of Fish and Game Sunken Ex-Oriskany Aircraft Carrier, an Artificial Reef in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico Off P-106 It Takes a Whole Riverine Estuary to Raise a Pensacola, FL Juvenile Common Snook: Connectivity Revealed By Keith Mille, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Otolith Microchemistry Commission and Robert Turpin, Escambia County Janet Ley and Holly Rolls, FWRI Marine Resources Division P-107 Dynamics of Fish Community Diversity P-100 Who’s Home? a Study of Artificial Reef within the Indian River Lagoon, Florida, USA Materials Along an Estuarine Salinity Gradient Brittany Troast1, Richard Paperno2 and Geoffrey Amy Flowers and Jason Peters, North Carolina Cook1, (1)University of Central Florida, (2)Florida Division of Marine Fisheries Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission

122 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting P-108 Spatial Distribution of Southern Flounder in Monitoring and Regulations Mobile Bay, Alabama Mary G. Duethman, Elaine M. Kurr and Bridgette F. P-113 A Comparative Analysis of Failure to Notify Froeschke, University of Tampa Complaints Stephanie Jones, NOAA/ NMFS Office of Law P-109 Nearshore Fish Sampling in the Alaskan Enforcement Arctic, 2001–2016 Justin Priest, Duncan Green and Trent M. Sutton, P-114 Agency Decision Making in the Ferc University of Alaska Fairbanks Relicensing Process: Recovery and Restoration of Fish Passage P-110 Abundance, Distribution and Dynamics of Sarah Vogel1, Jessica S. Jansujwicz1 and Joseph Shark Populations in the Gulf of Mexico Zydlewski2, (1)University of Maine, (2)U.S. Geological Steven Murawski, University of South Florida Survey: Maine Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit P-111 Ontogenetic Habitat Shifts and Parasite Community Structure in Five Southeast Florida P-115 Do Resource Agency Reviews of Road Marine Fishes Projects Translate to Better Fish and Wildlife Brittany White, Christopher A. Blanar, David Crossings? Kerstetter and Nicole Kirchoff, Nova Southeastern Marla Chambers, North Carolina Wildlife Resources University Commission

Modeling Habitat and Distribution of Movement, Tagging, and Biotelemetry Fluvial Fishes: Peculiar Challenges, Emerging Statistical Tools, and P-116 Responses of Small-Bodied Fishes to Surgically Implanted Passive Integrated Macroecological and Conservation Transponder (PIT) Tags Applications David Schumann1, David Deslauriers2, Katie Bertrand1, Matthew Wagner3, Brian Graeb1, Erik E-20 Lake Sturgeon-Habitat Distribution Model for Prenosil4 and Joshua Hoekwater1, (1)South Dakota the Great Lakes Basin of New York State University, (2)MADSAM Sturgeon 1 2 James E. McKenna Jr. , Dawn E. Dittman , Marc A. Ecophysiology Lab, (3)Mississippi Department of 2 3 Chalupnicki and Michael Slattery , (1)US Geological Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks, (4)University of Survey, Great Lakes Science Center, (2)USGS Great Nebraska at Kearney Lakes Science Center, (3)US Geological Survey P-117 Quantifying the Effectiveness of a Portable P-112 Predicting Invasion Risk for Invasive Carp in PIT Tag Antenna at Detecting Stream Fish the Minnesota River Brett Kelly, Joshua Cary, Alisha Smith, Kasey Pregler, 1 2 1 Melissa Oubre , Luis Escobar , Phillip Larson and Seog Hyun Kim and Yoichiro Kanno, Clemson 1 Water Resource Center , (1)Minnesota State University University, (2)University of Minnesota

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 123 P-118 Emigration of Juvenile Snook and Tarpon Multispecies and Watershed Approaches from a Mosquito Control Impoundment Is to Freshwater Fish Conservation: Science, Enhanced through a Draw-Down of Water Level in Planning, and Implementation Summer Anthony Cianciotto1, Jon Shenker1, Aaron Adams2,3 P-124 Influence of Succession on Fish Assemblages and David Heuberger4, (1)Florida Institute of Tech- in Pond Metacommunities nology, (2)Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute C. Thomas Olinger, Justin Hart and Jennifer Howeth, - FAU, (3)Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, (4)Indian River University of Alabama Land Trust

P-119 Site-Specific Estimation of Detection Range and Probability for Acoustic Receivers Non-fishing Impacts in Fisheries Devon C. Oliver, Jen-Luc Abeln, Matthew Lubejko, Management: Are We Doing Enough, and Andrea Lubejko, Greg Whitledge and James Garvey, How Could We Do More? Southern Illinois University P-125 Protecting Fisheries Ecosystems By P-120 Effects of a Disturbance Event on Fine Scale Controlling Suspended Sediments during Dredging Movement and Population Dynamics of an and Waterfront Construction with Sealed, Estuarine Sportfish Full-Depth Filter Curtains Jessica Noble1, Lauren Kircher1, Matia Gringas1, Andrew McCusker, Mackworth-Enviro Lissette Geubelle1, Joy Young2 and John Baldwin1, (1)Florida Atlantic University, (2)Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Observer Contributions to Fisheries Science, Management, and Safety P-121 Quantifying Movement Patterns and Nursery Habitat Use of Endangered Scalloped E-23 Technologies in Marine Safety Hammerhead Sharks in Central Florida Waters Kenneth Keene, NOAA Olivia Myers1, Eric Reyier2, Bonnie Ahr2 and Geoffrey 1 Cook , (1)University of Central Florida, (2)Kennedy P-126 A Summary of Albatross Band Recovery Space Center Ecological Program & Integrated Data in the Hawaii Deep and Shallow Set Fisheries Mission Support Services John Peschon, National Marine Fisheries Service

P-122 Determination of NC Southern Flounder P-127 Design Sprint: A Methodology for Offshore Migration through Active Acoustic Hyperproductive Software Development for Telemetry Fisheries Dependent Data Collection Technologies 1 1 1 Tyler Peacock , Joseph Luczkovich , Patrick Harris Joshua Lee, NOAA NMFS PIR and Jacob R. Krause2, (1)East Carolina University, (2)North Carolina State University Outreach, Extension, and Stakeholder P-123 Quantifying the Role of Anthropogenic Management Strategies on Sciaenops Ocellatus (Red Engagement in fisheries Drum) Movement Patterns and Spawning Success Steven Baker1, Eric Reyier2 and Geoffrey Cook1, (1) E-24 An Opportunity for Inland Fish? National University of Central Florida, (2)Kennedy Space Park Interpretation in Thailand Center Ecological Program & Integrated Mission E. Ashley Steel, US Forest Service and Piyarat Support Services Chimchome, Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation 124 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting E-25 The Massachusetts Wildlife Climate Action P-134 Effect of Long-Term Sound Exposure on Tool Bigheaded Carp Behavior in a Pond Environment Michelle D. Staudinger1,2, Amanda Davis2, Emily Stephen Shier, Katelyn Lawson, Robin D Calfee, Chad Powell1,3, Steven Mattocks2, Melissa Ocana2 and Scott J. Vishy and Cody Slaugh, U.S. Geological Survey Jackson2, (1)DOI Northeast Climate Science Center, (2)University of Massachusetts Amherst, (3)North P-135 The Role of Dissolved Oxygen and Atlantic Landscape Conservation Cooperative Turbidity on Visually-Mediated Behavior in an African Cichlid P-128 Barotrauma in Yellow Perch in Lake Erie: Richard Oldham and Suzanne Gray, Ohio State Take Pride in your Perch! University Jesse Lepak, New York Sea Grant P-136 Ecophysiology of Lionfish (Pterois spp.) P-129 NPS Public Service Announcements for Fish Visual Systems: A Comparative Analysis Using and Shellfish Consumption Advisory Education Standard Electroretinography Karl Brookins, National Park Service Aaron Hasenei, Nova Southeastern University

P-130 Gulf and Caribbean Research: An Open P-137 Spectral Tuning of Rhodopsins from Tampa Access Option for Publication of Fisheries Bay Fish Manuscripts! Ciara Myer and Jeffry Fasick, University of Tampa Mark S. Peterson and Nancy J. Brown-Peterson, University of Southern Mississippi Recent Progress in Lionfish Research and Management Physiology and Sensory Biology E-26 The Abundance and Distribution of the P-131 Total Mercury in Tissues of the Blue Crab Invasive Lionfish Pterois( volitans and P. mil es ) in (Callinectes sapidus) in Northeast Florida Bermuda Emily Gipson and Eric G. Johnson, University of Corey Eddy1, Joanna Pitt2, Struan Smith2, Gretchen North Florida Goodbody-Gringley3 and Diego Bernal1, (1)University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, (2)Bermuda Govern- P-132 Estimating the Percent Based Proximate ment, (3)Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences Composition of Brown Trout (Salmo trutta) through the Use of Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis (BIA) Restoration and Sustainability Cory Hartman, West Virginia University, School of Natural Resources and K.J. Hartman, West Virginia P-138 Influence of Predation By Mosquitofish on University the Success of an Insect Biological Control Agent of Hydrilla P-133 Anatomical and Histochemical Studies of the Courtney Stachowiak, University of Florida Olfactory Organ in the Eel Goby Odontamblyopus Lacepedii (Pisces; Gobiidae) in Korea! 1 2 1 P-139 Role of Aquatic Fauna in Phosphorus Hyun Tae Kim , Yong Joo Lee and Jong Young Park , Cycling in the Everglades Stormwater Treatment (1)College of Natural Sciences, (2)Education Areas Nathan Evans1, Joel C. Trexler1, Mark Cook2 and Susan Newman2, (1)Florida International University, (2)South Florida Water Management District American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 125 P-140 The Use of Fish Indicators in the Restoration River Development and Fisheries of Everglades Estuaries Challenges in Tropical River Systems Patrick Pitts, US Fish and Wildlife Service E-27 Snook Otolith Microchemistry with P-141 Effects of Enrichment on Recreational Fishes Watershed Chemical Signature in a Large Southern in Coastal Everglades Lakes: Tarpon, Common Mexico River Basin Snook, and Prey Dynamics Greg Jacobs, Seth Wenger and Krista Capps, 1 1 Cody Eggenberger , Rolando Santos , Thomas University of Georgia Frankovich1, Chris Madden2 and Jennifer Rehage1, (1)Florida International University, (2)South Florida P-147 Functional Structure of Fish Assemblages Water Managment District in Lajeado Dam on the Tocantins River in Amazon Basin P-142 If You Restore It, Will They Come? Mac David Silva Pinto1, Elineide Eugënio Marques1, Colonization of Robinson Preserve after Habitat Ariana Cella-Ribeiro2 and Carolina Doria2, (1)Fed- Restoration eral University of Tocantins, (2)Federal University of Amanda Croteau, University of Florida Rondônia

P-143 Fish Biodiversity As an Interdisciplinary P-148 Study on Vertical Slot Fish Passage Design to Link to Achieve Sustainability Facilitate Migration of Indigenous Fish Species in Martha Mather, Kansas State University and Richard the Southeast Asian Region Lehrter, Kansas Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Suthipong Thanasansakorn and Arif Wibowo, Research Unit SEAFDEC

P-144 Pacific Lamprey Entosphenus( tridentatus) Research and Restoration Project: Translocation Sampling and Statistical Methods Success in the Umatilla River, Oregon Aaron Jackson, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla P-149 The Detectability of Two Rare Crayfish Indian Reservation Species in the Meramec River Drainage: The “Vulnerable” Freckled Crayfish and Belted Crayfish P-145 An Overview of Bay Scallop Argopecten Joe Chilton, University of Missouri Irradians Restoration Efforts in Charlotte County, Florida with Future Directions P-150 Addressing Success of Aquatic Monitoring Elizabeth Staugler, Rebecca Lucas and Joshua Programs Patterson, University of Florida Cari-Ann Hayer, Jacob Richter and Bradley Smith, US Fish and Wildlife Service P-146 Epibenthic Response to 20+ Years without Fishing on Georges Bank Lauren Horton and Kevin D.E. Stokesbury, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, School for Marine Stable Isotope Analysis in Fisheries Science and Technology Ecology

P-151 Overview of Fish Eye Lenses As Lifetime Isotopic Recorders Amy A. Wallace, Julie L. Vecchio, Jennifer E. Granneman, Christopher D. Stallings and Ernst B. Peebles, University of South Florida

126 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting P-152 Investigating Life History of Hogfish Strengthening the Connection between (Lachnolaimus maximus) Using Eye-Lens Stable Habitat Science and Ecosystem-Based Isotopes Fisheries Management Meaghan Faletti and Christopher Stallings, University of South Florida P-158 Ecological Interactions and Resource Parti- tioning of Two Estuarine Predators, Red Drum (Sci- P-153 Stable Isotopes Ratios in the Eye Lenses of aenops ocellatus) and Spotted Seatrout (Cynoscion Doryteuthis Plei Reveal Migratory Patterns in the nebulosus) Gulf of Mexico Mariah Livernois, University of South Alabama, Brenna Meath, University of South Florida Dauphin Island Sea Lab, Sean Powers, University of South Alabama, Kenneth Heck, Dauphin Island Sea P-154 Using δ15 N Disequilibria to Infer Short- Lab and Joel Fodrie, University of North Carolina at Term, Latitudinal Movement in the Post-Settlement Chapel Hill Stages of Two Reef-Fish Species Julie L. Vecchio and Ernst B. Peebles, University of P-159 Habitat Mapping for Fisheries Management South Florida on the West Florida Shelf Alexander Ilich, Sarah Grasty, Jennifer Brizzolara, P-155 Tracking Hypoxia Induced Trophic Shifts of Heather Broadbent, Abigail Vivlamore and Steven Atlantic Croaker (Micropogonias undulatus) in the Murawski, University of South Florida Gulf of Mexico Using Stable Isotopes Tyler Steube, Texas A&M- Corpus Christi P-160 The Use of Sea Whips Leptogorgia( spp.) As an Indicator Species (IS) for Habitat Quality Assess- P-156 Effects of Enrichment on the Trophic ment within the Mid-Atlantic Bight (MAB) Structure of Everglades Coastal Habitats Cara Schweitzer, University of Maryland Eastern Steven Nanez1, Jennifer Rehage2, Cody Eggenberger2, Shore James Nelson3 and Rolando Santos2, (1)Georgia Gwinnett College, (2)Florida International University, (3)University of Louisiana Lafayette Sturgeon and Paddlefish Recovery in P-157 Trophodynamics of Autochthonous and Al- North America: Connecting Research lochthonous Carbon in a Large Cross-Border River across a Diverse Array of Habitats (China): Implications from Resource Availability and Hydrological Regime P-161 Free Embryo Development of Pallid Qiong Zhou and Yuanyuan Zheng, Huazhong Agri- Sturgeon and Shovelnose Sturgeon Reared in the cultural University Laboratory Kimberly A. Chojnacki, Marlene Malmborg, Amy E. George and Aaron J. DeLonay, U.S. Geological Survey

P-162 A Comparison of Artificial Substrate Samplers for the Assessment of Sturgeon Spawning Laura Heironimus, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Zachary Jackson, US Fish and Wildlife Service

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 127 P-163 Gape Size of Two Sturgeon Species in the Survival Modeling, Biotelemetry, Fish Upper Missouri River Barriers, and Passage: Applying Tanner Cox, Montana State University, Addie Developing Technologies to Fisheries Dutton, Montana Cooperative Fishery Research Unit, Montana State University-Department of Ecology and Management Issues Christopher Guy, U.S. Geological Survey, Montana Cooperative Fishery Research Unit E-28 Importance of Escapement for Regulating a Reservoir Walleye Population Michael J. Weber1, Randy D. Schultz2 and Mark P-164 Prey of the Atlantic Sturgeon in a Coastal 2 Aggregation Flammang , (1)Iowa State University, (2)Iowa Marissa DeTorre1, Michael G. Frisk2, Robert Cerrato2 Department of Natural Resources and Keith Dunton1, (1)Monmouth University, (2)Stony Brook University E-29 Fish Assemblage Response to the Removal of a Water Control Structure P-165 Assessing the Retention Rates of External James Vasslides, Barnegat Bay Partnership Acoustic Transmitters in Atlantic Sturgeon Keith Dunton, Monmouth University, Lisa Bonacci, E-30 Using Life Cycle Models to Develop and New York State Department of Environmental Apply Hydro-Ecological Metrics and Assess Flow Changes in a Regulated River Conservation, Kevin Wark, Endeavor Fisheries and 1 1 1 Dewayne Fox, Delaware State University Sean Blomquist , MARK Cantrell , Adam Kaeser , Steve Leitman2, Lydia Stefanova3 and Catherine Phillips1, (1)U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, (2)Water P-166 Paddlefish Polyodon Spathula Passage Without Borders, (3)Florida State University Potential in a Regulated Stream Chelsea Gilliland, Michael Colvin, Peter Allen and J. Wesley Neal, Mississippi State University Ten Years of Science-Based Management P-167 Implementation of Life-History Invariants in U.S. Fisheries: Progress and the Road and Telemetry Analysis for Evaluating Recovery of Ahead Atlantic Sturgeon in the Hudson River, New York 1 1 2 Evan Ingram , Michael G. Frisk and Keith Dunton , P-169 Literature Review: Accounting for Ecosystem (1)Stony Brook University, (2)Monmouth University Regime Shifts in Stock Rebuilding Plan Reviews Erin Schnettler, National Marine Fisheries Service P-168 Potential Physiological Response of Recreational Catch and Release Snagging on Paddlefish Dustin Broaddus1, Sara Tripp2 and Quinton Phelps2, Understanding Impacts of Climate Change (1)Southeast Missouri State University, (2)Missouri on Fish and Fisheries Department of Conservation E-16 Decreased pH Changes Juvenile Blue King Crab Morphology and Decreases Growth and Survival William Christopher Long1, Scott B. Van Sent2, Katherine M. Swiney1 and Robert J. Foy1, (1)NOAA Alaska Fisheries Science Center, (2) NOAA Southeast Fisheries Science Center

128 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Best Student Poster Presentations BSP-8 Density Dependent Fish Aggregative Behaviour BSP-1 Movement of Spotted Bass and Shorthead Michaela Holubová1,2, Martin Čech1, Mojmír Vašek1 Redhorse Across Season and Streamflow in the and Jiří Peterka1, (1)Biology Centre CAS, Institute of Regulated Lower Osage River, Missouri Hydrobiology, (2)University of South Bohemia, Elisa Baebler, University of Missouri and Craig Faculty of Science Paukert, U.S. Geological Survey; University of Missouri; Missouri Cooperative Fish and Wildlife BSP-9 Hydrologic Changes in the St. Lucie Estuary Research Unit and Implications for Common Snook Movement Patterns BSP-2 Considerations for Individual Growth Lauren Kircher1, Joy Young2, Jessica Noble1 and John Modelling in Exploited Fishes: A Case Study with Baldwin1, (1)Florida Atlantic University, (2)Florida the Gulf Corvina (Cynosion opthonopterus) Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Derek Bolser, Erin Reed, Mark Lopez and Brad Erisman, The University of Texas at Austin BSP-10 Population Characteristics and the Influence of Discharge on Bluehead Sucker and Flannelmouth BSP-3 Without a Net: Environmental DNA Sucker Metabarcoding Surveys of Fishes in an Aquarium, Zachary Klein, University of Idaho, Matthew Breen, a River, and a Mangrove Utah Division of Wildlife Resources and Michael C. Sam Chew Chin1, Nathan Morris1, John R. Waldman2 Quist, U.S. Geological Survey, Idaho Cooperative Fish and Elizabeth Alter1, (1)Graduate Center/York College and Wildlife Research Unit CUNY, (2)Queens College BSP-11 Evaluating the Relative Efficiency of Pulsed BSP-4 Predicting Potential Refugia: Spatially DC Electrofishing Waveforms to Collect Explicit Determinants of Great-River Fish Richness Smallmouth Bass within Two Free-Flowing Tributaries of the Zach Morris1, Craig Paukert2, Andrew Turner3, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers Zachary Ford3 and Jan Dean4, (1)University of Corey Dunn, University of Missouri; Missouri Missouri Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Cooperative Fish & Wildlife Research Unit Unit, (2)U.S. Geological Survey; University of Missouri; Missouri Cooperative Fish and Wildlife BSP-5 A Comparison of the Abundance and Size Research Unit, (3)Missouri Department of of Black Sea Bass in the Delaware and Maryland Conservation, (4)Dean Electrofishing LLC Coastal Bays David Ferranti, Brown University BSP-12 Determining Physical and Ecological Factors Affecting Abundances of Juvenile Indicator BSP-6 Detecting and Countering Fisheries-Induced Species Evolution Using Marine Protected Areas Adam Searles and Geoffrey Cook, University of Carissa Gervasi and Jennifer Rehage, Florida Central Florida International University BSP-13 Seasonal Variation of Fish Communities in BSP-7 Gut Content Analysis of the Invasive Pike Four Spring-Fed Coastal Rivers Killifish Belonesox( belizanus) in Tampa Bay Lynn Simonton, Taylor Marosi, Adrian Stanfill and Nicholas Haddad, Lori McRae and Mark McRae, Alexandria Taylor, Florida Fish and Wildlife University of Tampa Conservation Commission

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 129 BSP-14 Development of SNP Panels As a New Tool to Assess the Genetic Diversity, Population Structure, and Parentage Analysis of the Eastern Oyster (Crassostrea virginica) SWilawan Thongda1, Honggang Zhao1, Dongdong Zhang1, Benjamin Beck2, Ming Liu3, Ximing Guo3, Meagan Schrandt4, Sean Powers4 and Eric Peatman1, (1)Auburn University, (2)United States Department of Agriculture, (3)Rutgers University, (4)University of South Alabama

BSP-15 Sea Urchin Grazing Shapes Epibenthic Community Composition in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico Kara Wall and Christopher Stallings, University of South Florida

130 American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting Get Ready for Atlantic City!

The Mid-Atlantic Chapter of the American Fisheries Society invites you to Atlantic City, New Jersey for the 148th Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society to be held August 19–23, 2018.

Located on the Southeast New Jersey coast, Atlantic City is a glorious place to host the 148th Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society. Atlantic City overlooks the At- lantic Ocean to the east and Absecon estuary to the west, and is world renowned for its wide beaches and iconic boardwalk. The estuaries and nearby wildlife refuge system are an envi- ronmental paradise. Conference attendees from all over the world will have the opportunity to network with a diverse group of resource professionals in this city full of great food, entertainment, and outdoor adventure opportunities.

The 2018 Annual Meeting offers a chance to present your For more information, contact science to experts from around the world, enhance your job General Co-chairs Jeffrey Brust skills with hands-on Continuing Education Workshops, see ([email protected]) the latest technology in the Trade Show, and network with and John Clark ([email protected]). colleagues old and new. It will be an exciting and engaging experience for all … you won’t want to miss it! See you in Atlantic City!

Meet AC

American Fisheries Society 147th Annual Meeting 131