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Thread: "PIT" tagging article

  1. #1
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    Default "PIT" tagging article

    Pennsylvania Fish & Boat Commission
    PIT Tagging Muskies
    by Brian C. Niewinski, Fisheries Biologist
    __________________________________



    Muskies have earned the title “the fish of 10,000 casts”. The Pennsylvania Fish & Boat
    Commission (PFBC) is working to reduce the number of casts it takes to hook into one of these
    great fish by improving their Musky Culture Program. The muskellunge Esox masquinongy is a
    coolwater fish that is long-lived (up to 30 years old) and can reach 60-70 inches in length. In
    recent years, the PFBC has made great strides in improving the overall success of the Musky
    Culture Program. To learn more about the PFBC’s Musky Culture Program, you can read the
    article written by Larry Hines in the November/December 2009 issue of the Pennsylvania Angler
    & Boater. One of the recent advances in the Musky Culture Program is the use of Passive Integrated
    Transponder (PIT) tags. Beginning in 2007, all of the broodstock muskies spawned at the
    PFBC’s Linesville State Fish Hatchery have been implanted with a 12 mm (½ in) PIT tag. A PIT
    tag is a glass-encapsulated microchip that sends a unique, numeric code to a reading device. The
    major advantages to using PIT tags are that the data can be retrieved without harm to the fish and
    each fish has a unique identifying code. When using other tags, like Coded Wire Tags, the fish
    normally has to be killed in order to recover the tag. PIT tag technology allows the researcher to
    individually tag and track fish throughout their life.

    When adult muskies are spawned at the Linesville Hatchery, they are first collected with trapnets
    from the Pymatuning Reservoir and Sanctuary. The fish are measured and weighed, and
    then the eggs and milt are collected. The fish are also scanned with a PIT tag reader to determine
    if they already have a PIT tag. If a tag is not detected, the fish is implanted with a PIT tag in the
    abdominal area. Some of the data collected include the date and location the fish was caught, the
    date the fish was spawned, fish length, weight and sex. If a PIT tag is detected, the current data
    can be compared with previously collected data. With this technology, we can track growth
    rates, estimate age, determine egg production and quality based on female length and weight, and
    observe movement patterns. For example, a 50 inch, 39 ½ pound female musky was trap-netted
    in the Pymatuning Reservoir and brought to the Linesville Hatchery to be spawned. Because that
    fish was PIT tagged, we were able to determine that the female musky had grown an average of
    5 ¾ inches and 12.8 pounds per year. After the fish are spawned, the muskies are returned alive
    to the waters of Pymatuning.

    The Musky PIT Tagging Project allows us to follow individual fish being handled and spawned
    repeatedly over many years to determine if their egg/milt production and quality have changed
    over time and if the act of spawning these fish was detrimental to their growth and survival.
    Another objective of the Project is to determine if muskies released into the Pymatuning
    Sanctuary remain in the Sanctuary or whether they move back into the Pymatuning Reservoir.
    This information on musky movement patterns could provide insights into the best locations for
    setting trap-nets. This has been a great opportunity to work with a non-lethal, fish marking
    technique and to better understand the capabilities and limitations of this state of the art
    technology.

    Recently, Biomark, Inc. introduced a smaller, 8.5 mm (0.33 in) PIT tag. In 2010, we
    experimented with tagging yearling musky at Linesville that were approximately 300 mm (12 in)
    in length. The fish survived well with the smaller tag and were released into the Pymatuning
    Sanctuary. With this yearling group of muskies now at large, there are now known-age, PIT
    tagged muskies in the population. Each recaptured, PIT tagged musky will provide researchers
    and managers with valuable data.

    During 1997-2000, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) released yearling
    muskies into the Pymatuning Reservoir that were given unique fin clips corresponding to the
    year they were released. We’ve been catching these fin clipped muskies (now 11-14 yrs old) in
    our trap-nets in the Pymatuning Reservoir and implanting them with a PIT tag allowing us to
    now track their age and growth over time as they are recaptured.

    In 2011, the Three Rivers Chapter of Muskies Inc. presented the PFBC’s Executive Director, John Arway, with a check for $500 to support the Musky PIT Tagging Project. These funds are greatly appreciated and will be used to buy additional equipment like PIT tags, injectors, and
    readers.


    The plan is to continue PIT tagging all of the broodstock muskies that are spawned at Linesville
    and to continue to collect valuable data on age, growth and performance. The PFBC’s Fisheries
    Management Division is currently evaluating the efficacy of using PIT tags in wild musky
    populations in Pennsylvania. The PFBC will continue to look for ways to adapt emerging
    technologies into our fish culture and fisheries management programs.
    Allegheny Guide Service
    Red Childress

    E-mail - RedChildress@gmail.com
    Web Site: http://www.alleghenyguideservice.com

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Pennsylvania
    Posts
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    Default

    The article was in PDF format so I was not able to make it look 100% authentic. Article is courtesy of Joe Houck via Toothyfishman via myself.
    Allegheny Guide Service
    Red Childress

    E-mail - RedChildress@gmail.com
    Web Site: http://www.alleghenyguideservice.com

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Southwest PA
    Posts
    389

    Default

    Good article. I hope they expand that project to musky populations in the rivers.

    I'm a little skeptical on the growth rates though

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