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Brooke N Anderson

Brooke N Anderson
  • Doctor of Philosophy
  • Fish Biologist at Saltwater Inc.

About

42
Publications
6,468
Reads
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197
Citations
Current institution
Saltwater Inc.
Current position
  • Fish Biologist
Additional affiliations
January 2024 - November 2024
North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality
Position
  • Marine Fisheries Biologist
Education
January 2020 - May 2024
Arizona State University
Field of study
  • Environmental Life Science
June 2017 - December 2019
University of New England
Field of study
  • Marine Science
August 2013 - May 2017
Coastal Carolina University
Field of study
  • Marine Science

Publications

Publications (42)
Article
Full-text available
For highly mobile marine species such as pelagic elasmobranchs, the development of effective spatial management requires a comprehensive understanding of movement ecology. Research incorporating movement data across seasons and life stages, including reproductive states, is valuable for informing spatial management, yet is absent for most species....
Article
Full-text available
Pop-off satellite archival tags (PSATs) have been increasingly deployed on marine megafauna to remotely monitor their movements, behavior, and environmental preferences. These tags have also allowed the occasional novel documentation of ecological interactions, such as predation on tagged animals. A PSAT deployed on a pregnant porbeagle Lamna nasus...
Article
Full-text available
Context For threatened marine species, data on their vertical habitat use patterns can reveal risk of interactions with fishing gear and can inform bycatch avoidance strategies. Such data are lacking for young porbeagles (Lamna nasus), which are captured as bycatch in north-western Atlantic fisheries. Aims We aimed to examine temporal patterns in...
Article
Full-text available
While lethal sampling can be the most effective technique to collect critical reproductive data for elasmobranchs, non-lethal techniques need to be validated for future use. Concentrations of reproductive hormones in plasma and muscle have been found to correlate to sexual maturity and/or reproductive cycles in oviparous as well as yolk-sac, placen...
Article
Full-text available
The great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) is a highly mobile shark species whose population in the United States declined dramatically through the early 2000s. Their spatial ecology is poorly understood, creating challenges for effective conservation of this enigmatic marine predator. Using acoustic telemetry and network analyses, we describe t...
Article
Full-text available
Knowledge of the three-dimensional movement patterns of elasmobranchs is vital to understand their ecological roles and exposure to anthropogenic pressures. To date, comparative studies among species at global scales have mostly focused on horizontal movements. Our study addresses the knowledge gap of vertical movements by compiling the first globa...
Article
Chondrichthyan fishes are among the most threatened vertebrates on the planet because many species have slow life histories that are outpaced by intense fishing. The Western Central Atlantic Ocean, which includes the Greater Caribbean, is a hotspot of chondrichthyan biodiversity and abundance, but has been characterized by extensive shark and ray f...
Preprint
Full-text available
Chondrichthyan fishes are among the most threatened vertebrates on the planet because many species have slow life histories that are outpaced by intense fishing. The Western Central Atlantic Ocean, which includes the greater Caribbean, is a hotspot of chondrichthyan biodiversity and abundance, but is historically characterized by extensive shark an...
Article
Full-text available
Accurately characterizing the biology of a pelagic shark species is critical when assessing its status and resilience to fishing pressure. Natural mortality (M) is well known to be a key parameter determining productivity and resilience, but also one for which estimates are most uncertain. While M can be inferred from life history, validated direct...
Article
Full-text available
The Atlantic sea scallop Placopecten magellanicus dredge fishery is one of the most lucrative commercial fishing industries in the northeastern United States, and fish bycatch can comprise up to~42% of the total catch. Benthic species , such as flatfish, are particularly susceptible to unintended capture in scallop dredge gear, and mitigating bycat...
Article
Full-text available
The Gulf of Maine (GOM) commercial lobster fishery has approximately 3.5 million actively fished traps and captures several non‐targeted groundfish species, including Atlantic Cod Gadus morhua (hereafter “cod”) as bycatch; yet, there has been limited research on the incidental mortality of these species in this fishery. While the mortality of cod h...
Article
Full-text available
Studying the species-specific responses to fishing capture is critical for effective management and conservation of bycatch species given that acute stress incurred from capture and handling may ultimately lead to mortality. While species of low commercial value are often overlooked, having accurate information on the effects of capture on all spec...
Article
The Northwest Atlantic (NWA) population of porbeagles Lamna nasus is susceptible to capture in rod-and-reel fisheries and most individuals are discarded alive due to catch and size limits. To estimate post-release survival, pop-off satellite archival tags were attached to porbeagles captured with rod-and-reel. Fourteen tags were deployed, of which...
Article
Full-text available
Understanding how rising temperatures, ocean acidification, and hypoxia affect the performance of coastal fishes is essential to predicting species-specific responses to climate change. Although a population’s habitat influences physiological performance, little work has explicitly examined the multi-stressor responses of species from habitats diff...

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