Thanks for sharing, David. In 2013, I actually contacted some of those authors to propose a tagging study of my own; I was told they already had a student working on GTs... seems they were talking about Elodie! Small world.
I don't find this paper convincing in its conclusion that GTs show high site fidelity - the authors themselves acknowledge this a few times but still interpret the data as validating the fidelity postulate. Usable data were obtained from only 10 individuals; the other 10 could have gone anywhere (and probably did). When half of a population stay in an area and the other half disappear from an area, it is inappropriate to conclude that the population as a whole displays high site fidelity. That much is logical.
When I look at the data, they tell a story that runs through many other GT studies with small sample sizes: different fish act differently (this can be seen in the huge standard deviations surrounding most figures); as the authors state on p7, "long-term residency patterns were variable". Sadly, many generalisations in these kinds of papers tend to fall apart. Such is life. At least the authors made an effort to draw out relationships by conducting various complex statistical tests... I'm just not convinced this can compensate for the difficulties inherent in studying a small subset of a population with the biological/behavioural attributes of Caranx ignobilis.
Despite my quibble with the overarching conclusion of the paper, I think a few of the minor observations/trends are interesting to note, especially for this particular GBR population:
- Tagged GTs were detected more frequently at night, meaning they may hunt on the reefs under the cover of darkness, as do sharks.
- As light intensity increased and wind speed decreased, tagged GTs were found deeper in the water column... hence, it might be wise to target GTs around deep pinnacles and reefs during the middle of calm sunny days. This may be a particularly good tactic in Spring (vs. Autumn), and when tides are strong.
- Some tagged GTs may have spawned around the October full moon... so keep a lookout for mobile bommies at this time!
- Tagged GTs roamed around reefs in three dimensions, using some areas more frequently. These are probably foraging grounds where current flow is strongest (think of drains, points, pinnacles etc).
- Tagged GTs moved to shallow areas when winds were strong, so working the reef line on a windy day might be productive (I'm picturing New Cal here too).
That's my two cents' worth.