Encounter of GSB462

An encounter is a sighting of a single animal at a specific location and time. Learn more.

Location


Location ID:

Water depth: Unknown

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Identity

Identified as: GSB462

Matched by: Unmatched first encounter

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Next suggested new ID: 069

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Alternate ID:

 Occurrence ID: 6ab4a979-63ff-46b6-a7f1-4ae7961d3953

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Metadata

Number: 35c79749-8f7f-4fe4-9239-85f85b2cef93

Date created:2021-05-29T00:05:02.514
Date last edited:  2022-01-11

Workflow state: approved

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Managing researcher: 

Molly Morse

Affiliation: Benioff Ocean Initiative, UCSB


Measurements

Type Size Units
36.0 Measured

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()
()

Tracking

Metal Tags
Left:
Right:

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Right

Date

Unknown
Verbatim Event Date: None

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Gallery




Attributes

Taxonomy Stereolepis gigas 

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Status: alive

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Sex: unknown

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Noticeable scarring: 

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Behavior:  None

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Group Role:  None

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Patterning code:  None

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Life stage:  adult

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Additional comments:
Mike captured this fish on 27 November 2015, a 37.5mm (1 3/8 inch) and 1.42 gram brown-phase young-of-the-year Giant Sea Bass next to Newport Pier in Orange County and brought it to Heal the Bay Aquarium beneath Santa Monica Pier for his original spot pattern study. They released the fish into King Harbor at Redondo Beach on May 21, 2021, about 5 1/2 years after capture.

Before the release, Dr. Anderson of CSU Long Beach's Shark Lab inserted one of the large acoustic transmitters that they use for White Sharks. On 22 May 2021, the fish's fork length was 91 cm (36 inches), and it weighed 14.3 kg (31.5 lbs).

The fish was released at exactly 1000 hours on 22 May 2021 at the end of the westernmost King Harbor Yacht Club dock at 33.848554º N X -118.401371º W. The fish descended into about 10 feet of water.

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Observations

None

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Spot Matching Algorithms (Modified Groth and I3S)

Extracted Spots

21 left-side spots added. 23 right-side spots added.

Pattern Matching Results

Groth: Right-side scan results
I3S: Right-side scan results

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