P-264
Florida Atlantic Coast Telemetry (FACT) Array: A Working Partnership

Douglas Scheidt , Kennedy Space Center Ecological Program / Integrated Mission Support Services, Kennedy Space Center, FL
Erick Ault , Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission / Fish & Wildlife Research Institute, Tequesta, FL
Robert D. Ellis , Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL
Samuel Gruber , Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Miami / Bimini Biological Field Station Foundation
Joseph Iafrate , Environmental Division, Naval Undersea Warfare Center, Newport, RI
Chris Kalinowsky , Coastal Resources Division, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Richmond Hill, GA
Steven Kessel , Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, University of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada
Eric Reyier , Kennedy Space Center Ecological Program & Integrated Mission Support Services, Kennedy Space Center, FL
David Snyder , CSA Ocean Sciences Inc, Stuart, FL
Stephanie Watwood , Environmental Division, Naval Undersea Warfare Center, Newport, RI
Joy Young , Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Tequesta, FL
The Florida Atlantic Coast Telemetry (FACT) Array is a collaborative partnership of researchers from 24 different organizations using passive acoustic telemetry to document site fidelity, habitat preferences, seasonal migration patterns, and reproductive strategies of valuable sportfish, sharks, and marine turtles.  FACT partners have found that by bundling resources, they can leverage a smaller investment to track highly mobile animals beyond a study area typically restrained in scale by funds and manpower. FACT is guided by several simple rules: use of the same type of equipment, locate receivers in areas that are beneficial to all researchers when feasible, maintain strong scientific ethics by recognizing that detection data on any receiver belongs to the tag owner, do not use other members detection data without permission and acknowledge FACT in publications. Partners have access to a network of 480 receivers deployed along a continuum of habitats from freshwater rivers to offshore reefs and covers ~1100 km of coastline from the Dry Tortugas, Florida to South Carolina and extends to the Bahamas.  Presently, 49 species, (25 covered by Fisheries Management Plans and five covered by the Endangered Species Act) have been tagged with 2736 tags in which 1767 tags are still active.