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Acoustic observations of micronekton fish on the scale of an ocean basin: potential and challenges
Author(s) -
Rudy Kloser,
Tim Ryan,
Jock Young,
Mark Lewis
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
ices journal of marine science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.348
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1095-9289
pISSN - 1054-3139
DOI - 10.1093/icesjms/fsp077
Subject(s) - oceanography , environmental science , fishing , biomass (ecology) , transect , fishery , structural basin , pelagic zone , biodiversity , abundance (ecology) , spatial distribution , geology , remote sensing , ecology , biology , paleontology
Kloser, R. J., Ryan, T. E., Young, J. W., and Lewis, M. E. 2009. Acoustic observations of micronekton fish on the scale of an ocean basin: potential and challenges. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 66: 998–1006. Acoustic methods of characterizing micronekton communities (∼2 to 20 cm length) on the scale of an ocean basin could provide valuable inputs to ecosystem-based fishery management, marine planning, and monitoring the effects of climate change. The micronekton fish are important forage for top predators (e.g. tunas), and information on their diversity, distribution, size-structure, and abundance is needed to increase accuracy of top-predator distribution and abundance predictions. At the scale of an ocean basin, four years of Tasman Sea transects using a fishing vessel provide fine-scale maps of acoustic backscatter at 38 kHz that reveal detailed spatial patterns and structure to depths of 1200 m. Research-vessel data provide detailed biodiversity, density, size structure, and acoustic-scattering information from depth-stratified net sampling and a lowered acoustic probe. Wet-weight biomass estimates of the micronekton fish in the region vary considerably by a factor of 5–58 between acoustics (16–29 g m−2), nets (1.6 g m−2), and large spatial-scale, ecological models (0.5–3 g m−2). We demonstrate the potential and challenges of an acoustic basin-scale, fishing-vessel monitoring programme, including optical and net sensing, which could assist in characterizing the biodiversity, distribution, and biomass of the micronekton fish.

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