Spatial and temporal variance of walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) in the eastern Bering

Abstract: Mobile acoustic surveys attempt to map and count aquatic organisms without biasing abundance estimates. Horizontal and vertical movements by target species may influence density measurements and net samples during acoustic surveys. To investigate the influence of fish movement on density d...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: John K. Horne, Paul D. Walline
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.487.6148
http://www.acoustics.washington.edu/pubs/2005 horne %26 walline - sampling.pdf
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Summary:Abstract: Mobile acoustic surveys attempt to map and count aquatic organisms without biasing abundance estimates. Horizontal and vertical movements by target species may influence density measurements and net samples during acoustic surveys. To investigate the influence of fish movement on density data, we compared temporal and spatial variability of walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) in three sets (2 night, 1 day) of 14.8-km transects in the east-ern Bering Sea. Walleye pollock density distributions were also compared with those in the five nearest daytime survey transects. We found that horizontal density distributions did not change at temporal scales ≤4 h and that spatial vari-ance remained consistent at scales ≤2.5 km. Spatial variance density patterns were similar in transects sampled during the day compared with those sampled at night and were also similar in along-shore compared with cross-shore transects. Transects that contained two biological scattering layers could be vertically separated into zooplankton and fish. Spatial variance patterns in the upper zooplankton layer mimicked those of passive tracers, while patterns in the lower layer were consistent with those previously observed for mobile nekton. Current sampling resolution of acoustic surveys adequately captures horizontal spatial variance of walleye pollock in the Bering Sea. Résumé: Les inventaires acoustiques mobiles cherchent à cartographier et à dénombrer les organismes aquatiques sans fausser les estimations d’abondance. Les déplacements horizontaux et verticaux des espèces ciblées peuvent affecter les mesures de densité et fausser les échantillons nets durant l’inventaire. Afin d’évaluer l’influence des déplacements des