The acoustic properties of Salpa thompsoni

<qd> Wiebe, P. H., Chu, D., Kaartvedt, S., Hundt, A., Melle, W., Ona, E., and Batta-Lona, P. 2010. The acoustic properties of Salpa thompsoni . – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 67: 000–000. </qd>Aggregations of the salp Salpa thompsoni were encountered during the Antarctic krill and eco...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:ICES Journal of Marine Science
Main Authors: Wiebe, Peter H., Chu, Dezhang, Kaartvedt, Stein, Hundt, Anna, Melle, Webjorn, Ona, Egil, Batta-Lona, Paola
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2009
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Online Access:http://icesjms.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/fsp263v1
https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsp263
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Summary:<qd> Wiebe, P. H., Chu, D., Kaartvedt, S., Hundt, A., Melle, W., Ona, E., and Batta-Lona, P. 2010. The acoustic properties of Salpa thompsoni . – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 67: 000–000. </qd>Aggregations of the salp Salpa thompsoni were encountered during the Antarctic krill and ecosystem-studies cruise on the RV “G.O. Sars” from 19 February to 27 March 2008. The salp's in situ target strength ( TS ), size, number of individuals in aggregate chains, and chain angle of orientation were determined. Shipboard measurements were made of Salpa thompsoni 's material properties. Individual aggregates were mostly 45.5–60.6 mm in mean length; relatively rare solitaries were ∼100 mm. Chains ranged from 3 to at least 121 individuals, and in surface waters (<20 m), they showed no preferred angle of orientation. Sound-speed contrast ( h ) ranged from 1.0060 to 1.0201 and density contrast ( g ) estimates between 1.0000 and 1.0039. The in situ TS distributions peaked between −75 and −76 dB at 38 kHz, with a secondary peak at approximately −65 dB. TS ranged between −85 and −65 dB at 120 and 200 kHz and peaked around −74 dB. The measured in situ TS of salps reasonably matched the theoretical scattering-model predictions based on multi-individual chains. The backscattering from aggregate salps gives rise to TS values that can be similar to krill and other zooplankton with higher density and sound-speed contrasts.