Zooplankton sound scattering layers in North Norway fjords : interactions between fish and krill shoals in a winter situation in Ullsfjorden and Øksfjorden

Aspects of the inter-relationship of krill Sound Scattering Layers (SSLs) and fish were examined in Ullsfjorden and Øksfjorden, northern Norway from 2 - 8 February 1980. Diel changes in the depth distribution and biomass of krill (Euphausiacea) were compared with the depth distribution and abundance...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Falk-Petersen, S., Hopkins, C. C. E.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Institut für Meereskunde 1981
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/56104/
https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/56104/1/Falk-Petersen_S_1981.pdf
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Summary:Aspects of the inter-relationship of krill Sound Scattering Layers (SSLs) and fish were examined in Ullsfjorden and Øksfjorden, northern Norway from 2 - 8 February 1980. Diel changes in the depth distribution and biomass of krill (Euphausiacea) were compared with the depth distribution and abundance of gadoid fish using a pelagic capelin trawl, 38 and 120 kHz echosounders, and a digital echointegrator. Krill underwent vertical migrations from the surface at night to the fjord bottom at mid-day. A significant power curve relationship was found when catches of krill in the pelagic trawl (l·trawl h-1) were compared with volume backscattering (dB m-3) at 120 kHz, indicating that krill biomass can be reliably estimated using acoustic techniques. Krill were the dominant food item of fish caught with the pelagic trawl in the SSLs. Fish were nevertheless rare in these krill SSLs; the majority congregated under them, probably feeding extensively at their periphery. Interactions between krill and pelagic feeding gadoids in north Norwegian fjords are examined.