The use of multibeam and split-beam echo sounders for assessing biomass and distribution of spring-spawning Atlantic cod in the Gulf of Maine

This research focused on advancing the application of split-beam and multibeam echo sounding to remotely locate and describe spatial distribution, and to provide a relative measure of abundance of the spring-spawning Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in the western Gulf of Maine. Specifically, the main ob...

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Main Author: Gurshin, Christopher William Damon
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation/693
https://scholars.unh.edu/context/dissertation/article/1692/viewcontent/3537815.pdf
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spelling ftuninhampshire:oai:scholars.unh.edu:dissertation-1692 2024-09-15T17:55:29+00:00 The use of multibeam and split-beam echo sounders for assessing biomass and distribution of spring-spawning Atlantic cod in the Gulf of Maine Gurshin, Christopher William Damon 2012-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation/693 https://scholars.unh.edu/context/dissertation/article/1692/viewcontent/3537815.pdf unknown University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation/693 https://scholars.unh.edu/context/dissertation/article/1692/viewcontent/3537815.pdf Doctoral Dissertations Agriculture Fisheries and Aquaculture Biology Zoology Physics Acoustics text 2012 ftuninhampshire 2024-08-02T04:50:27Z This research focused on advancing the application of split-beam and multibeam echo sounding to remotely locate and describe spatial distribution, and to provide a relative measure of abundance of the spring-spawning Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in the western Gulf of Maine. Specifically, the main objectives of this research were 1) to test the feasibility of a multibeam echo sounder to detect changes in volume backscatter proportional to incrementally decreasing quantities of cod held in a submerged cage, and to compare results to a split-beam echo sounder; 2) to describe the spatio-temporal distribution and estimate biomass of spring-spawning cod in the Gulf of Maine cod spawning protection area (GOMCSPA) by repeated acoustic and trawl surveys; and 3) to determine a predictive relation between target strength and length for 38-kHz and 120-kHz split-beam echo sounders and a 300-kHz multibeam echo sounder, and characterize other factors affecting backscattering of sound. The multibeam echo sounder detected a small and large reduction in volume backscatter proportional to reductions in stocking density of caged cod, while the split-beam echo sounder only detected a large reduction in stocking density. The spatial information from the multibeam echo sounder helped interpret and explain results from the split-beam echo sounder. Repeated acoustic and trawl surveys showed cod were relatively widespread in the survey area in May, but congregated at higher densities in areas adjacent to two elevated bathymetric features. Most cod converged to a single location in June, and were at a higher concentration than observations in May. This congregation decreased in size and density in July. Survey estimates of cod biomass ranged 184-494 mt in May, 138-617 mt in June, and 39-135 mt in July, depending on the estimation method. Based on echo classification and extrapolation, cod biomass to the GOMCSPA ranged 260-466 mt in May, 196-513 mt in June, and 91-198 mt in July. The biomass being protected by the closure may have ... Text atlantic cod Gadus morhua University of New Hampshire: Scholars Repository
institution Open Polar
collection University of New Hampshire: Scholars Repository
op_collection_id ftuninhampshire
language unknown
topic Agriculture
Fisheries and Aquaculture
Biology
Zoology
Physics
Acoustics
spellingShingle Agriculture
Fisheries and Aquaculture
Biology
Zoology
Physics
Acoustics
Gurshin, Christopher William Damon
The use of multibeam and split-beam echo sounders for assessing biomass and distribution of spring-spawning Atlantic cod in the Gulf of Maine
topic_facet Agriculture
Fisheries and Aquaculture
Biology
Zoology
Physics
Acoustics
description This research focused on advancing the application of split-beam and multibeam echo sounding to remotely locate and describe spatial distribution, and to provide a relative measure of abundance of the spring-spawning Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in the western Gulf of Maine. Specifically, the main objectives of this research were 1) to test the feasibility of a multibeam echo sounder to detect changes in volume backscatter proportional to incrementally decreasing quantities of cod held in a submerged cage, and to compare results to a split-beam echo sounder; 2) to describe the spatio-temporal distribution and estimate biomass of spring-spawning cod in the Gulf of Maine cod spawning protection area (GOMCSPA) by repeated acoustic and trawl surveys; and 3) to determine a predictive relation between target strength and length for 38-kHz and 120-kHz split-beam echo sounders and a 300-kHz multibeam echo sounder, and characterize other factors affecting backscattering of sound. The multibeam echo sounder detected a small and large reduction in volume backscatter proportional to reductions in stocking density of caged cod, while the split-beam echo sounder only detected a large reduction in stocking density. The spatial information from the multibeam echo sounder helped interpret and explain results from the split-beam echo sounder. Repeated acoustic and trawl surveys showed cod were relatively widespread in the survey area in May, but congregated at higher densities in areas adjacent to two elevated bathymetric features. Most cod converged to a single location in June, and were at a higher concentration than observations in May. This congregation decreased in size and density in July. Survey estimates of cod biomass ranged 184-494 mt in May, 138-617 mt in June, and 39-135 mt in July, depending on the estimation method. Based on echo classification and extrapolation, cod biomass to the GOMCSPA ranged 260-466 mt in May, 196-513 mt in June, and 91-198 mt in July. The biomass being protected by the closure may have ...
format Text
author Gurshin, Christopher William Damon
author_facet Gurshin, Christopher William Damon
author_sort Gurshin, Christopher William Damon
title The use of multibeam and split-beam echo sounders for assessing biomass and distribution of spring-spawning Atlantic cod in the Gulf of Maine
title_short The use of multibeam and split-beam echo sounders for assessing biomass and distribution of spring-spawning Atlantic cod in the Gulf of Maine
title_full The use of multibeam and split-beam echo sounders for assessing biomass and distribution of spring-spawning Atlantic cod in the Gulf of Maine
title_fullStr The use of multibeam and split-beam echo sounders for assessing biomass and distribution of spring-spawning Atlantic cod in the Gulf of Maine
title_full_unstemmed The use of multibeam and split-beam echo sounders for assessing biomass and distribution of spring-spawning Atlantic cod in the Gulf of Maine
title_sort use of multibeam and split-beam echo sounders for assessing biomass and distribution of spring-spawning atlantic cod in the gulf of maine
publisher University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository
publishDate 2012
url https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation/693
https://scholars.unh.edu/context/dissertation/article/1692/viewcontent/3537815.pdf
genre atlantic cod
Gadus morhua
genre_facet atlantic cod
Gadus morhua
op_source Doctoral Dissertations
op_relation https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation/693
https://scholars.unh.edu/context/dissertation/article/1692/viewcontent/3537815.pdf
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