Fish Population and Behavior Revealed by Instantaneous Continental Shelf-Scale Imaging

Until now, continental shelf environments have been monitored with highly localized line-transect methods from slow-moving research vessels. These methods significantly undersample fish populations in time and space, leaving an incomplete and ambiguous record of abundance and behavior. We show that fish populations in continental shelf environments can be instantaneously imaged over thousands of square kilometers and continuously monitored by a remote sensing technique in which the ocean acts as an acoustic waveguide. The technique has revealed the instantaneous horizontal structural characteristics and volatile short-term behavior of very large fish shoals, containing tens of millions of fish and stretching for many kilometers.

[1]  Mark V. Trevorrow,et al.  Intermediate range fish detection with a 12-kHz sidescan sonar , 1999 .

[2]  G. Rose,et al.  Cod spawning on a migration highway in the north-west Atlantic , 1993, Nature.

[3]  Oscar Sund,et al.  Echo Sounding in Fishery Research , 1935, Nature.

[4]  Deanelle T. Symonds,et al.  Long range acoustic imaging of the continental shelf environment: the Acoustic Clutter Reconnaissance Experiment 2001. , 2005, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[5]  B. Worm,et al.  Rapid worldwide depletion of predatory fish communities , 2003, Nature.

[6]  E. G. Barham,et al.  Deep Scattering Layer Migration and Composition: Observations from a Diving Saucer , 1966, Science.

[7]  W. Siebert Circuits, Signals and Systems , 1985 .

[8]  N. Makris The Effect of Saturated Transmission Scintillation on Ocean Acoustic Intensity Measurements , 1996 .

[9]  W. C. Leggett The Ecology of Fish Migrations , 1977 .

[10]  N. Makris,et al.  A unified model for reverberation and submerged object scattering in a stratified ocean waveguide. , 2001, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[11]  J. Goodman Statistical Optics , 1985 .

[12]  K. Bjorndal,et al.  Historical Overfishing and the Recent Collapse of Coastal Ecosystems , 2001, Science.

[13]  Steven Mackinson,et al.  Bioeconomics and catchability: fish and fishers behaviour during stock collapse , 1997 .

[14]  C. Clay,et al.  Fundamentals of Acoustical Oceanography , 1997 .

[15]  Nicholas C. Makris,et al.  Deterministic reverberation from ocean ridges , 1995 .