Abstract

Combined trawling (rectangular midwater trawl, RMT-8 net) and acoustic (120 kHz) surveys in the upstream and downstream region of the Prince Edward Islands were undertaken during April and May 1996 and 1997. A total of 49 species of macroplankton and micronekton were encountered within the region investigated. Mesopelagic fishes, euphausiids, chaetognaths and tunicates dominated numerically and by biomass. Average abundance and biomass of macroplankton/micronekton in the top 300 m layer were low, 18 individuals 1000 m−3 and 288 mg dry wt 1000 m−3, respectively. Numerical analysis revealed the presence of two major groups of stations broadly corresponding to the offshore (upstream and downstream) and inshore (inter-island) realms. Planktonic samples and acoustic measurements revealed that elevated densities of macroplankton/micronekton were associated with the subantarctic front region and in close proximity to the island plateau. Based on trawling and acoustic survey results, it is suggested that large plankton and micronekton are mostly washed around rather than across the inter-island shelf region. This is in contrast with the “replenishing hypothesis” previously proposed for this region by other investigators.

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