Abstract

Acoustic-trawl surveys rely on a combination of backscatter measured with echosounders and species composition data from trawls to apportion the backscatter to different species and size classes. Narrowband echosounders have been widely used in this context for decades. Multi-frequency analysis of narrowband echosounder data has been shown to be effective for discriminating between diverse taxa (e.g., euphausiids vs. swimbladdered fishes) but distinguishing morphologically similar species (e.g., swimbladdered fishes) remains a major challenge. Previous work indicates that broadband backscatter techniques have the potential to improve such acoustic target characterizations by exploiting nearly continuous frequency spectra, but these methods have not been widely applied in fisheries surveys. The recent commercial availability of broadband transceivers is accelerating the evaluation of this technology. We present operational data from two broadband acoustic scattering systems: (1) 14-160 kHz and (2) 3-10 kHz...

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call