Abstract

High resolution imaging of the seafloor has been limited to fixed sensors and/or limited field-of-view instruments. As a result, our ability to characterize large areas of benthic habitat has relied on acoustic maps and photomosaics combined with point sampling. In addition, the response of motile epibenthos and demersal fish to habitat patches, structure and disturbance has been largely inferred or based on disruptive sampling and manipulative experiments. Direct quantitative observation of large areal variation in these factors is possible through a combination of traditional video census techniques with high resolution optical imaging of the seafloor. Laser Line Scan Systems (LLSS) are capable of imaging continuous swaths of the seafloor from 3 to 15 m wide at speeds up to 5 km/h. Image quality is dependent on system performance and turbidity but can exceed limits required to distinguish benthic habitats and census undisturbed fish and epibenthos. This areal coverage rate (1 km/day) is several orders of magnitude higher than video sleds and can complement high resolution acoustic surveys (multibeam or side scan). We present results from several applications of these systems for assessment of benthic resources and disturbance in turbid estuarine environments.

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