Towards the acoustic estimation of jellyfish abundance

被引:42
作者
Brierley, AS [1 ]
Boyer, DC
Axelsen, BE
Lynam, CP
Sparks, CAJ
Boyer, HJ
Gibbons, MJ
机构
[1] Univ St Andrews, Gatty Marine Lab, St Andrews KY16 8LB, Fife, Scotland
[2] Natl Marine Informat & Res Ctr, Swakopmund, Namibia
[3] Inst Marine Res, N-5817 Bergen, Norway
[4] Cape Technikon, Fac Sci Appl, ZA-8000 Cape Town, South Africa
[5] Univ Western Cape, Dept Zool, ZA-7535 Bellville, South Africa
关键词
Aequorea aequorea; Chrysaora hysoscella; forward problem; jellyfish; multi-frequency; target strength; zooplankton;
D O I
10.3354/meps295105
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Acoustic target strengths (TSs) of the 2 most common large medusae, Chrysaora hysoscella and Aequorea aequorea, in the northern Benguela (off Namibia) have previously been estimated (at 18, 38 and 120 kHz) from acoustic data collected in conjunction with trawl samples, using the 'comparison method'. These TS values may have been biased because the method took no account of acoustic backscatter from mesozooplankton. Here we report our efforts to improve upon these estimates, and to determine TS additionally at 200 kHz, by conducting additional sampling for mesozooplankton and fish larvae, and accounting for their likely contribution to the total backscatter. Published sound scattering models were used to predict the acoustic backscatter due to the observed numerical densities of mesozooplankton and fish larvae (solving the forward problem). Mean volume backscattering due to jellyfish alone was then inferred by subtracting the model-predicted values from the observed water-column total associated with jellyfish net samples. Zooplankton-corrected echo intensity/jellyfish density data pairs were in close agreement with linear relationships determined previously from uncorrected data. Small sample sizes precluded recalculation of TS, but nonparametric pair-wise tests failed to detect any significant differences between echo intensities for jellyfish densities observed in the present study and echo intensities predicted for those densities by density-intensity relationships arising from the previous study. Previous linear density-intensity relationships had y-axis intercepts greater than zero. On the assumption that the positive intercepts were due to backscatter from unsampled mesozooplankton, new TS relationships were calculated from downward-adjusted density-intensity relationships. New values agreed closely with TS estimates determined elsewhere using single-target echo detection techniques. Given that estimates of jellyfish TS appear robust, it should now be feasible to identify jellyfish acoustically at sea and to assess their abundance, even in the presence of mixed mesozooplankton assemblages.
引用
收藏
页码:105 / 111
页数:7
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]   Distributions of physonect siphonulae in the Gulf of Maine and their potential as important sources of acoustic scattering [J].
Benfield, MC ;
Lavery, AC ;
Wiebe, PH ;
Greene, CH ;
Stanton, TK ;
Copley, NJ .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2003, 60 (07) :759-772
[2]   Single-target echo detections of jellyfish [J].
Brierley, AS ;
Axelsen, BE ;
Boyer, DC ;
Lynam, CP ;
Didcock, CA ;
Boyer, HJ ;
Sparks, CAJ ;
Purcell, JE ;
Gibbons, MJ .
ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE, 2004, 61 (03) :383-393
[3]   Acoustic observations of jellyfish in the Namibian Benguela [J].
Brierley, AS ;
Axelsen, BE ;
Buecher, E ;
Sparks, CAJ ;
Boyer, H ;
Gibbons, MJ .
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2001, 210 :55-66
[4]   Evidence for a substantial increase in gelatinous zooplankton in the Bering Sea, with possible links to climate change [J].
Brodeur, RD ;
Mills, CE ;
Overland, JE ;
Walters, GE ;
Schumacher, JD .
FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY, 1999, 8 (04) :296-306
[5]   Biometry and size distribution of Chrysaora hysoscella (Cnidaria, Scyphozoa) and Aequorea aequorea (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) off Namibia with some notes on their parasite Hyperia medusarum [J].
Buecher, E ;
Sparks, C ;
Brierley, A ;
Boyer, H ;
Gibbons, M .
JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH, 2001, 23 (10) :1073-1080
[6]   Acoustic estimates of zooplankton biomass and distribution: application of canonical correlation to scaling of multifrequency acoustic data [J].
Coyle, KO .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2000, 57 (11) :2306-2318
[7]   ACOUSTICAL ESTIMATION OF ZOOPLANKTON POPULATIONS [J].
GREENLAW, CF .
LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 1979, 24 (02) :226-242
[8]   Fall and rise of the Black Sea ecosystem [J].
Kideys, AE .
SCIENCE, 2002, 297 (5586) :1482-1484
[9]   Jellyfish abundance and climatic variation: contrasting responses in oceanographically distinct regions of the North Sea, and possible implications for fisheries [J].
Lynam, CP ;
Hay, SJ ;
Brierley, AS .
JOURNAL OF THE MARINE BIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM, 2005, 85 (03) :435-450
[10]   Interannual variability in abundance of North Sea jellyfish and links to the North Atlantic Oscillation [J].
Lynam, CP ;
Hay, SJ ;
Brierley, AS .
LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 2004, 49 (03) :637-643