Authors
Olav Rune Godø, Nils Olav Handegard, Howard I Browman, Gavin J Macaulay, Stein Kaartvedt, Jarl Giske, Egil Ona, Geir Huse, Espen Johnsen
Publication date
2014/10/1
Journal
ICES Journal of Marine Science
Volume
71
Issue
8
Pages
2357-2369
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Sustainable management of fisheries resources requires quantitative knowledge and understanding of species distribution, abundance, and productivity-determining processes. Conventional sampling by physical capture is inconsistent with the spatial and temporal scales on which many of these processes occur. In contrast, acoustic observations can be obtained on spatial scales from centimetres to ocean basins, and temporal scales from seconds to seasons. The concept of marine ecosystem acoustics (MEA) is founded on the basic capability of acoustics to detect, classify, and quantify organisms and biological and physical heterogeneities in the water column. Acoustics observations integrate operational technologies, platforms, and models and can generate information by taxon at the relevant scales. The gaps between single-species assessment and ecosystem-based management, as well as between …
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