ES60 Water Column Sonar Data Collected During FR0403
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Oregon - Washington Sardine Survey. Forty of the forty-two primary stations were occupied after dusk and prior to sunrise. Daytime activities included occupying fine scale patterns relative to the previous station using the ES-60 sounder. At each night station the following activities were performed: a. Deployment of a Seabird SeaCat down to 100 meters, bottom depth permitting. The self-contained CTD collected depth, temperature, conductivity and chlorophyll data. b. A standard Pairovet cast. The Pairovet net was fished from 70 meters to the surface (depth permitting) using paired 25 cm diameter 150 µm mesh nets. The technical requirements for the Pairovet tow was: Descent rate of 70 meters per minute, a terminal depth time of 10 seconds and an ascent rate of 70 meters per minute. c. Standard meteorological data including SST, wind speed and direction, wave height and direction, cloud cover, relative humidity, air temperature and barometric pressure. d. During all transit between stations continuous acoustic measurements were made using the ES-60. e. A Nordic 264 mid-water trawl using 3.0 m² foam core doors was towed at the surface for 30 minutes traveling at approximately 3.5 knots. Every catch was sorted and sardines were sampled.
ES80 Water Column Sonar Data Collected During IYSNWExplorer22
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Pacific salmon are an important cultural, commercial, and biological resource for countries of the North Pacific rim. The geographic distribution of these salmon spans the North Pacific Ocean (NPO), where they occupy a variety of ecosystems and water masses throughout their ocean life history phase. There are significant gaps in our understanding of the mechanisms that regulate distribution, productivity/survival in coastal and high seas environments. These gaps hamper our ability to usefully inform management decisions related to fisheries and habitat across freshwater, coastal and high seas ecosystems. As a changing climate and associated anomalous events in the large marine ecosystems of the NPO progressively expose Pacific salmon to conditions that are outside the "normal" climate cycles, society will confront new resource management issues. These include the future of the cultures and subsistence lifestyles of local Indigenous communities, potential impacts of industrial activities (e.g., commercial fishing), potential changes to regional ocean carrying capacity, and resilience of North Pacific marine ecosystems. In addition, the growing threat of illegal, unreported, and unregulated high seas fishing and the recovery of salmon populations listed under the US Endangered Species Act and Canadian Species at Risk Act has increased the need for timely advice about salmon distribution. An international effort is required to detect and monitor changes in salmon and their ecosystem because stocks from all major salmon States of origin are distributed in the NPO. Salmon originate in producer nations rivers migrate through the exclusive economic zones of coastal states and intermingle in the high seas. In response to this need, the NPAFC, with partners and collaborating scientists in academia, NGOs and the private sector, is conducting an ambitious high seas research expedition with up to five research vessels surveying the full breadth of the NPO in late winter 2022. The expedition will test a collaborative research framework to better understand the mechanisms and processes that regulate the distribution and abundance of Pacific salmon and steelhead trout; to promote sustainable populations of anadromous populations in the NPO; to allow for better forecasts of salmon production trends in the future; and to enhance the sustainable fisheries management, food security, and economic security in salmon States. Our key methodological approach is to conduct an international survey of salmon and their ecosystems in the offshore regions of the NPO by deploying survey vessels at key times and areas to provide a seasonal picture of the distribution, migration and ecology of salmon in the high seas. This information will be connected to survey data (past and present) from NPAFC member countries conducting integrated ecosystem research within their Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) and previous international salmon research in the high seas. Together, these surveys provide a unique opportunity for research towards conservation and management of Pacific salmon. This effort builds on decades of high seas trawl surveys by the Russian Federation and other countries in the NPO and successful international research endeavors by the NPAFC and its precursor the International North Pacific Fisheries Commission (INPFC), such as the Bering Aleutian Salmon International Survey (BASIS; NPAFC Doc. 579 Rev 2). Two recent winter surveys to the Gulf of Alaska in 2019 and 2020, which were privately organized by Dr. Dick Beamish and Dr. Brian Riddell, form the proof of concept and provide baseline data comparable to this larger scale survey. The organization and operation of the first expedition was highly supported by the NPAFC Secretariat staff. The project is a Signature Project within the NPAFCs five-year International Year of the Salmon initiative (20182022), an effort dedicated to set the conditions supporting the resilience of salmon and people in a
ES60 Water Column Sonar Data Collected During BE201301
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A broad-scale, baseline acoustic-trawl surveys of pelagic fishes were conducted in late summer 2013 over the continental shelf of the ice-free U.S. northern Bering and Chukchi Seas on the F/V Bristol Explorer, a 55 m chartered fishing vessel. The goal of this work was to characterize the abundance and distribution of abundant pelagic fishes in the area to better understand the structure and function of these ecosystems. Fish species of interest included commercial subarctic species, which could expand northward in response to warming. The survey was conducted along 0.5 degree spaced transect lines from 59.75N to 73N between 170W and 157W. The primary water column acoustic instrument for the survey was a Simrad ES60 scientific echosounder equipped with a Simrad ES38-10 38 kHz transducer and ES120-7C 120 kHz transducer. The ship departed Dutch Harbor, AK on 01 August 2013, making intermediate port calls to Nome AK before ending in Dutch Harbor, AK on 29 September 2013. The echosounder was calibrated with a 38.1 mm tungsten-carbide sphere via the standard sphere method during the survey in the southern Chukchi Sea on 13 August 2013. The results of these surveys and further description of data collection are available in: De Robertis, A., Taylor, K., Wilson, C., and Farley, E. 2017. Abundance and Distribution of Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida) and other Pelagic Fishes over the U.S. Continental Shelf of the Northern Bering and Chukchi Seas Deep-Sea Research II, 135: 51-65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2016.03.002
ES60 Water Column Sonar Data Collected During BE201301
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A broad-scale, baseline acoustic-trawl surveys of pelagic fishes were conducted in late summer 2013 over the continental shelf of the ice-free U.S. northern Bering and Chukchi Seas on the F/V Bristol Explorer, a 55 m chartered fishing vessel. The goal of this work was to characterize the abundance and distribution of abundant pelagic fishes in the area to better understand the structure and function of these ecosystems. Fish species of interest included commercial subarctic species, which could expand northward in response to warming. The survey was conducted along 0.5 degree spaced transect lines from 59.75N to 73N between 170W and 157W. The primary water column acoustic instrument for the survey was a Simrad ES60 scientific echosounder equipped with a Simrad ES38-10 38 kHz transducer and ES120-7C 120 kHz transducer. The ship departed Dutch Harbor, AK on 01 August 2013, making intermediate port calls to Nome AK before ending in Dutch Harbor, AK on 29 September 2013. The echosounder was calibrated with a 38.1 mm tungsten-carbide sphere via the standard sphere method during the survey in the southern Chukchi Sea on 13 August 2013. The results of these surveys and further description of data collection are available in: De Robertis, A., Taylor, K., Wilson, C., and Farley, E. 2017. Abundance and Distribution of Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida) and other Pelagic Fishes over the U.S. Continental Shelf of the Northern Bering and Chukchi Seas Deep-Sea Research II, 135: 51-65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2016.03.002