By Chris Taylor, Senior Scientist, NOAA National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, Marine Spatial Ecology Division
Echosounders have been employed in fisheries and ocean research for decades to detect fish, plankton, and features both on the seabed and in the water column. The ship-mounted echosounder on the R/V Point Sur will provide the first line of evidence for the location, depth, and relative abundance of the mesopelagic community.
This echosounder is a system of multiple transducers and transceivers that transmit sound through the water at frequencies from 18 kilohertz (kHz) to 120 kHz. Electrical pulses are generated by the transceiver and transmitted to the transducer, which vibrates and transmits those pulses, or sound, into the water. The sound that is reflected back vibrates the transducer, and is then sent to the transceiver, where the information is processed and can be viewed on a laptop as an echogram. For this mission, the transducers are mounted inside a pod at the bottom of a pole that is hanging over the starboard side of the ship.
The energy from the higher frequencies (70 and 120 kHz) is absorbed by water quickly and only transmits a few hundred meters. The low frequency echosounders (38 and 18 kHz) can transmit sound through the full depth of our research area in the Gulf of Mexico (about 1,800 meters, or 5,250 feet). Acoustic reflection from the mesopelagic community will show up as layers in the water column, with complex structure and migrations occurring during day and night.
But remotely sensing the scattering layer from as far away as 1,000 meters (3,281 feet) has its limitations. Due to the length of the transmitted pulse and the spreading of the acoustic beam, the organisms in the scattering layer reflect sound as a collective mass, what we term “volume scattering.” We lack fine resolution images of the layers and cannot detect individuals to make inferences on their species-specific acoustic properties. We know the layers are diverse communities with each organism responding to various cues and migrating vertically. We will see this in real time from the ship, and use this information to guide the glider with the echosounder and the drift cameras to investigate the layers more closely, hopefully getting us to the species and individuals making these fascinating migrations through hundreds of meters of water in short hours.
Published July 28, 2021