Daytime pelagic schooling behaviour and relationships with plankton patch distribution in the Sicily Strait (Mediterranean Sea)
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2011
abstract:
In this study, hydroacoustic data collected with a scientific echosounder working
at two frequencies (38 and 120 kHz) over the continental shelf off the southern
Sicilian coast were used in order to investigate the relationship between fish
schools and plankton patches. Specifically, image analysis algorithms were
applied to raw echograms in order to detect and characterise pelagic fish schools
and plankton aggregations, considered as a proxy of food availability. The
relationship was first investigated using estimated total plankton biomass over
the whole water column and, second, by dividing the study area into three
sub-regions and further distinguishing plankton patches between the surface and
the bottom. In the relatively lower plankton abundance areas of Zone 1 (northern
sector of the study area), results showed an inverse relationship between the
biomass (and density) of fish schools and the biomass of co-occurring plankton
patches located close to the bottom. Instead, over the Sicilian-Maltese shelf
(Zone 3), characterised by higher plankton abundances, a direct relationship was
found when using plankton data from the whole water column. The observed
difference between Zones 1 and 3 is probably due to diverse dominant fish species
in the two sub-regions.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
acoustics; fish schools; plankton patches; Sicily Strait; spatial distribution
List of contributors:
Basilone, Gualtiero; Giacalone, Giovanni; Fontana, Ignazio; Aronica, Salvatore; Quinci, ENZA MARIA; D'Elia, Marta; Patti, Bernardo; Bonanno, Angelo; Mazzola, Salvatore
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