“…Although initially used for determining substrate composition in deep-water biological assessments as a replacement for manned submersibles (Koenig et al, 2005), advancements in video quality and in ROV technology have allowed ROVs to become a more practical and affordable method for providing assessments for a wide variety of flora and fauna, including elasmobranchs (Benz et al, 2007;Henry et al, 2016), teleost fish (Carpenter and Shull, 2011;Haggarty et al, 2016), cephalopods (Smale et al, 2001;Zeidberg and Robison, 2007), gastropods (Butler et al, 2006;Stierhoff et al, 2012), macro-algae (Spalding et al, 2003), corals (Doughty et al, 2014;Etnoyer et al, 2018) and other macroinvertebrates (Grinyó et al, 2016;Hemery and Henkel, 2016). While ROVs can provide in situ observations of fish, their behaviors and habitat-associations that cannot be determined with traditional methods (i.e., trawls, longline) (Adams et al, 1995;Karpov et al, 2004;Linley et al, 2013), ROVbased sampling strategies must account for the unique challenges of surveying mobile organisms that are not applicable in surveys of sessile invertebrates and substrate.…”