“…Several of these seamounts host commercially valuable pelagic and demersal fish species important for local fisheries (Morato et al, 2008b;Menezes et al, 2013) and act as foraging posts for sea turtles, seabirds, marine mammals, and large pelagic fishes (Santos et al, 2007;Morato et al, 2008b;Silva et al, 2013;Afonso et al, 2014b;Tobeña et al, 2016). However, with few exceptions (e.g., Hargreaves, 1975;Martin and Nellen, 2004), previous studies on acoustic backscatter distribution in the Azores have focused only in open ocean areas (e.g., Moore, 1950;McElroy, 1974;Smailes, 1976;Wade and Heywood, 2001). Here we compare the distribution of micronekton backscatter in open ocean waters and at two seamounts with different physical properties to (i) investigate the influence of seamounts in driving distribution patterns of acoustic scatterers, (ii) determine how this effect varies over diel and seasonal scales, and (iii) discuss physical and biological processes controlling dynamics of micronekton in the study areas.…”