1994
DOI: 10.1006/jmsc.1994.1051
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On acoustic estimates of zooplankton biomass

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Cited by 185 publications
(169 citation statements)
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“…Although volume backscattering was lower in the north, echo energy at 200 kHz per unit biomass has been shown to be comparable for certain sizes of siphonophores and euphausiids (Stanton et al, 1994), and this volume backscattering decrease is more likely related to a difference in biomass than to spatial patterns in community composition.…”
Section: Potential Limitations Of the Acoustic Techniquementioning
confidence: 92%
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“…Although volume backscattering was lower in the north, echo energy at 200 kHz per unit biomass has been shown to be comparable for certain sizes of siphonophores and euphausiids (Stanton et al, 1994), and this volume backscattering decrease is more likely related to a difference in biomass than to spatial patterns in community composition.…”
Section: Potential Limitations Of the Acoustic Techniquementioning
confidence: 92%
“…Measurements of the intensity of echoes returned from sonic pulses emitted into the water column therefore can be used to make estimates of more biologically-meaningful quantities such as animal abundance and size. This process of inferring the abundance and distribution of zooplankton in a quantitative sense from acoustic measurements, however, is not straightforward (Stanton et al, 1994;Wiebe et al, 1996). Scattering in the water column can result from both physical oceanic processes (e.g., microstructure; Warren et al, 2003) and the biota, where scattering from the latter is a complex function of the taxonomic composition of animals present, and the associated variability in their size, shape, physical properties, and behavior.…”
Section: History Of Krill Research and The Krill Fisherymentioning
confidence: 99%
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