TY - JOUR TI - Accounting for biological and physical sources of acoustic backscatter improves estimates of zooplankton biomass AU - Warren, J AU - Wiebe, P T2 - Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences AB - To convert measurements of backscattered acoustic energy to estimates of abundance and taxonomic information about the zooplankton community, all of the scattering processes in the water column need to be identified and their scattering contributions quantified. Zooplankton populations in the eastern edge of Wilkinson Basin in the Gulf of Maine in the Northwest Atlantic were surveyed in October 1997. Net tow samples at different depths, temperature and salinity profiles, and multiple frequency acoustic backscatter measurements from the upper 200 m of the water column were collected. Zooplankton samples were identified, enumerated, and measured. Temperature and salinity profiles were used to estimate the amount of turbulent microstructure in the water column. These data sets were used with theoretical acoustic scattering models to calculate the contributions of both biological and physical scatterers to the overall measured scattering level. The output of these predictions shows that the dominant source of acoustic backscatter varies with depth and acoustic frequency in this region. By quantifying the contributions from multiple scattering sources, acoustic backscatter becomes a better measure of net-collected zooplankton biomass. DA - 2008/07// PY - 2008 VL - 65 IS - 7 SP - 1321 EP - 1333 UR - https://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/full/10.1139/F08-047#.XqNMJ2hKhPZ DO - 10.1139/F08-047 LA - English KW - Ecosystem Processes ER -