Fisheries Acoustics - A Practical Manual for Aquatic Biomass Estimation













Table of Contents


by
K.A. Johannesson, MIOA
Electronics/Acoustics Engineer
FAO Acoustics Expert

R.B. Mitson, FIOA
Electronics/Acoustics Engineer
FAO Consultant

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER 240
FIRM/T240

FAO - FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS
Rome, 1983

The designations employed and the presentation of material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.

M-42
ISBN 92-5-101449-3

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. Applications for such permission, with a statement of the purpose and extent of the reproduction, should be addressed to the Director, Publications Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via delle Terme di Caracalla, 00100 Rome, Italy.

© FAO 1983

This electronic document has been scanned using optical character recognition (OCR) software and careful manual recorrection. Even if the quality of digitalisation is high, the FAO declines all responsibility for any discrepancies that may exist between the present document and its original printed version.


Table of Contents


PREPARATION OF THIS MANUAL

1. INTRODUCTION

1.1 Development of Acoustic Methods in Fisheries
1.2 Contents of this Manual: Its aim and scope

2. KEY PHYSICAL QUANTITIES

2.1 Direct Electrical Current (DC)
2.2 Alternating Electrical Current (AC)
2.3 Root-Mean-Square (rms) Values
2.4 Acoustic Pressure and Intensity

2.4.1 Pressure
2.4.2 Intensity

2.5 Decibels

2.5.1 Power and Intensity Ratios
2.5.2 Voltage and Pressure Ratios

2.6 Speed and Absorption of Acoustic Waves

2.6.1 Absorption of Acoustic Waves

2.7 Frequency and Wavelength
2.8 Acoustic Waves and Fish

3. PRINCIPLES OF INSTRUMENTS FOR FISHERIES ACOUSTICS

3.1 The Echo-Sounder

3.1.1 Time base
3.1.2 Transmitter
3.1.3 Transducers and Acoustic Beams
3.1.4 Receiver Amplifier
3.1.5 Displaying and Recording Signals
3.1.6 Recording Paper

3.2 The Analog Echo-integrator

3.2.1 Demodulator
3.2.2 Amplifier
3.2.3 Threshold
3.2.4 Depth and Interval Selection
3.2.5 Voltage Squarer
3.2.6 Voltage Squared Integrator
3.2.7 Display of Integrated Signals

3.3 Digital Echo-Integrators

3.3.1 Simrad QD Integrator
3.3.2 Biosonics DE1 120 Integrator
3.3.3 AGENOR Integrator
3.3.4 Furuno FQ Integrator

3.4 Test Instruments

3.4.1 Multimeters
3.4.2 Oscilloscopes
3.4.3 Signal Generators
3.4.4 Electronic Counters
3.4.5 Hydrophones
3.4.6 Projectors
3.4.7 Calibration of Test Instruments

4. FORMING THE ACOUSTIC EQUATIONS

4.1 Power and Source Level
4.2 Decrease of Intensity with Distance
4.3 Variation of Intensity across the Beam
4.4 Single Fish as Acoustic Targets
4.5 Fish Schools as Simple Acoustic Targets
4.6 An Equivalent Transducer Beam
4.7 Noise Level
4.8 Summary of Acoustic Equation Terms

4.8.1 Source Level
4.8.2 Receiving Sensitivity
4.8.3 SL + SRT
4.8.4 Transmission Loss
4.8.5 Target Strength
4.8.6 Volume Back-Scattering Coefficient
4.8.7 Reverberation Level
4.8.8 Beam Factor
4.8.9 Biomass Calculation

5. ACOUSTIC PROPERTIES OF FISH

5.1 Target Strength
5.2 Measurement of Fish Target Strength

5.2.1 Direct TS measurements
5.2.2 Indirect TS measurements

5.3 Fish Size and Target Strength Dependence
5.4 Fish Tilt Angle
5.5 Acoustic Frequency and Fish Target Strength
5.6 Fish School Target Strength

6. CONCEPTS OF ACOUSTIC ESTIMATES OF AQUATIC BIOMASS

6.1 Measurement of Volume Back-Scattering Strength
6.2 Mean Volume Back-Scattering Strength (MVBS)
6.3 Measurement of relative density
6.4 Measurement of Absolute Density
6.5 Determination of Mean Fish Density in a given Area

7. CALIBRATION

7.1 Acoustic Calibration

7.1.1 Standard Targets
7.1.2 Calibration by Range (R) and Voltage (V) measurements
7.1.3 Hydrophones/Projectors
7.1.4 Intership Acoustic Calibration
7.1.5 Live Fish Calibration

7.2 Electronic Calibration

7.2.1 Transmitter/transducer
7.2.2 Receiver/Time Varied Gain
7.2.3 Time Varied Gain Amplifier Calibration
7.2.4 Integrator

8. ORGANISATION OF WORK AND PROCEDURES

8.1 Importance of Team Work
8.2 Planning and Design of Surveys

8.2.1 Objectives and Background Information
8.2.2 Operational Aspects
8.2.3 Survey Design

8.3 Standardisation of Control Settings

8.3.1 Echo-sounder
8.3.2 Echo-integrator

8.4 Data Collection

8.4.1 List of Equipment Factors
8.4.2 Data Recording and Storage

9. SOURCES OF ERROR IN THE ESTIMATES

9.1 Systematic/Random Errors
9.2 Equipment Operational Errors

9.2.1 Bottom Pulse Failure
9.2.2 Layer Selector Spike
9.2.3 School Generated Bottom Stop Pulse
9.2.4 Secondary Echo Interference
9.2.5 Instrument Drift
9.2.6 Attentuation by Bubbles

9.3 Noise

9.3.1 Biological Noise
9.3.2 Electrical Noise
9.3.3 Receiver Amplifier Self-noise
9.3.4 Acoustic Noise
9.3.5 Ship Noise
9.3.6 Miscellaneous Sources

9.4 Coverage Errors

9.4.1 Near Surface Layer
9.4.2 Near Bottom Zone
9.4.3 Inaccessible Fish Distribution

9.5 Vessel Avoidance (variability with depth of fish)
9.6 Other Errors

9.6.1 Motion Induced Errors
9.6.2 Acoustic Beam Overlap
9.6.3 Shadowing Effects
9.6.4 Resonance of Organisms

10. DATA ANALYSIS FOR FISH ABUNDANCE ESTIMATION

10.1 Data Handling and Processing

10.1.1 Visual Evaluation
10.1.2 Mapping and Representation

10.2 Derivation of Estimates

10.2.1 Scaling Factor 'C'
10.2.2 Simple Random Sample
10.2.3 Post-Sampling Stratification

10.3 Statistical Implications and Limitations

10.3.1 Transformation of Sample Observations
10.3.2 Confidence Limits for the Estimated Means
10.3.3 Allocation of Survey Samples

APPENDICES

APPENDIX I. UNITS AND SYMBOLS
APPENDIX II. GLOSSARY OF TERMS
APPENDIX III. REFERENCES AND RECOMMENDED READING