M. Soule et al., EVIDENCE OF BIAS IN ESTIMATES OF TARGET STRENGTH OBTAINED WITH A SPLIT-BEAM ECHO-SOUNDER, ICES journal of marine science, 52(1), 1995, pp. 139-144
In addition to testing the echo duration, the Simrad EK500 split-beam
echo-sounder uses the between-sample variation in signal phase to isol
ate echoes from single fish. The performance of these discriminators w
as tank-tested on a 38-kHz EK500 sounder, using spheres as targets. It
was found that for typical settings of the allowable phase variation
and echo duration: (1) there was a pronounced bias against accepting w
eaker targets; and (2) multiple echoes from targets as far as 700 mm a
part were falsely accepted as single echoes, particularly if the indiv
idual echoes happened to interfere constructively. These effects will
all result in target strengths being over-estimated, by an amount whic
h could be large in many cases and which cannot be corrected for. We c
onclude that, except in cases where the fish are widely separated and
differ comparatively little in target strength, the single fish discri
minators used in the EK500 (software Version 4.01) are unreliable, and
should be used with great circumspection. Possible improvements to th
e phase algorithm are suggested, although it is considered unlikely th
at these will eliminate all biases in the method.