J. Kubecka et M. Wittingerova, HORIZONTAL BEAMING AS A CRUCIAL COMPONENT OF ACOUSTIC FISH STOCK ASSESSMENT IN FRESH-WATER RESERVOIRS, Fisheries research, 35(1-2), 1998, pp. 99-106
During the summer of 1992 and spring and summer of 1995 and 1996, the
fish stocks of four Czech reservoirs, Lipno, Orlik, Slapy and Rimov, w
ere surveyed acoustically. Two acoustic systems (BioSonics model 102 d
ual-beam 420 kHz echosounder and SIMRAD EY500 split-beam 120 kHz echos
ounder) were employed to survey the whole bodies by vertical and near-
surface horizontal beaming with the transducer at a depth of 40-60 cm.
Day and night acoustic surveys were carried out during the spring and
summer when fish were unlikely to be undetectable 'hiding' in the 'ac
oustically-blind' zone near the bottom. Fish more than one pulse lengt
h from the bottom could be detected in the sonar beam. The main findin
g of this study was that vertical beaming must be supplemented by hori
zontal beaming in all the water bodies as the fish were usually confin
ed to depths of 0-4 m due to attraction to warm surface waters in spri
ng and, later, due to avoidance of de-oxygenated hypolimnions. This ap
plied to all the coarse fish species (mainly Perca fluviatilis, Rutilu
s rutilus and Abramis brama) apart from their larval stages. Fish dens
ities estimated by vertical beaming were two to fifty times lower than
those estimated by horizontal beaming due to avoidance of the boat. S
plit-beam tracking showed that fish remained very close to the surface
even within the strata surveyed by the horizontal beam. (C) 1998 Else
vier Science B.V.