G. Swartzman et al., Spatial proximity of age-0 walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) to zooplankton near the Pribilof Islands, Bering Sea, Alaska, ICES J MAR, 56(4), 1999, pp. 545-560
Acoustic surveys, conducted in September 1994 and 1995 in the neighbourhood
of the Pribilof Islands, Alaska, collected data at three frequencies, maki
ng possible the location of pollock shoals and patches of zooplankton along
the survey transect. These patches were identified using threshold and mor
phological filters on echosounder images taken at 38 kHz (fish identificati
on) and 120 and 200 kHz (plankton identification). We checked the morpholog
ical methods by comparing the depth distribution of acoustically determined
plankton with zooplankton from net surveys and found them in general agree
ment. Our ability to spatially map patches of plankton and shoals of fish (
mostly pollock) along the survey transects led to our examining the spatial
proximity between pollock and plankton patches. Results, using both interv
aI- and distance-based measures, suggested that fish-plankton proximity was
affected by plankton biomass. When the plankton biomass was low, fish tend
ed to remain close to existing plankton patches, while at high plankton bio
mass there was no consistent small-scale proximity relationship. At interme
diate plankton densities there was no particular distance-based proximity o
f plankton patches to fish shoals. However, the interval-based fish densiti
es tended to increase with increasing plankton density up to some plankton
density threshold, above which there was no clear association between fish
and plankton density. These findings suggest the existence of plankton biom
ass density thresholds, both overall and within plankton patches that may i
nfluence pollock feeding strategies. They also suggest a possible method fo
r empirically estimating these thresholds using multi-frequency acoustic su
rvey data. (C) 1999 International Council for the Exploration of the Sea.