4.4 Article

Diel vertical migration of zooplankton and mesopelagic fish in the Arabian Sea

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0967-0645(99)00150-2

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Acoustic (153 kHz ADCP and 12 kHz hull-mounted transducers) data and MOCNESS (MOC01 and MOC10) net tow samples collected in the Arabian Sea during the Spring Intermonsoon (April/May) and Southwest Monsoon (August) in 1995 documented substantial diel migrations of fish and zooplankton despite the year-round presence of an oxygen minimum ( < 0.2 mi l(-1) at 175-150 m). Fish and zooplankton layers were distinguished by comparing 13 kHz sonar and 153 kHz ADCP backscatter data, which indicated that the strongly migrating layers were predominantly composed of fishes. Fish vertical migration speeds were independently estimated from the slopes of the volume scattering layers and from the vertical velocity components of the ADCP, yielding average speeds of 4 and 3 cm s(-1) and maximum speeds of 13 and 10 cm s(-1), respectively. A few migrating zooplankton layers were identified with an average speed of about ? cm s(-1) and maximum speeds as high as 8 cm s(-1). Migration depths for both zooplankton and fish differed somewhat amongst stations and appeared to be related to local hydrographic conditions (principally the vertical gradients in DO and water temperature). Zooplankton displacement volumes at individual sites suggested that zooplankton biomass during the Southwest Monsoon could be as much as fivefold greater than during the Spring Intermonsoon. This observation was confirmed for the region in general by first deriving a relationship between ADCP backscatter intensity and daytime zooplankton biomass and then comparing the latter between cruises using daytime ADCP data taken along a 1500 km transect that extended from the coast of Somalia to the center of the northern basin. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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