Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6388512 | Progress in Oceanography | 2015 | 18 Pages |
â¢We re-evaluated krill distribution and abundance in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.â¢We challenge the established perception of krill biomass and distribution.â¢Biomass in the northwestern Gulf and estuary totaled 1.0 Mt in August 2009.â¢Our findings have important implications for baleen whale critical habitat studies.
The opportunistic collection of hydroacoustic data during multipurpose, large-scale surveys since 2000 has led to the detection of several, newly-documented krill concentrations throughout the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Based on both historical and these recent results, a series of regional-scale acoustic surveys was initiated in the northwestern Gulf and estuary to quantify the spatial and temporal variations in the regional abundance, distribution and aggregation of northern and Arctic krill. By using a recently-developed multi-frequency method to classify these two krill species, our study re-evaluated the species-specific krill distribution and abundance, previously monitored by plankton-net sampling alone. We show that Thysanoessa raschii is the more coastal species, with its center-of-mass in the shelf and slope habitats. Meganyctiphanes norvegica forms generally less dense aggregations in the slope and channel habitats. Biomass in the northwestern Gulf and estuary was split 60:40 between T. raschii and M. norvegica, and totaled 1.0 million tonnes in August 2009; substantially more than has been reported previously. This re-evaluation should have considerable impact on ecosystem models which have assumed much lower values for these important forage populations. The pattern of krill aggregations identified from large- and regional-scale surveys will have important implications for the interpretation of critical habitat for endangered marine mammals which depend on krill.