Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9481732 | Fisheries Research | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
The dependence of maximum, minimum and mean target strength (TS), in both horizontal and vertical planes, on the body length, weight and swimbladder volume of European freshwater fish species (trout-Salmo trutta, perch-Perca fluviatilis, bream-Abramis brama, roach-Rutilus rutilus, carp-Cyprinus carpio and bleak-Alburnus alburnus) was studied. TS was measured with a split-beam echosounder operating at 120Â kHz. The orientation of the fish towards the transducer was found to be the most important parameter that affected the TS. Body length and fish species were less important and variations in swimbladder volume contributed little. Regression models for TS, length, weight and swimbladder volume were fitted to the data for both individual fish species and pooled for all species. The side aspect in the lateral plane gave the strongest echo for all fish species except trout. Here, the dorso-ventral aspect gave the most intensive echoes.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Aquatic Science
Authors
Jaroslava Frouzova, Jan Kubecka, Helge Balk, Jan Frouz,