Water (Apr 2023)

Feasibility of Time-Dependent Amplitude in Pulse-Compressed Broadband Acoustic Signals for Determining the Dorsal Orientation of Fish

  • Michal Tušer,
  • Marek Brabec,
  • Helge Balk,
  • Vladislav Draštík,
  • Jan Kubečka,
  • Jaroslava Frouzová

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w15081596
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 8
p. 1596

Abstract

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Fish body orientation significantly influences the size obtained with hydroacoustic signals, and thus the estimate of fish size and biomass. For this reason, each characteristic of a target’s echo can be advantageous for developing algorithms to refine acoustic fish estimates. We measured pulse-compressed broadband acoustic signals from tethered fish (common bream Abramis brama) in different dorsal positions. Based on generalized additive mixed models (GAMM), we initially tested the influence of the fish dorsal aspect on the amplitude echo envelope and amplitude echo descriptors (amplitude maximum and amplitude echo length at seven different levels below the maximum) by altering the fish dorsal orientation. Our study confirmed that the dorsal aspect influenced the shapes of the amplitude echo envelopes in both fast- and slow-tapered pulses. Furthermore, we found that echo lengths approximately 15 dB below the amplitude maximum, especially for fast-tapered signals, could provide good characteristics of the echo-envelope shape for determining the fish dorsal aspect and facilitating thus the conversion between acoustic target strength and true fish length.

Keywords