New Technology Holds Great Promise for Fisheries Science
 

Fish size, distribution, age, biomass—although fisheries scientists are interested in all those things, they also want to know more about fish behavior: how fish interact with each other and other organisms, how they use habitat. “The question has always been,” said Kevin Boswell, “what are they doing there?”
Boswell, a Ph.D. student, and his colleagues in the Department of Oceanography & Coastal Sciences (DOCS) are excited about a new piece of equipment that promises to revolutionize the way they look at fish.
The DIDSON, manufactured by Sound Metrics, is an acoustics system with a difference—it can produce near-video quality images. The Applied Physics Department at the University of Washington developed the DIDSON for military use, but recently fisheries scientists recognized that the DIDSON could change the way they do fisheries research.
Using acoustics in fisheries work is nothing new. Boswell’s doctoral research, which is nearing completion, focuses on the use of acoustics to quantify fish abundance and biomass. What is new is the DIDSON technology that turns acoustic data into images.
Boswell explained that whereas the traditional acoustics system he uses is a dual-beam or split-beam system operating at 120 or 420 kilohertz, the DIDSON has 96 beams and operates at a very high frequency of 1.2 megahertz. The multiple beams are what gives the unit the ability to image. A novelty is that it utilizes a series of acoustic lenses that concentrate the acoustic beam, and the last lens is filled with an acoustically defined media, the composition of which is proprietary. The lenses can be focused as the distance changes.
“With this system, we can image habitat, fish, and behavioral interactions between organisms. We can count, size, and track fish. The technology is in its infancy, and the possibilities are limitless,” said Boswell. “The system is the function of the merging of creativity and physics.”
Bowell learned about the DIDSON from an article by Debbie Burwen with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, who is using multiple DIDSON units for an acoustic study of salmon in shallow water. “After talking to her,” Boswell said, “I was sold. I contacted Sound Metrics, and they arranged for me to use a unit for a week.”
Using acoustics in shallow water, which is also what Boswell does, has physical challenges. Because of the depth limitation, soundings must be taken horizontally instead of vertically. Burwen used the DIDSON in two feet of water. Although Boswell isn’t often confronted with the need to work in water that shallow, Louisiana coastal waters present another challenge—turbidity. Often the water is so murky that traditional underwater photography is not an option. The DIDSON acoustic system isn’t hindered by murky water, nor by lack of light, which means data can be gathered by night as well as day.
A major limitation to the system is that it collects approximately 1.2 gigabytes of data an hour. Powered by either two car batteries or an A/C line, it can run indefinitely. The acoustic data collected on a computer is later converted to image data. The DIDSON is limited in range. After about 12 meters, it loses some fine-scale resolution. Sound Metrics is working to enhance the unit’s usefulness in shallow water at longer ranges.
Boswell tested the DIDSON in a tidal mangrove at Fouchon, where he set up the DIDSON a few meters off the bank and imaged fish that were using the edge habitat in a small tidal channel. He also took it to the LSU Aquaculture Facility at Ben Hur during catfish feeding time, and used it in Barataria Bay. Boswell and Andy Fisher have set up a page on the Coastal Fisheries Institute (CFI) Web site, www.cfi.lsu.edu/hydroacoustics/DIDSON, where images taken during the week-long testing of the DIDSON system can be seen.
Other CFI and DOCS faculty are interested in using the DIDSON technology in applications as diverse as artificial reef fish surveys and monitoring the behavior of invertebrates. Dr. Jim Cowan expects that CFI will obtain at least one DIDSON unit by the end of the summer.
“It’s great technology,” said Boswell. “If used properly, it can be a very powerful tool.”

—Debra Waters

 

 

 

School of the Coast and Environment
1002-Q Energy, Coast & Environment Building
Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
Tel: 225/578-6316


Job Listings | Prospective Students | Faculty and Staff | News and Events | Visitors
Chancellor's Welcome | About LSU | LSU A - Z | Colleges and Schools | Directory | Search | Contact LSU | Home

Send Comments or Questions to webmaster
Copyright © 2007. All Rights Reserved. Official Web Page of Louisiana State University.