link to AFSC home page
Mobile users can use the Site Map to access the principal pages


link to NMFS home page link to AFSC home page link to NOAA home page

Benthic Habitat

ABL Home
Marine Ecology & Stock Assessment
Marine Ecology
Benthic Habitat:
Seafloor Mapping
Program Activities:
Publications
Posters
Reports & Activities
Archives
Coral and juvenile rockfish from Delta submersible
Coral and juvenile rockfish from Delta submersible.
 
Juvenile rockfish in sponge from Delta submersible
Juvenile rockfish in sponge from Delta submersible.
 
Coral, boulder habitat from Delta submersible
Coral and boulder habitat from Delta submersible.

Studies on benthic habitat in the MESA program focus on identification of essential fish habitat, determining the effects of fishing on benthic habitat, improving stock assessments, and understanding basic ecological processes and life histories of benthic organisms. Seafloor habitat mapping is increasingly being integrated with these long-term objectives. Large research vessels have collected high resolution bathymetry and backscatter data using multibeam sonar on several areas in the Gulf of Alaska (GOA) and Aleutian Islands. Benthic habitat mapping has important implications for stock assessment. Many stock assessments for groundfish rely on trawl surveys to provide abundance information. In some areas, especially in the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands, an unknown proportion of the survey area is untrawlable. Since the average density of a particular fish species may differ between trawlable and untrawlable grounds, absolute abundance estimates derived from trawl surveys may be biased. Habitat mapping can help in the computation of the proportion of trawlable ground, which will aid in the calculation of unbiased abundance estimates.


Contact:
Kalei Shotwell
Auke Bay Laboratories
Alaska Fisheries Science Center, NOAA Fisheries

Ted Stevens Marine Research Institute
17109 Pt Lena Loop Rd
Juneau AK 99801
Kalei.Shotwell@noaa.gov

 

Featured Research, Publications, Posters, Reports, and Activities

  • STONE, R. P., M. M. MASUDA, and P. W. MALECHA. 2005. Effects of bottom trawling on soft-sediment epibenthic communities in the Gulf of Alaska, p. 461-475. In P.W. Barnes and J.P. Thomas (editors), Benthic Habitats and the Effects of Fishing. Am. Fish. Soc. Symp. 41, Bethesda, Maryland 
     


See the publications and poster databases for additional listings.

 

To view and print these documents, you must install Adobe Acrobat Reader freeware.  Adobe also offers free tools for the visually disabled

Webmaster | Privacy | Disclaimer | Accessibility