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Distribution and diel vertical movements of mesopelagic scattering layers in the Red Sea
Authors
A Antunes
A Staby
+48 more
AR Longhurst
BA Seibel
C Robinson
CF Greenlaw
CJ Ashjian
CJ Robinson
CN Flagg
Daniel J. Torres
E Ramirez-Llodra
E Widder
ED Prince
EG Barham
GC Hays
H Weikert
HB Moore
J Badcock
J Donnelly
J Gjøsaeter
J Hersey
J Kinzer
J Luo
J Morrison
JJ Childress
JJ Childress
JJ Torres
JK Gjøsaeter
K Wishner
KF Wishner
KF Wishner
L Stramma
M Angel
N Tremblay
P Dalpadado
R Kloser
R Rosa
RJ Korneliussen
RJ Korneliussen
S Kaartvedt
S Venema
SJ Jorgensen
Stein Kaartvedt
T Sutton
TA Klevjer
Thor A. Klevjer
W Ekau
W Pearcy
Y Halim
ZB Batang
Publication date
1 January 2012
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
© The Author(s), 2012. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Marine Biology 159 (2012): 1833-1841, doi:10.1007/s00227-012-1973-y.The mesopelagic zone of the Red Sea represents an extreme environment due to low food concentrations, high temperatures and low oxygen waters. Nevertheless, a 38 kHz echosounder identified at least four distinct scattering layers during the daytime, of which the 2 deepest layers resided entirely within the mesopelagic zone. Two of the acoustic layers were found above a mesopelagic oxygen minimum zone (OMZ), one layer overlapped with the OMZ, and one layer was found below the OMZ. Almost all organisms in the deep layers migrated to the near-surface waters during the night. Backscatter from a 300 kHz lowered Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler indicated a layer of zooplankton within the OMZ. They carried out DVM, yet a portion remained at mesopelagic depths during the night. Our acoustic measurements showed that the bulk of the acoustic backscatter was restricted to waters shallower than 800 m, suggesting that most of the biomass in the Red Sea resides above this depth.This research is based in part on work supported by Award Nos. USA 00002, KSA 00011 and KSA 00011/02 made by KAUST to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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