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Topic Name: Genesis of fish shoals: Observations of herring apply to other animals; could impact conservation
Category: Geo sciences & technology
Research persons: Purnima Ratilal,Nicholas Makris
Location: Cambridge, United States
Details
For the first time, MIT engineers and colleagues have observed the initiation
of a mass gathering and subsequent migration of hundreds of millions of animals
-- in this case, fish.
The work, conducted using a novel imaging technique, "provides information
essential to the conservation of marine ecosystems that vast oceanic fish shoals
inhabit," the team writes in the March 27 issue of Science.
It also confirms theories about the behavior of large groups of animals in
general, from bird flocks to locust swarms. Until now those theories had only
been predicted through theoretical investigations, computer simulations and
laboratory experiments.
For example, the team found that once a group of fish reaches a critical
population density, it triggers a kind of chain reaction resulting in the
synchronized movement of millions of individuals over a large area. The
phenomenon is akin to a human "wave" moving around a sports stadium.
"As far as we know, this is the first time we've quantified this behavior in
nature and over such a huge ecosystem," said Nicholas C. Makris '83, PhD '91,
leader of the work and a professor of mechanical and ocean engineering. The
resulting shoals of migrating fish can extend some 40 kilometers or
approximately 25 miles across the ocean.
Makris' principal collaborators on the work include Purnima Ratilal PhD '02,
a professor at Northeastern University, J. Michael Jech of the Northeast
Fisheries Science Center, and Olav Rune Godoe of the Institute of Marine
Research in Norway. Other collaborators are from MIT, Northeastern and the
Southeast Fisheries Science Center.
Off Georges Bank:
The researchers focused on Atlantic herring off Georges Bank near Boston
during the fall spawning season. They found that the formation and movement of
large shoals of the fish constituted a kind of daily evening commute to the
shallower waters of the bank where they spawn under cover of darkness. Come
morning, the fish head back to deeper water and disband.
The work was conducted using Ocean Acoustic Waveguide Remote Sensing (OAWRS).
In 2006, Makris and colleagues published a paper in Science introducing OAWRS,
which they invented, and initial observations made with it.
OAWRS allows the team to take images of an area some 100 kilometers
(approximately 62 miles) in diameter every 75 seconds. This is a vast
improvement over conventional techniques such as fish-finding echo-sounders,
which Makris compares to "watching one pixel on a movie screen" while the new
technology allows you to "see the entire movie."
Both OAWRS and conventional methods rely on acoustics to locate objects by
bouncing sound waves off of them. With conventional techniques, survey vessels
send high-frequency sound beams into the ocean. In contrast, the new system uses
much lower frequency sound that can travel much greater distances and still
return useful information with signals far less intense.
Toward conservation:
Makris sees potential in using OAWRS to better monitor -- and conserve --
fish populations. Large oceanic fish shoals provide vital links in the ocean and
human food chain, he explained, but their sheer size makes it difficult to
collect information using conventional methods.
Ron O'Dor, co-senior scientist of the Census of Marine Life (CoML), commented
that "OAWRS allows us to gather information such as geographical distributions,
abundance and behavior of fish shoals and to better understand what constitutes
healthy fish populations ... which can be implemented by policymakers to better
monitor and improve conservation of fish stocks."
CoML is an international scientific collaboration engaged in a 10-year
initiative to assess and explain the diversity, distribution and abundance of
marine life in the oceans. It aims to release the first Census of Marine Life in
2010.
Could OAWRS be exploited to find and take more fish illegally, rather than
conserve them? Makris believes that it would be virtually impossible. For
example, he said, it cannot be used in stealth. "Thieves do not like to work in
broad daylight or with the lights on, and OAWRS [essentially] turns the lights
on in the ocean making it possible for everyone to see what is happening there
and do something about it." He also emphasized that permission from each
government would be needed to use it in any nation's territorial waters or in
internationally regulated waters.
The work was sponsored by the National Oceanographic Partnership Program, the
Office of Naval Research, and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and is a
contribution to the Census of Marine Life.
About the researchers :
1. Professor Nicholas
Makris
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Director of the
Laboratory for Undersea Remote Sensing
Education: PhD in Ocean Engineering, MIT 1991,
SB in Physics, MIT 1983.
Honors and Awards:
- NASA Group Achievement Award to Jupiter Icy Moons Orbiter Science
Definition Team
- Doherty Professor of Ocean Utilization
- Edgerly Fellow
- Secretary of the Navy/Chief of Naval Operations
Scholar of Oceanographic Sciences
- Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America
- ONR Young Investigator
- Alan Berman Outstanding Publication Award, NRL
- A. B. Wood Medal, Institute of Acoustics, UK
- Navy Special Act Award Feb.
- MIT Nautical Association Service Award
- Comodore MIT Nautical Association
Research:
Ocean exploration, undersea remote sensing of marine life and geophysical
phenomena, census of marine life, ocean acoustic hurricane classification,
Europa ice sheet fracture mechanics and seismics, wave propagation and
scattering theory in remote sensing through random media and waveguides,
statistical estimation and information theory in sensing, linear and nonlinear
acoustics and seismics.
Contact info of Prof. Makris:
Room 5-212
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139
Phone: 617-258-6104
Fax: 617-253-2350
Email:
makris@mit.edu
2.
Purnima Ratilal
Assistant Professor
Ratilal has extensive experimental and
theoretical experience in remote sensing with acoustics and ultrasonics. The
applications include long range acoustic detection, localization, and
inference of underwater vehicles, geology, fish, and other objects in the
ocean; linear and nonlinear ultrasound imaging for biomedical and military
applications; and imaging in multipath environments.
Ratilal holds a PhD in acoustics from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT, 2002). She was was previously a Postdoctoral Associate in the
Department of Ocean Engineering at MIT (2002-2004) and a Research Scientist at
Singapore's DSO National Laboratories (1994-1998). She was awarded the ONR
Postdoctoral Award in Ocean Acoustics in 2002, the Bruce Lindsay Award by the
Acoustical Society of America in 2006, the ONR Young Investigator (YIP) Award
in 2007, and the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers
(PECASE) in 2008.
Research Areas:
Remote Sensing, Acoustics, Wave Propagation and Scattering in Random Media
and Multipath Environments, Temporal and Spatial Signal Processing, Image
Processing, Statistical Inference Theory, Underwater Acoustics, Acoustical
Oceanography, Ultrasonics, Biomedical Ultrasound Sensing, Nonlinear Scattering
Theory.
Contact information of Purnima:
Office: 310 Stearns
Phone: (617) 373-8458
Fax: (617) 373-8627
Email : purnima@ece.neu.edu
| Tags: |
mass gathering - subsequent migration - Ocean Acoustic Waveguide Remote Sensing - OAWRS - |
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