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Detecting Mesopelagic Organisms Using Biogeochemical‐Argo Floats

Nils Haëntjens, Alice Della Penna, Nathan Briggs, Lee Karp‐Boss, Peter Gaube, Hervé Claustre, Emmanuel Boss

2020Geophysical Research Letters40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract During the North Atlantic Aerosols and Marine Ecosystems Study in the western North Atlantic, float‐based profiles of fluorescent dissolved organic matter and backscattering exhibited distinct spike layers at 300 m. The locations of the spikes were at depths similar or shallower to where a ship‐based scientific echo sounder identified layers of acoustic backscatter, an Underwater Vision Profiler detected elevated concentration of zooplankton, and mesopelagic fish were sampled by a mesopelagic net tow. The collocation of spike layers in bio‐optical properties with mesopelagic organisms suggests that some can be detected with float‐based bio‐optical sensors. This opens the door to the investigation of such aggregations/layers in observations collected by the global biogeochemical‐Argo array allowing the detection of mesopelagic organisms in remote locations of the open ocean under‐sampled by traditional methods.

Topics & Concepts

Mesopelagic zoneArgoBiogeochemical cycleOceanographyDiel vertical migrationEnvironmental scienceEcho soundingGeologyZooplanktonPelagic zoneBiologyEcologyMarine and coastal ecosystemsMarine Biology and Ecology ResearchMarine and fisheries research
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