One fish, two fish: New sensor improves fish counts 
US Source: underwatertimes 2/2/2006

Researchers at MIT have found a new way of looking beneath the ocean surface that could help definitively determine whether fish populations are shrinking.

A remote sensor system developed by Associate Professor Nicholas Makris of mechanical engineering, along with others at MIT, Northeastern University and the Naval Research Laboratory, allows scientists to track enormous fish populations, or shoals, as well as small schools, over a 10,000-square-kilometer area - a vast improvement over conventional technology that can survey only about 100 square meters at a time.
 

"We're able to see for the first time what a large group of fish looks like," said Makris, who compared the dramatic improvement to the difference between seeing everything on a television screen and seeing only one pixel.

The new sensor system, described in the Feb. 3 issue of Science, could allow government agencies to figure out what's really happening to fish populations, which many environmentalists and scientists believe are in rapid decline.

"The world's fish stocks are being depleted at a horrible rate," said Makris, who attributed declining populations to overfishing, a problem that has been abetted by inaccurate fish counts. "One of the reasons (for the inaccurate counts) is the darkness in the ocean. You don't know what's going on."

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
1251Osakis fisherman loses runaway walleye during photo opechopress2023-10-20CA
1252Plan for water cuts from 3 Western states is enough to protect Colorado RiverThe Associated Press2023-10-25US
1253Tsleil-Waututh’s race to save salmon habitat in drought stricken southwest B.C.coastalnewstoday2023-10-20CA
1254Alleged salmon price-fixing scheme prompts $5.2M Canadian settlementvancouverisawesome2023-10-20CA
1255The Ausable River's fish died in droves in July.CBC News2023-10-12CA
1256Reaping the rewards of a move from agri- to aqua-culturethefishsite2023-10-20IN
1257‘It smells so bad’: glut of wild salmon creates stink in Norway and Finlandtheguardian2023-10-02UK
1258Estonia's national fish stock fell by half even while adhering to quotaerr2023-10-04EE
1259Invasive spiny water flea found in Lake Winnipesaukee for first time evermasslive2023-10-01US
1260Fisherman loses runaway walleye during photo op and makes miraculous catchechopress2023-10-20US
1261Illegal fishing plagues Omani coastal citiesmuscatdaily2023-10-07OM
1262A young leader fights for Yukon River salmon, her community – and herselfalaskapublic2023-10-03US
1263North Carolina angler's colorful puddingwife catch may set world recordfoxweather2023-10-03US
1264Canada’s DFO confronts Native fishermennationalfisherman2023-10-19CA
1265US Women's Fly Fishing Team Wins Bronze Medal at 2023einnews2023-10-19US
1266Хитрый лещohotniki2023-10-10RU
1267State seeks $27.6 million from southern Oregon dam operatorsOregon Capital Chronicle2023-10-08US
1268Researchers in Japan Find Tritium Does Not Accumulate in FishThe Yomiuri Shimbun2023-10-05JP
1269Why Does Canada Have So Many Lakes?southwestjournal2023-10-16CA
1270Canada to help monitor vessels illegally fishing in PH watersCNN Philippines2023-10-17CA
1271Canada to help Philippines track illegal fishingfoxnews2023-10-16CA
1272Frisch: Find the green, find the fishechopress2023-10-13US
1273future of rivers as invasive fish continue to proliferate.fishncanada2023-10-11CA
1274Monster 283-pound alligator gar caught in Texas could set two fishing recordsFox News2023-10-11US
1275Red drum RAS is ready to roll in Floridathefishsite2023-10-11US

215 216 217 50 of [218 - pages.]