Pacific Hake and Coastal Pelagic Species Survey

This 60-day effort to assess stocks of Pacific hake and five coastal pelagic species was carried out in two sub-missions extending the full length of the US west coast.

60 days

On mission

7

Saildrone Explorers

140 nm

Transect extensions offshore

Access Data Set

Purpose

Saildrone and NOAA’s Northwest and Southwest Fisheries Science Centers performed the second joint integrated survey of the US West Coast, collecting data on Pacific hake and five coastal pelagic species integral to the California Current Ecosystem. The mission follows up last year’s successful 100-day mission to survey these fish stocks, count marine mammals, and test how uncrewed surface vehicles (USVs) can augment ship-based sampling. The 2019 mission combined the efforts of seven saildrones and research teams onboard NOAA FSVs (NWFSC) and Reuben Lasker (SWFSC) to survey the full length of the US West Coast from San Diego, CA, to Cape Flattery, WA.

Results

The 2019 mission included more granular coverage near shore to depths as shallow as 7 meters, as well as transect extensions up to 140 nautical miles offshore.

The 2019 mission was completed in just 60 days and included more granular coverage near shore, to depths as shallow as seven meters (23 feet), as well as transect extensions up to 140 nautical miles (260 kilometers) offshore.

“What made the 2019 survey unique was the close adherence to the requirement that the saildrones stay within three to five days of the Shimada. It was one of the most challenging aspects of the mission, requiring a lot of planning and constant communication, but it came off very well thanks to active cooperation on both sides and the responsiveness of the team at Saildrone Mission Control.”

Sandy Parker-Stetter

Supervisory research fish biologist at NOAA Fisheries NWFSC

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