**ABSTRACT NOT FOR CITATION WITHOUT AUTHOR PERMISSION. The title, authors, and abstract for this completion report are provided below.  For a copy of the full completion report, or with questions, please contact the GLFC via email at stp@glfc.org or via telephone at 734-662-3209.**

 

Workshop on Great Lakes Acoustic Standard Operating Procedures

 

Daniel Yule1, Lars Rudstam2, Sandra Parker-Stetter3, David Warner4, Randall Claramunt5, Patrick Sullivan2

 

 

1Great Lakes Science Center, Lake Superior Biological Station, 2800 Lakeshore Drive E., Ashland, WI 54806.

 

2Cornell Biological Field Station and Department  of Natural Resources, Cornell        University, 900 Shackelton Point Road, Bridgeport, NY 13030.

 

3School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, Box 355020, Seattle, WA 98195-5020.

 

4Great Lakes Science Center, 1451 Green Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48105-2807.

 

5Michigan Department of Natural Resources, Charlevoix Fisheries Research Station, Charlevoix, MI 49720.

 

December 2008

 

ABSTRACT:

 

The Workshop on Great Lakes acoustic standard operating procedures (SOP) was held 8-11 September at the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (MI DNR), Charlevoix Fishery Research Station. The workshop was paid for by a $10,500 grant received from the Great Lakes Fishery Commission (GLFC) science transfer fund, with participants charged a small fee of $50 each to offset costs of provided meals. The workshop included 1) introductory lectures on fishery acoustics, 2) description of the new Great Lakes acoustic SOP, 3) instruction on the use of two acoustic post processing software packages (Echoview 4.5 and Sonar 5), 4) demonstration of methods for conducting field calibration tests aboard the MI DNR research vessel Steelhead, 5) an example application of the SOP to a Lake Champlain data set, and 6) instruction on cluster analysis, geostatistics and uncertainty analysis. A total of 69 people were invited to participate, but the actual number of participants was 26 led by 5 instructors. Scientists from 3 Universities, 2 private-sector businesses, 10 state, federal and provincial agencies and 1 private environmental consultant attended. The workshop provided an opportunity for new acoustic users to network with more experienced users within the framework of describing how to apply the SOP.  A workshop exit survey showed attendees were generally pleased with the workshop. Future acoustic workshops should be directed towards case studies using the new SOP, invertebrate sampling and bottom typing applications, and methods of incorporating all uncertainty in confidence bound estimates.