Area covered
|
Small vessels: coastal watersLarge vessels: high seas |
Generally limited to coastal waters but depends on fuel capacity/endurance and availability of airports |
Travel speed around 10 knots limits area coverage with time |
Travel speed around 100 knots means around 10 times greater search distance with time |
Poor for areas with complex coastlines and small islands |
Deals with complex coastlines and small islands well |
Species
|
Relates to area that can be covered and behaviour, but in principle all species either visually or acoustically |
Better suited to the non long-divers given speed of platform; not good for high seas species given endurance limitations |
Need to account for potential responsive movement |
Responsive movement not a problem |
School size estimation for some species can be difficult |
Generally easier to estimate school size |
Generally poor for estimating other megafauna |
Good for other megafauna (e.g. sea turtle, giant devil ray, sharks, tuna) at least in the Mediterranean Sea |
Environmental conditions
|
Cannot operate in ‘unacceptable’ conditions (these will depend on species) – swell can be a major problem |
Cannot operate in ‘unacceptable’ conditions (these will depend on species) – swell less of a problem |
Given speed limitations, relatively poor use of good weather windows |
Efficient use of good weather windows (higher survey speed, ability to move to good weather areas quickly) |
Data collection
|
Measurement of key parameters, especially distance, and to a lesser extent angle, is problematic |
Measurement of perpendicular distance easier and better |
Estimation of g(0) using double platform methods well established and space on board usually not a problem |
Difficult to use double platform methods in smaller planes (for some species ‘circle back’ works [60]) but possible in larger planes |
Allows collection of additional data: acoustic, environmental, photo-identification data |
Collection of additional data difficult or impossible |
Usually can incorporate more scientists |
Limited number of scientists |
Cost
|
More expensive than aerial surveys but:can operate on high seas;can collect additional data. |
More cost-effective where they can operate and better able to take advantage of good conditions when they are scarce (both geographically and seasonally) |