The oceanic circulation in the Mozambique Channel (MZC) is dominated by mesoscale cyclonic and anticyclonic eddies that are known to play a key role in biological processes of less-productive deep-sea ecosystems by converting physical energy into trophic energy and by restructuring and concentrating biomass across the eddy field. In this study, hydroacoustics was used to investigate the spatial distribution of micronekton according to four classes of mesoscale features and assess whether cyclonic eddies, anticyclonic eddies or eddy edges (divergence and frontal regions) impact the density of micronekton. Acoustic data were collected continuously with a Simrad EK60 split-beam echosounder during three surveys carried out in the MZC within the...