Passive acoustic monitoring in ecology and conservation.
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Date
2017Author
Browning, Ella
Gibb, Rory
Glover-Kapfer, Paul
Jones, Kate E.
Status
PublishedPages
76pp.
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Show full item recordAbstract
are urgently needed to understand how global change is affecting wildlife and ecosystems.
Sound is an important component of any habitat, and sound recordings made in the field
offer potentially rich sources of ecological information about the abundance, distribution and
behaviour of vocalising animals in an area. Acoustic sensors are therefore becoming widely used
in ecology and conservation settings to monitor animal populations, behaviour, and responses
to environmental change. In recent years the burgeoning field of ecoacoustics has also begun
providing insights into acoustic community dynamics at larger scales.
With technological improvements making sophisticated off-the-shelf bioacoustic sensors
increasingly affordable, it is an exciting and fast-moving time for acoustic wildlife monitoring.
Research in this field is now addressing fundamental questions in ecology and animal behaviour,
but is also becoming increasingly useful in applied conservation settings, such as mo.....
Resource URL
Publisher: https://www.wwf.org.uk/sites/default/files/2019-04/Acousticmonitoring-WWF-guidelines.pdfPublisher
WWF-UKWoking, UK
Series;Nr
WWF Conservation Technology Series;1(2)Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.AEssential Ocean Variables (EOV)
Ocean soundMaturity Level
TRL 9 Actual system "mission proven" through successful mission operations (ground or space)Best Practice Type
Manual (incl. handbook, guide, cookbook etc)Citation
Browning, E.; Gibb, R.; Glover-Kapfer, P. and Jones, K.E. (2017) Passive acoustic monitoring in ecology and conservation. Woking, UK, WWF-UK, 76pp. (WWF Conservation Technology Series 1(2)). DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25607/OBP-876Collections