Listening forward: approaching marine biodiversity assessments using acoustic methods.
View/ Open
Average rating
votes
Date
2020Author
Mooney, T. Aran
Di Iorio, Lucia
Lammers, Marc
Lin, Tzu-Hao
Nedelec, Sophie L.
Parsons, Miles
Radford, Craig
Urban, Ed
Stanley, Jenni
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Ecosystems and the communities they support are changing at
alarmingly rapid rates. Tracking species diversity is vital to
managing these stressed habitats. Yet, quantifying and
monitoring biodiversity is often challenging, especially in ocean
habitats. Given that many animals make sounds, these cues
travel efficiently under water, and emerging technologies are
increasingly cost-effective, passive acoustics (a long-standing
ocean observation method) is now a potential means of
quantifying and monitoring marine biodiversity. Properly
applying acoustics for biodiversity assessments is vital. Our goal
here is to provide a timely consideration of emerging methods
using passive acoustics to measure marine biodiversity. We
provide a summary of the brief history of using passive
acoustics to assess marine biodiversity and community
structure, a critical assessment of the challenges faced, and
outline recommended practices and considerations for acoustic
biodiversity measuremen.....
Journal
Royal Society Ope ScienceVolume
7Issue
Article 201287Page Range
27pp.Document Language
enEssential Ocean Variables (EOV)
N/ADOI Original
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201287Citation
Mooney, T.A., Di Iorio, L., Lammers, M., Lin, T-H., Nedelec, S.L., Parsons, M., Radford, C., Urban, E. and Stanley, J. (2020) Listening forward: approaching marine biodiversity assessments using acoustic methods. Royal Society Open Science, 7:201287, 27pp. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201287Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: