Near real-time marine mammal monitoring from gliders: Practical challenges, system development, and management implications.
View/ Open
Average rating
votes
Date
2020Author
Kowarski, Katie A.
Gaudet, Briand J.
Cole, Arthur J.
Maxner, Emily E.
Turner, Stephen P.
Martin, S. Bruce
Johnson, Hansen D.
Moloney, John E.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In 2017, an endangered North Atlantic right whale mortality event in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada, triggered the
implementation of dynamic mitigation measures that required real-time information on whale distribution.
Underwater glider-based acoustic monitoring offers a possible solution for collecting near real-time information but
has many practical challenges including self-noise, energy restrictions, and computing capacity, as well as limited
glider-to-shore data transfer bandwidth. This paper describes the development of a near real-time baleen whale
acoustic monitoring glider system and its evaluation in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in 2018. Development focused on
identifying and prioritizing important acoustic events and on sending contextual information to shore for human validation. The system performance was evaluated post-retrieval, then the trial was simulated using optimized parameters. Trial simulation evaluation revealed that the validated detections of right, fin,.....
Journal
Journal of the Acoustical Society of AmericaVolume
148Page Range
pp.1215 - 1230Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.aEssential Ocean Variables (EOV)
Marine turtles, birds, mammals abundance and distributionOcean sound
Spatial Coverage
North Atlantic OceanNorth Pacific Ocean
DOI Original
https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0001811Citation
Kowarski, Katie A., et al (2020) Near real-time marine mammal monitoring from gliders: practical challenges, system development, and management implications. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 148, pp.1215-1230. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0001811Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: