Detections of whale vocalizations by simultaneously deployed bottom-moored and deep-water mobile autonomous hydrophones.
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Date
2020Author
Fregosi, Selene
Harris, Danielle
Matsumoto, Haruyoshi
Mellinger, David K
Barlow, Jay
Baumann-Pickering, Simone
Klinck, Holger
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Advances in mobile autonomous platforms for oceanographic sensing, including gliders and deep-water profiling floats, have provided new opportunities for passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) of cetaceans. However, there are few direct comparisons of these mobile autonomous systems to more traditional methods, such as stationary bottom-moored recorders. Cross-platform comparisons are necessary to enable interpretation of results across historical and contemporary surveys that use different recorder types, and to identify potential biases introduced by the platform. Understanding tradeoffs across recording platforms informs best practices for future cetacean monitoring efforts. This study directly compares the PAM capabilities of a glider
Seaglider) and a deep-water profiling float (QUEphone) to a stationary seafloor system (High-frequency
Acoustic Recording Package, or HARP) deployed simultaneously over a 2 week period in the Catalina Basin, California, United States. Two HARPs were dep.....
Journal
Frontiers in Marine ScienceVolume
7Issue
Article 721Page Range
18pp.Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.aEssential Ocean Variables (EOV)
Marine turtles, birds, mammals abundance and distributionOcean sound
Spatial Coverage
North Pacific OceanDOI Original
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2020.00721Citation
Fregosi, S., Harris, D.V., Matsumoto, H., Mellinger, D.K., Barlow, J., Baumann-Pickering, S. and Klinck, H. (2020) Detections of Whale Vocalizations by Simultaneously Deployed Bottom-Moored and Deep-Water Mobile Autonomous Hydrophones. Frontiers in Marine Science, 7:721. DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2020.00721Collections
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