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Assessing the cross platform performance of marine mammal indicators between two collocated acoustic recorders

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Title Assessing the cross platform performance of marine mammal indicators between two collocated acoustic recorders
Names Denes, Samuel L. (creator)
Miksis-Olds, Jennifer L. (creator)
Mellinger, David K. (creator)
Nystuen, Jeffrey A. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-05 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Elsevier and can be found at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/ecological-informatics/.
Abstract Equipment and deployment strategies for remote passive acoustic sensing of marine environments must balance
memory capacity, power requirements, sampling rate, duty-cycle, deployment duration, instrument size, and environmental
concerns. The impact of different parameters on the data and applicability of the data to the specific
questions being asked should be considered before deployment. Here we explore the effect of recording and detection
parameters on marine mammal acoustic data across two platforms. Daily classifications of marine mammal
vocalizations from two passive acoustic monitors with different subsampling parameters, an AURAL and a
Passive Aquatic Listener (PAL), collocated in the Bering Sea were compared. The AURAL subsampled on a preset
schedule, whereas the PAL sampled via an adaptive protocol. Detected signals of interest were manually classified
in each dataset independently. The daily classification rates of vocalizations were similar. Detections from
the higher duty-cycle but lower sample rate AURAL were limited to species and vocalizations with energy below
4 kHz precluding detection of echolocation signals. Temporal coverage from the PAL audio files was limited by
the adaptive sub-sampling protocol. A method for classifying ribbon (Histriophoca fasciata) and bearded seal
(Erignathus barbatus) vocalizations from the sparse spectral time histories of the PAL was developed. Although
application of the acoustic entropy as a rapid assessment of biodiversity was not reflective of the number of species
detected, acoustic entropy was robust to changes in sample rate and window length.
Genre Article
Topic Acoustic diversity
Identifier Denes, S. L., Miksis-Olds, J. L., Mellinger, D. K., & Nystuen, J. A. (2014). Assessing the cross platform performance of marine mammal indicators between two collocated acoustic recorders. Ecological Informatics, 21, 74-80. doi:10.1016/j.ecoinf.2013.10.005

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