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Several examples of passive acoustics contribution to biodiversity study. C. Gervaise, J. Bonnel , ENSIETA Y. Stephan, SHOM C. Ioana , GIPSA- Lab. Main ideas. Our experience of passive acoustics contribution for biodiversity study
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Several examples of passive acoustics contribution to biodiversity study C. Gervaise, J. Bonnel, ENSIETA Y. Stephan, SHOM C. Ioana, GIPSA-Lab
Main ideas • Our experience of passive acoustics contribution for biodiversity study • In North East Atlantic Ocean, the English Channel and in Saint Lawrence River • Some ideas to keep for Mediterranean Sea? • Some solution for EMSO-LIGURE (Equipex) ?
ENSIETA • ENSIETA (Ecole Nationale Superieur d’Ingénieurs des Etudes et Techniques de l’Armement), a french superior Engineering school depending on Defense ministry, 600 students, a third are officiers the others are civilians, • A staff of 150 peoples, 60 are involved in researches in 4 laboratories, • MSN : Mechanics of naval structures, • E3I2 : Signal processing and information merging, • SHI : Humanities for Engineers, • DTN : Development of New Technologies • Informatics & Electronics, • Oceanic & hydrographic observatory systems - Gliders • - Passive underwater acoustics monitoring Pour modifier le titre cliquez sur masque de diapositive - 19/02/2008 - 3
PAM Passive Acoustics Monitoring – research topic Does listening sounds produced by sources of opportunity carry new information about marine environment ? How to exploit theses sounds ?
Rail d’Ouessant 160 ships /day Our investigation sitesand partners Benthos in higly anthropogenic area SHOM IUEM PNMI AAMP 30 common bottlenose dolphins Saguenay – Saint Lawrence Marine Park, Beluga, Whale Watching GECCDREAL Agence de l’eau UQAR/ISMER MPO Saint Lawrence 4000 ships / semester Blue, fin, humpback whales 400 common dolphins, At-sea wind turbines, Marine current power.
Example 1 : can we use passive acoustics to study marine mammals close to a noisy navigation road? • Example 2: passive acoustics for benthos ethology – biological sentry point of view • Example 3 : Impact of human activity (Whale Watching) over the Beluga population in Saguenay–St. Lawrence Marine Park
Example 1 : can we use passive acoustics to study marine mammals close to a noisy navigation road? September to October 2009 Continuous recording (fe=32kHz, 16 bit)s
Example 1 : can we use passive acoustics to study marine mammals close to a noisy navigation road?
Example 1 : can we use passive acoustics to study marine mammals close to a noisy navigation road? Simple metric extraction : % of time with vocalizations over a reference time period
Example 1 : can we use passive acoustics to study marine mammals close to a noisy navigation road?
Example 1 : can we use passive acoustics to study marine mammals close to a noisy navigation road? Example 2: passive acoustics for benthos ethology – biological sentry point of view Example 3 : Impact of human activity (Whale Watching) over the Beluga population in Saguenay–St. Lawrence Marine Park
Example 2: passive acoustics for benthos ethology – biological sentry point of view Seashore ambiant noise contains benthos production Some benthic organisms can be biological records of environmental conditions Can we monitor benthos behaviour just by listening to it? Is it possible to understand the link between its behaviour and the environmental conditions ? - emphasis on the biological sentry concept - emphasis on the biological records exploitation
Example 2: passive acoustics for benthos ethology – biological sentry point of view Sounds are produced when the shell open or close => breathing
Example 2: passive acoustics for benthos ethology – biological sentry point of view 8 dB => Rmax ~ 80 cm Breathing can be heard up to one meter away Good potentiality for scallop ethology (collaboration with IUEM in 2011) Some impulsive sounds have been localized in very shallow using multipath methods, some sources where more than 200~m away.... What species is it? Do we have another biological sentry? - 14
Example 1 : can we use passive acoustics to study marine mammals close to a noisy navigation road? Example 2: passive acoustics for benthos ethology – biological sentry point of view Example 3 : Impact of human activity (Whale Watching) over the Beluga population in Saguenay–St. Lawrence Marine Park
Example 3 : Impact of Whale Watching over the Beluga population in Saguenay–St. Lawrence Marine Park Acoustical observation in 4 points, continous recording thanks to a cabled observatory May-June 2009
Example 3 : Impact of Whale Watching over the Beluga population in Saguenay–St. Lawrence Marine Park • St. Lawrence Marine Park is a good site to evaluate human contribution in ambiant noise as its temporal repartition shows 3 distinct phases : • - night : no ship traffic • day at fixed hours and location : ferry traffic • day at random hours and location : Whale Watching activity
Example 3 : Impact of Whale Watching over the Beluga population in Saguenay–St. Lawrence Marine Park Statistical analysis over the full database : 2 months of continuous recording, 4 hydrophones
Example 3 : Impact of Whale Watching over the Beluga population in Saguenay–St. Lawrence Marine Park Estimated hourly mean noise budget recorded noise ferry noise floor Réduction (%) of beluga call ranges recorded noise only ferry Statistical analysis over the full database : 2 months of continuous recording, 4 hydrophones
Passive acoustics observatory projects • 3 years of observation in rail d’Ouessant – AIS, 2 hydrophones (SHOM, ENSIETA) • Cabled observatory creation in really coastal Iroise sea, Projet INTERREG IV Manche, (Ifremer, ENSIETA, Plymouth Marine Laboratory & University), objective : 1 year of continuous observation in 2011 • Submission with INSU, INEE et Ifremer of the équipex ‘EMSO-LIGURE’, installation of 8 hydrophones : • Raw data measurment and transmission to scientific community using IP • Real time ENSIETA algorithm implementation • Open structure allowing implementation of any algorithms