Major soundscape differences in the west coast of Scotland are reflected in acoustic indices

  • B. L. Dell
  • , P. R. White
  • , J. M. Bull
  • , D. Risch

Publikation

Abstract

Passive Acoustic Monitoring (PAM) is increasingly used to monitor marine soundscapes, which are often characterised using anthrophony (human-related sounds), biophony (biotic events) and geophony (abiotic events) categories. The soundscape is especially complex in shallow marine habitats, and has been shown to vary on small temporal-spatial scales 1 . Processing PAM data sets with high sample rates remains a challenge in signal extraction, efficiency of data processing and balancing the requirement of long-term data visualisation or statistical summaries with often short duration soundscape drivers such as delphinid clicks.
The study of all components of a soundscape, alongside individual sources or species, is vital in the
context of rapidly changing habitats and increasing evidence of the impact of anthrophony on marine ecosystems 2,3,4 . Soundscape Ecology considers an entire soundscape, allowing questions around the inter-relation between soundscape components and their spatial-temporal patterns to be considered5. Understanding and efficiently quantifying soundscapes which may differ over small regions is vital if marine management and protection is to utilise PAM data effectively.
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OriginalspracheEnglish
TitelInternational Conference on Underwater Acoustics, ICUA 2024
Herausgeber (Verlag)Institute of Acoustics
Band46
Auflage1
ISBN (elektronisch)9781906913489
DOIs
PublikationsstatusPublished - 2024
Veranstaltung2024 International Conference on Underwater Acoustics, ICUA 2024 - Bath
Dauer: 12 Nov. 202414 Nov. 2024

Publikationsreihe

NameProceedings of the Institute of Acoustics
Band46
ISSN (Print)1478-6095

Conference

Conference2024 International Conference on Underwater Acoustics, ICUA 2024
Land/GebietUnited Kingdom
OrtBath
Zeitraum12/11/2414/11/24

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