Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait

This project aims to establish a base program for year-round acoustic monitoring of marine mammals in Bering Strait. Instrumentation will be added onto an existing high resolution physical and biological mooring program (National Science Foundation-Arctic Observing Network (AON) and Russian American...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kathleen M Stafford
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18739/A2X63B60K
id dataone:doi:10.18739/A2X63B60K
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:doi:10.18739/A2X63B60K 2023-11-08T14:14:16+01:00 Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait Kathleen M Stafford Bering Strait ENVELOPE(-170.0,-166.0,69.0,65.5) BEGINDATE: 2011-08-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2015-07-31T00:00:00Z 2017-03-09T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.18739/A2X63B60K unknown Arctic Data Center mooring hydrophone ambient noise Dataset 2017 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC https://doi.org/10.18739/A2X63B60K 2023-11-08T13:46:16Z This project aims to establish a base program for year-round acoustic monitoring of marine mammals in Bering Strait. Instrumentation will be added onto an existing high resolution physical and biological mooring program (National Science Foundation-Arctic Observing Network (AON) and Russian American Long-term Census of the Arctic), also supported by annual survey data. The combination of these data sets will provide urgently required, base-line information on how species presence varies seasonally with changes in sea ice, currents, ocean water temperatures and freshwater flow. Building on opportunistic proof-of-concept deployments in the strait in the last 2 years, the proposed effort will also provide critical, consistent data on interannual variability. The research project will test cutting edge scientific hypotheses such as: how do oceanographic conditions dictate the residency of different marine mammal species? Are temperate species invading the Arctic? What is the correlation between ice cover and marine mammal sound production? The Bering Strait is the only oceanic connection between the Pacific and the Arctic oceans. It is through this narrow (~85 km) passageway that the entire population of Bering-Chukchi-Beaufort bowhead whales passes twice yearly and that herds of beluga whales access Arctic waters. It is thought to be year-round habitat for ice seals and walrus. The Bering Strait is also the path by which Pacific sub-Arctic marine species are invading the Arctic. As the Northwest Passage becomes a viable Pacific-Atlantic shipping route, every ship along this route will pass through Bering Strait. It is, therefore, the region where climate change and changing anthropogenic utilization may have sizeable impacts on local marine fauna, and where changing fluxes of marine mammals to the Arctic can be well observed. Passive acoustic monitoring is the only method currently available to identify year-round, and in all weather conditions, the presence of marine mammals and other physical (ice movement) or anthropogenic (ships, oil and gas seismic exploration) sounds. Dataset Arctic Beluga Beluga* Bering Strait Chukchi Climate change Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait Northwest passage Sea ice walrus* Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic Bering Strait Pacific Northwest Passage ENVELOPE(-170.0,-166.0,69.0,65.5)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic mooring
hydrophone
ambient noise
spellingShingle mooring
hydrophone
ambient noise
Kathleen M Stafford
Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait
topic_facet mooring
hydrophone
ambient noise
description This project aims to establish a base program for year-round acoustic monitoring of marine mammals in Bering Strait. Instrumentation will be added onto an existing high resolution physical and biological mooring program (National Science Foundation-Arctic Observing Network (AON) and Russian American Long-term Census of the Arctic), also supported by annual survey data. The combination of these data sets will provide urgently required, base-line information on how species presence varies seasonally with changes in sea ice, currents, ocean water temperatures and freshwater flow. Building on opportunistic proof-of-concept deployments in the strait in the last 2 years, the proposed effort will also provide critical, consistent data on interannual variability. The research project will test cutting edge scientific hypotheses such as: how do oceanographic conditions dictate the residency of different marine mammal species? Are temperate species invading the Arctic? What is the correlation between ice cover and marine mammal sound production? The Bering Strait is the only oceanic connection between the Pacific and the Arctic oceans. It is through this narrow (~85 km) passageway that the entire population of Bering-Chukchi-Beaufort bowhead whales passes twice yearly and that herds of beluga whales access Arctic waters. It is thought to be year-round habitat for ice seals and walrus. The Bering Strait is also the path by which Pacific sub-Arctic marine species are invading the Arctic. As the Northwest Passage becomes a viable Pacific-Atlantic shipping route, every ship along this route will pass through Bering Strait. It is, therefore, the region where climate change and changing anthropogenic utilization may have sizeable impacts on local marine fauna, and where changing fluxes of marine mammals to the Arctic can be well observed. Passive acoustic monitoring is the only method currently available to identify year-round, and in all weather conditions, the presence of marine mammals and other physical (ice movement) or anthropogenic (ships, oil and gas seismic exploration) sounds.
format Dataset
author Kathleen M Stafford
author_facet Kathleen M Stafford
author_sort Kathleen M Stafford
title Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait
title_short Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait
title_full Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait
title_fullStr Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait
title_full_unstemmed Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait
title_sort integrating passive acoustic monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the bering strait
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2017
url https://doi.org/10.18739/A2X63B60K
op_coverage Bering Strait
ENVELOPE(-170.0,-166.0,69.0,65.5)
BEGINDATE: 2011-08-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2015-07-31T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-170.0,-166.0,69.0,65.5)
geographic Arctic
Bering Strait
Pacific
Northwest Passage
geographic_facet Arctic
Bering Strait
Pacific
Northwest Passage
genre Arctic
Beluga
Beluga*
Bering Strait
Chukchi
Climate change
Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait
Northwest passage
Sea ice
walrus*
genre_facet Arctic
Beluga
Beluga*
Bering Strait
Chukchi
Climate change
Integrating Passive Acoustic Monitoring in long-term oceanographic observations of the Bering Strait
Northwest passage
Sea ice
walrus*
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18739/A2X63B60K
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