Fish choruses off Port Hedland, Western Australia

Australian waters are home to a number of vocal species of fish. Cataloguing the acoustic characteristics and temporal patterns of choruses and their locations can provide significant information for long-term monitoring of vocal fishes and their ecosystems. In coastal waters off Port Hedland, Weste...

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Published in:Bioacoustics
Main Authors: Parsons, Miles, Salgado Kent, Chandra, Recalde-Salas, Angela, McCauley, Robert
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Taylor & Francis 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/52277
https://doi.org/10.1080/09524622.2016.1227940
id ftcurtin:oai:espace.curtin.edu.au:20.500.11937/52277
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spelling ftcurtin:oai:espace.curtin.edu.au:20.500.11937/52277 2023-06-11T04:12:30+02:00 Fish choruses off Port Hedland, Western Australia Parsons, Miles Salgado Kent, Chandra Recalde-Salas, Angela McCauley, Robert 2017 restricted https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/52277 https://doi.org/10.1080/09524622.2016.1227940 unknown Taylor & Francis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/52277 doi:10.1080/09524622.2016.1227940 Journal Article 2017 ftcurtin https://doi.org/20.500.11937/5227710.1080/09524622.2016.1227940 2023-05-30T19:47:13Z Australian waters are home to a number of vocal species of fish. Cataloguing the acoustic characteristics and temporal patterns of choruses and their locations can provide significant information for long-term monitoring of vocal fishes and their ecosystems. In coastal waters off Port Hedland, Western Australia, two seafloor positioned sea-noise loggers, located 21.5 km apart in 8 and 18 m of water, recorded for an 18-month period. Numerous sound sources were detected, including mooring and vessel noise, humpback whale song and a large variety of fish signal types. Seven fish choruses were identified, occurring predominantly between late spring and early autumn (wet season) and displaying energy from 50 Hz to >4 kHz. Many of these choruses exhibited acoustic characteristics similar to choruses previously reported elsewhere, for some of which the source species or families have been identified. Distinct diurnal patterns in the choruses were observed, associated with sunrise or sunset and in some cases, both. While choruses were predominantly recorded on different days, there were at total of 80 days when more than one chorus was present at the same site. Some pairs of choruses present on the same day exhibited various combinations of temporal and frequency partitioning, while others displayed predominant overlap in both spaces. Article in Journal/Newspaper Humpback Whale Curtin University: espace Bioacoustics 26 2 135 152
institution Open Polar
collection Curtin University: espace
op_collection_id ftcurtin
language unknown
description Australian waters are home to a number of vocal species of fish. Cataloguing the acoustic characteristics and temporal patterns of choruses and their locations can provide significant information for long-term monitoring of vocal fishes and their ecosystems. In coastal waters off Port Hedland, Western Australia, two seafloor positioned sea-noise loggers, located 21.5 km apart in 8 and 18 m of water, recorded for an 18-month period. Numerous sound sources were detected, including mooring and vessel noise, humpback whale song and a large variety of fish signal types. Seven fish choruses were identified, occurring predominantly between late spring and early autumn (wet season) and displaying energy from 50 Hz to >4 kHz. Many of these choruses exhibited acoustic characteristics similar to choruses previously reported elsewhere, for some of which the source species or families have been identified. Distinct diurnal patterns in the choruses were observed, associated with sunrise or sunset and in some cases, both. While choruses were predominantly recorded on different days, there were at total of 80 days when more than one chorus was present at the same site. Some pairs of choruses present on the same day exhibited various combinations of temporal and frequency partitioning, while others displayed predominant overlap in both spaces.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Parsons, Miles
Salgado Kent, Chandra
Recalde-Salas, Angela
McCauley, Robert
spellingShingle Parsons, Miles
Salgado Kent, Chandra
Recalde-Salas, Angela
McCauley, Robert
Fish choruses off Port Hedland, Western Australia
author_facet Parsons, Miles
Salgado Kent, Chandra
Recalde-Salas, Angela
McCauley, Robert
author_sort Parsons, Miles
title Fish choruses off Port Hedland, Western Australia
title_short Fish choruses off Port Hedland, Western Australia
title_full Fish choruses off Port Hedland, Western Australia
title_fullStr Fish choruses off Port Hedland, Western Australia
title_full_unstemmed Fish choruses off Port Hedland, Western Australia
title_sort fish choruses off port hedland, western australia
publisher Taylor & Francis
publishDate 2017
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/52277
https://doi.org/10.1080/09524622.2016.1227940
genre Humpback Whale
genre_facet Humpback Whale
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/52277
doi:10.1080/09524622.2016.1227940
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11937/5227710.1080/09524622.2016.1227940
container_title Bioacoustics
container_volume 26
container_issue 2
container_start_page 135
op_container_end_page 152
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