id ftdtic:ADA475190
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdtic:ADA475190 2023-05-15T15:37:07+02:00 Beaked Whale Anatomy, Field Studies and Habitat Modeling Hildebrand, John A. SCRIPPS INSTITUTION OF OCEANOGRAPHY LA JOLLA CA MARINE PHYSICAL LAB 2007-11 text/html http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA475190 http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA475190 en eng http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA475190 Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. DTIC Biology Anatomy and Physiology Computer Programming and Software Acoustics *SOUND TRANSMISSION *BEHAVIOR *HABITATS *NOISE(SOUND) *HEAD(ANATOMY) *ANATOMICAL MODELS *WHALES COMPUTERIZED SIMULATION TISSUES(BIOLOGY) ACOUSTIC VELOCITY COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY ORGANS(ANATOMY) CALIFORNIA GULF HEARING SOUND PRESSURE UNDERWATER ACOUSTICS RECEPTION SOUND WAVES FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS FIELD TESTS *BEAKED WHALES *BALEEN WHALES WHALE SIGHTINGS WHALE DISTRIBUTION VOCALIZATIONS FIELD STUDIES HABITAT MODELING CETACEANS ODONTOCETE MARINE HABITATS BEAKED WHALE ANATOMY SOUND RECEPTION MODELING SOUND GENERATION MODELING TURSIOPS TRUNCATUS BIOLOGICAL TISSUE MODELING ZIPHIUS CAVIROSTRIS GULAR PATHWAY VIBRO-ACOUSTIC TOOLBOX Text 2007 ftdtic 2016-02-22T13:05:43Z This report describes the results of two tasks related to the study of beaked whales. The first study was a field study of beaked whales in the Gulf of California from December 2004 to December 2006. The goal of the study was to determine the range of sound produced by beaked whales and to investigate beaked whale behavior and habitat. A minimum of 17 cetacean species (12 toothed and 5 baleen whales) were observed in 147 sightings. The proportion of sighted toothed whales and baleen whales was 67% and 32%, respectively. The second task was the modeling of beaked whale anatomy, the conversion of anatomy to physical properties, and the use of these in a finite element model of the effects of intense sound. To validate their methodological procedures, the authors compared CT data from live, frozen, and thawed specimens of Tursiops truncatus. The results showed that CT scans produce similar results in tissues and organs for the following quantities: geometry, absolute density, and sound velocity across live and thawed specimens. Simulated sound sources placed inside and outside of a modeled adult male beaked whale (Ziphius cavirostris) revealed pathways for acoustic propagation into and out of the head. This result supports the notion that dual sonar sources interfere constructively to form a sonar beam in front of the animal. The simulations also indicated a new "gular pathway" for sound reception. Propagated sound pressure waves enter the head from below and between the lower jaws, continuing toward the bony ear complexes through the internal mandibular fat bodies. The report titles produced through these studies are as follows: "Vocalizations and Marine Habitat of Baleen and Beaked Whales," by Gustavo Cardenas, Jorge Urban, and Alejandro Gomez-Gallardo; and "Simulated Sound Transmission and Reception in Cuvier's Beaked Whale (Ziphius Cavirostris) Using the Vibro-Acoustic Toolbox," by Ted W. Cranford, Petr Krysl, and John A. Hildebrand. Prepared in cooperation with the Universidad Autonoma de Baja California Sur, La Paz, Mexico; Quantitative Morphology Consulting, Inc., San Diego, CA; and San Diego State University, San Diego, CA. The original document contains color images. Text baleen whales toothed whales Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database Baja Gomez ENVELOPE(-58.795,-58.795,-62.196,-62.196) Gustavo ENVELOPE(-62.917,-62.917,-64.833,-64.833)
institution Open Polar
collection Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
op_collection_id ftdtic
language English
topic Biology
Anatomy and Physiology
Computer Programming and Software
Acoustics
*SOUND TRANSMISSION
*BEHAVIOR
*HABITATS
*NOISE(SOUND)
*HEAD(ANATOMY)
*ANATOMICAL MODELS
*WHALES
COMPUTERIZED SIMULATION
TISSUES(BIOLOGY)
ACOUSTIC VELOCITY
COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY
ORGANS(ANATOMY)
CALIFORNIA GULF
HEARING
SOUND PRESSURE
UNDERWATER ACOUSTICS
RECEPTION
SOUND WAVES
FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS
FIELD TESTS
*BEAKED WHALES
*BALEEN WHALES
WHALE SIGHTINGS
WHALE DISTRIBUTION
VOCALIZATIONS
FIELD STUDIES
HABITAT MODELING
CETACEANS
ODONTOCETE
MARINE HABITATS
BEAKED WHALE ANATOMY
SOUND RECEPTION MODELING
SOUND GENERATION MODELING
TURSIOPS TRUNCATUS
BIOLOGICAL TISSUE MODELING
ZIPHIUS CAVIROSTRIS
GULAR PATHWAY
VIBRO-ACOUSTIC TOOLBOX
spellingShingle Biology
Anatomy and Physiology
Computer Programming and Software
Acoustics
*SOUND TRANSMISSION
*BEHAVIOR
*HABITATS
*NOISE(SOUND)
*HEAD(ANATOMY)
*ANATOMICAL MODELS
*WHALES
COMPUTERIZED SIMULATION
TISSUES(BIOLOGY)
ACOUSTIC VELOCITY
COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY
ORGANS(ANATOMY)
CALIFORNIA GULF
HEARING
SOUND PRESSURE
UNDERWATER ACOUSTICS
RECEPTION
SOUND WAVES
FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS
FIELD TESTS
*BEAKED WHALES
*BALEEN WHALES
WHALE SIGHTINGS
WHALE DISTRIBUTION
VOCALIZATIONS
FIELD STUDIES
HABITAT MODELING
CETACEANS
ODONTOCETE
MARINE HABITATS
BEAKED WHALE ANATOMY
SOUND RECEPTION MODELING
SOUND GENERATION MODELING
TURSIOPS TRUNCATUS
BIOLOGICAL TISSUE MODELING
ZIPHIUS CAVIROSTRIS
GULAR PATHWAY
VIBRO-ACOUSTIC TOOLBOX
Hildebrand, John A.
Beaked Whale Anatomy, Field Studies and Habitat Modeling
topic_facet Biology
Anatomy and Physiology
Computer Programming and Software
Acoustics
*SOUND TRANSMISSION
*BEHAVIOR
*HABITATS
*NOISE(SOUND)
*HEAD(ANATOMY)
*ANATOMICAL MODELS
*WHALES
COMPUTERIZED SIMULATION
TISSUES(BIOLOGY)
ACOUSTIC VELOCITY
COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY
ORGANS(ANATOMY)
CALIFORNIA GULF
HEARING
SOUND PRESSURE
UNDERWATER ACOUSTICS
RECEPTION
SOUND WAVES
FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS
FIELD TESTS
*BEAKED WHALES
*BALEEN WHALES
WHALE SIGHTINGS
WHALE DISTRIBUTION
VOCALIZATIONS
FIELD STUDIES
HABITAT MODELING
CETACEANS
ODONTOCETE
MARINE HABITATS
BEAKED WHALE ANATOMY
SOUND RECEPTION MODELING
SOUND GENERATION MODELING
TURSIOPS TRUNCATUS
BIOLOGICAL TISSUE MODELING
ZIPHIUS CAVIROSTRIS
GULAR PATHWAY
VIBRO-ACOUSTIC TOOLBOX
description This report describes the results of two tasks related to the study of beaked whales. The first study was a field study of beaked whales in the Gulf of California from December 2004 to December 2006. The goal of the study was to determine the range of sound produced by beaked whales and to investigate beaked whale behavior and habitat. A minimum of 17 cetacean species (12 toothed and 5 baleen whales) were observed in 147 sightings. The proportion of sighted toothed whales and baleen whales was 67% and 32%, respectively. The second task was the modeling of beaked whale anatomy, the conversion of anatomy to physical properties, and the use of these in a finite element model of the effects of intense sound. To validate their methodological procedures, the authors compared CT data from live, frozen, and thawed specimens of Tursiops truncatus. The results showed that CT scans produce similar results in tissues and organs for the following quantities: geometry, absolute density, and sound velocity across live and thawed specimens. Simulated sound sources placed inside and outside of a modeled adult male beaked whale (Ziphius cavirostris) revealed pathways for acoustic propagation into and out of the head. This result supports the notion that dual sonar sources interfere constructively to form a sonar beam in front of the animal. The simulations also indicated a new "gular pathway" for sound reception. Propagated sound pressure waves enter the head from below and between the lower jaws, continuing toward the bony ear complexes through the internal mandibular fat bodies. The report titles produced through these studies are as follows: "Vocalizations and Marine Habitat of Baleen and Beaked Whales," by Gustavo Cardenas, Jorge Urban, and Alejandro Gomez-Gallardo; and "Simulated Sound Transmission and Reception in Cuvier's Beaked Whale (Ziphius Cavirostris) Using the Vibro-Acoustic Toolbox," by Ted W. Cranford, Petr Krysl, and John A. Hildebrand. Prepared in cooperation with the Universidad Autonoma de Baja California Sur, La Paz, Mexico; Quantitative Morphology Consulting, Inc., San Diego, CA; and San Diego State University, San Diego, CA. The original document contains color images.
author2 SCRIPPS INSTITUTION OF OCEANOGRAPHY LA JOLLA CA MARINE PHYSICAL LAB
format Text
author Hildebrand, John A.
author_facet Hildebrand, John A.
author_sort Hildebrand, John A.
title Beaked Whale Anatomy, Field Studies and Habitat Modeling
title_short Beaked Whale Anatomy, Field Studies and Habitat Modeling
title_full Beaked Whale Anatomy, Field Studies and Habitat Modeling
title_fullStr Beaked Whale Anatomy, Field Studies and Habitat Modeling
title_full_unstemmed Beaked Whale Anatomy, Field Studies and Habitat Modeling
title_sort beaked whale anatomy, field studies and habitat modeling
publishDate 2007
url http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA475190
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA475190
long_lat ENVELOPE(-58.795,-58.795,-62.196,-62.196)
ENVELOPE(-62.917,-62.917,-64.833,-64.833)
geographic Baja
Gomez
Gustavo
geographic_facet Baja
Gomez
Gustavo
genre baleen whales
toothed whales
genre_facet baleen whales
toothed whales
op_source DTIC
op_relation http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA475190
op_rights Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
_version_ 1766367573834727424