3D tracking of foraging belugas from their clicks: Experiment from a coastal hydrophone array

WOS International audience A simple passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) setup was used to localize and track beluga whales underwater in three dimensions (3D) in a fjord. In June 2009, beluga clicks were recorded from a cabled hydrophone array in a regularly frequented habitat in Eastern Canada. Belug...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied Acoustics
Main Authors: Roy, Nathalie, Simard, Yvan, Gervaise, Cedric
Other Authors: Institut Maurice-Lamontagne (IML), Institut Maurice-Lamontagne, Institut des Sciences de la Mer, Université du Québec à Rimouski (UQAR), Extraction et Exploitation de l'Information en Environnements Incertains (E3I2), École Nationale Supérieure de Techniques Avancées Bretagne (ENSTA Bretagne)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2010
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Online Access:https://hal-ensta-bretagne.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00522364
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apacoust.2010.05.008
Description
Summary:WOS International audience A simple passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) setup was used to localize and track beluga whales underwater in three dimensions (3D) in a fjord. In June 2009, beluga clicks were recorded from a cabled hydrophone array in a regularly frequented habitat in Eastern Canada. Beluga click energy was concentrated in the 30–50 kHz frequency band. The click trains detected on several hydrophones were localized from their time difference of arrivals. Cluster analysis linked localizations into tracks based on criteria of spatial and temporal proximity. At close ranges from the array, the localized click-train series allowed three-dimensional tracking of a beluga during its dive. Clicks within a train spanned a large range of durations, inter-click intervals, source levels and bandwidths. Buzzes sometimes terminated the trains. Repeated click packets were frequent. All click characteristics are consistent with oblique observations from the beam axis, and ordered variation of the source pattern during a train, likely resulting from a scan of angles from the beam axis, was observed before click trains indicated focusing of the echolocation clicks in one direction. The click-train series is interpreted as echolocation chasing for preys during a foraging dive. Results show that a simple PAM system can be configured to passively and effectively 3D track wild belugas and small odontocetes in their regularly frequented habitat.