Short Term and Long Term Bioacoustic Monitoring of the Marine Environment. Results from NEMO ONDE Experiment and Way Ahead.

The INFN NEMO-OνDE (Ocean Noise Detection Experiment) station, deployed on the seafloor at 2000 m depth 25 km offshore Catania (Sicily, Italy) in year 2005, was designed to continuously transmit broad-band acoustic data through optical cables to the INFN lab located in the port of Catania. It was op...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: PAVAN, GIANNI, La Manna G., Zardin F., Internullo E., Kloeti S., Cosentino G., Speziale F., Riccobene G., the NEMO Collaboration
Other Authors: Frommolt K.H., Rolf Bardeli R., Clausen M., Pavan, Gianni, La Manna, G., Zardin, F., Internullo, E., Kloeti, S., Cosentino, G., Speziale, F., Riccobene, G., the NEMO, Collaboration
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Federal Agency for Nature Conservation, Bonn, Germany 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11571/147275
Description
Summary:The INFN NEMO-OνDE (Ocean Noise Detection Experiment) station, deployed on the seafloor at 2000 m depth 25 km offshore Catania (Sicily, Italy) in year 2005, was designed to continuously transmit broad-band acoustic data through optical cables to the INFN lab located in the port of Catania. It was operational until November 2006, when it was replaced by other experimental equipment. During the operational period, 5 minutes of recording (4 hydrophones, 45 kHz bandwidth, 96 kHz sampling rate at 24 bits resolution) were taken every hour. The experiment provided long-term data on the underwater noise and an unique opportunity to study the acoustic emissions of marine mammals living in, or transiting through the area east of Sicily. The recordings revealed a more frequent and consistent presence of sperm whales than previously believed.