D-PorCCA, a new tool to study the acoustic life of harbour porpoises

Despite decades of research, the social life of harbour porpoises in their natural environment is almost entirely unknown, although recent data suggest they are very social. Harbour porpoises produce only highly stereotyped clicks (narrow-band high frequency -NBHF-) that are ideal for monitoring pur...

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Main Author: Cosentino, Melania
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.48730/3jfk-8345
https://stax.strath.ac.uk/concern/theses/bz60cw73p
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spelling ftunsthclydestax:oai:strathclyde:bz60cw73p 2023-05-15T16:33:30+02:00 D-PorCCA, a new tool to study the acoustic life of harbour porpoises Cosentino, Melania https://doi.org/10.48730/3jfk-8345 https://stax.strath.ac.uk/concern/theses/bz60cw73p unknown https://stax.strath.ac.uk/downloads/6d56zx06f T16093 https://stax.strath.ac.uk/thesis_copyright_statement http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06 ftunsthclydestax https://doi.org/10.48730/3jfk-8345 2021-12-20T08:56:46Z Despite decades of research, the social life of harbour porpoises in their natural environment is almost entirely unknown, although recent data suggest they are very social. Harbour porpoises produce only highly stereotyped clicks (narrow-band high frequency -NBHF-) that are ideal for monitoring purposes. These are emitted in click trains: a series of clicks with regular or gradually changing inter-click intervals. The patterns in repetition rates are indicative of the behaviour of the clicking porpoise, which can be broadly divided into three main categories: orientation or travelling, feeding, and socialising. This means passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) methods can be used to study the behaviour of harbour porpoises. In this project, a series of algorithms to study the behaviour of NBHF species from acoustic recordings were developed and put together in a standalone application, D-PorCCA. The algorithms were developed and tested using data from Scotland and Denmark collected using static and mobile PAM devices. D-PorCCA and all algorithms were developed in MATLAB. The application includes a user-friendly interface, a simple transient sound detector, a new porpoise click classifier (PorCC), and algorithms to identify behaviours. Additionally, the acoustic behaviour of harbour porpoises was studied while interacting with a solitary short-beaked common dolphin who inhabits the Firth of Clyde (Scotland). The performance the algorithms in D-PorCCA was tested against manual labelling, varying from 69.2% to 98.5% of accuracy. These steps are automated and provide researchers with pre-selected data and summary data such as ’positive porpoise minute’ and day/night activities. D-PorCCA has many functionalities and the user can easily inspect and verify the data. The main results of this project are four. First, evidence was found of interspecies communication between a solitary short-beaked common dolphin and harbour porpoises in the Firth of Clyde (Scotland). Second, a series of patterns consistent with social calls reported in the literature as well as new ones were found for the first time using PAM in the wild. The most striking patterns were those known as ’phrases’, which are a series of similar calls produced in a short period of time. Third, the feeding and socialising patterns overlap, limiting our ability to distinguish between them. Lastly, the algorithms can be used in other species that produce NBHF clicks. These results suggest D-PorCCA can potentially be used for behavioural studies of wild harbour porpoises as well as other NBHF species, and to fill knowledge gaps in our understanding of the behaviour of these elusive species. Moreover, it has potential for application in large monitoring project, such as the Static Acoustic Monitoring of the Baltic Sea Harbour Porpoise, known as the SAMBAH Project. Other/Unknown Material Harbour porpoise University of Strathclyde Glasgow: STAX
institution Open Polar
collection University of Strathclyde Glasgow: STAX
op_collection_id ftunsthclydestax
language unknown
description Despite decades of research, the social life of harbour porpoises in their natural environment is almost entirely unknown, although recent data suggest they are very social. Harbour porpoises produce only highly stereotyped clicks (narrow-band high frequency -NBHF-) that are ideal for monitoring purposes. These are emitted in click trains: a series of clicks with regular or gradually changing inter-click intervals. The patterns in repetition rates are indicative of the behaviour of the clicking porpoise, which can be broadly divided into three main categories: orientation or travelling, feeding, and socialising. This means passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) methods can be used to study the behaviour of harbour porpoises. In this project, a series of algorithms to study the behaviour of NBHF species from acoustic recordings were developed and put together in a standalone application, D-PorCCA. The algorithms were developed and tested using data from Scotland and Denmark collected using static and mobile PAM devices. D-PorCCA and all algorithms were developed in MATLAB. The application includes a user-friendly interface, a simple transient sound detector, a new porpoise click classifier (PorCC), and algorithms to identify behaviours. Additionally, the acoustic behaviour of harbour porpoises was studied while interacting with a solitary short-beaked common dolphin who inhabits the Firth of Clyde (Scotland). The performance the algorithms in D-PorCCA was tested against manual labelling, varying from 69.2% to 98.5% of accuracy. These steps are automated and provide researchers with pre-selected data and summary data such as ’positive porpoise minute’ and day/night activities. D-PorCCA has many functionalities and the user can easily inspect and verify the data. The main results of this project are four. First, evidence was found of interspecies communication between a solitary short-beaked common dolphin and harbour porpoises in the Firth of Clyde (Scotland). Second, a series of patterns consistent with social calls reported in the literature as well as new ones were found for the first time using PAM in the wild. The most striking patterns were those known as ’phrases’, which are a series of similar calls produced in a short period of time. Third, the feeding and socialising patterns overlap, limiting our ability to distinguish between them. Lastly, the algorithms can be used in other species that produce NBHF clicks. These results suggest D-PorCCA can potentially be used for behavioural studies of wild harbour porpoises as well as other NBHF species, and to fill knowledge gaps in our understanding of the behaviour of these elusive species. Moreover, it has potential for application in large monitoring project, such as the Static Acoustic Monitoring of the Baltic Sea Harbour Porpoise, known as the SAMBAH Project.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Cosentino, Melania
spellingShingle Cosentino, Melania
D-PorCCA, a new tool to study the acoustic life of harbour porpoises
author_facet Cosentino, Melania
author_sort Cosentino, Melania
title D-PorCCA, a new tool to study the acoustic life of harbour porpoises
title_short D-PorCCA, a new tool to study the acoustic life of harbour porpoises
title_full D-PorCCA, a new tool to study the acoustic life of harbour porpoises
title_fullStr D-PorCCA, a new tool to study the acoustic life of harbour porpoises
title_full_unstemmed D-PorCCA, a new tool to study the acoustic life of harbour porpoises
title_sort d-porcca, a new tool to study the acoustic life of harbour porpoises
url https://doi.org/10.48730/3jfk-8345
https://stax.strath.ac.uk/concern/theses/bz60cw73p
genre Harbour porpoise
genre_facet Harbour porpoise
op_relation https://stax.strath.ac.uk/downloads/6d56zx06f
T16093
op_rights https://stax.strath.ac.uk/thesis_copyright_statement
op_doi https://doi.org/10.48730/3jfk-8345
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