Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 21 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Applying Two Active Acoustic Technologies to Document Presence of Large Marine Animal Targets at a Marine Renewable Energy Site

Garrett Staines    
Gayle Barbin Zydlewski    
Haley A. Viehman and Rachel Kocik    

Resumen

Coastal regions are highly used by humans. The growing marine renewable energy (MRE) industry will add to existing anthropogenic pressures in these regions. Regulatory bodies require animal risk assessment before new industrial activities can progress, and MRE is no exception. Preliminary data of marine mammal use of an MRE device deployment location could be informative to permitting. A combination of downlooking hydroacoustics using an echosounder and acoustic camera (imaging sonar) was used to provide a number of large targets (proxy for large fish and marine mammals) in an area of interest for MRE tidal turbine deployment in Western Passage, Maine, USA. Data were collected in May, June, August, and September of 2010 and 2011. Of the nine large targets confirmed to be animals, eight were porpoises and one was a shark. Few large targets were observed in May and June, with the majority (90%) being present in August and September of both years. The most large targets were observed when tidal current speed was less than 1 m·s-1. These data provide a preliminary assessment of large targets in a single location over sixteen 24-h surveys. The aforementioned methodology could be used for future pre- and post-installation assessments at MRE device deployment locations. Their use in concert with visual and passive acoustic monitoring can provide water depth usage by marine mammals, which is a metric that is difficult to assess with passive acoustic and visual techniques.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Guangjie Peng, Yuan Lou, Dehui Yu, Shiming Hong, Guangchao Ji, Lie Ma and Hao Chang    
Marine sediment pumps are extensively applied in marine engineering fields with complex media and harsh flow conditions. Therefore, this study conducts a multi-factor optimization design for a marine sediment pump. The response surface optimization metho... ver más

 
Kwang-Leol Jeong, Sunho Park and Se-Min Jeong    
When performing simulations using computational fluid dynamics, the grid systems in the viscous boundary layer regions are important because the velocity and pressure change very rapidly in these regions. Especially for the turbulent flows, thin grids sh... ver más

 
Chao Li, Nan Pang, Kai Xu, Qingling Geng, Xiangyu Wang, Feihong Yun and Lei Gao    
In order to clean up marine fouling attached to marine steel pile, this paper proposed an innovative configuration scheme of the marine steel pile cleaning equipment by the scraping method and its telescopic mechanism by applying a multi-cylinder synchro... ver más

 
Yongjin Sun, Wei Zheng, Zhaowei Li, Zhiquan Zhou and Xiaocong Zhou    
The use of satellite altimetry to recover marine gravity anomalies allows for the rapid acquisition of seafloor topography on a wide range of regional scales. Currently, the commonly used approaches for inverting seafloor topography have been focused on ... ver más

 
Ewa Dabrowska    
The paper deals with an important issue related to the identification, modelling, and prediction of environmental pollution in aquatic ecosystems of the Baltic Sea caused by anthropopressure. Water ecosystems are in danger nowadays because of the negativ... ver más
Revista: Water