A digital acoustic recording tag for measuring the response of wild marine mammals to sound

Definitive studies on the response of marine mammals to anthropogenic sound are hampered by the short surface time and deep-diving lifestyle of many species. A novel archival tag, called the DTAG, has been developed to monitor the behavior of marine mammals, and their response to sound, continuously throughout the dive cycle. The tag contains a large array of solid-state memory and records continuously from a built-in hydrophone and suite of sensors. The sensors sample the orientation of the animal in three dimensions with sufficient speed and resolution to capture individual fluke strokes. Audio and sensor recording is synchronous so the relative timing of sounds and motion can be determined precisely. The DTAG has been attached to more than 30 northern right whales (Eubalaena glacialis) and 20 sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) with recording duration of up to 12 h per deployment. Several deployments have included sound playbacks to the tagged whale and a transient response to at least one playback is evident in the tag data.

[1]  Peter L. Tyack,et al.  Buoyant balaenids: the ups and downs of buoyancy in right whales , 2001, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.

[2]  D. Costa,et al.  A programmable acoustic recording tag and first results from free-ranging northern elephant seals , 1998 .

[3]  Frank E. Fish,et al.  Phase Relationships Between Body Components of Odontocete Cetaceans in Relation to Stability and Propulsive Mechanisms , 2000 .

[4]  W. F. Hilton Introduction to Space Dynamics. William Tyrrell Thomson. John Wiley, London. 1961. 317 pp. Diagrams. 87s. , 1962 .

[5]  Randall S. Wells,et al.  An onboard acoustic data logger to record biosonar of free‐ranging bottlenose dolphins , 1998 .

[6]  William A. Watkins,et al.  Sperm whales (Physeter catodon) react to pingers , 1975 .

[7]  D. Ann Pabst,et al.  Morphology of the subdermal connective tissue sheath of dolphins: a new fibre‐wound, thin‐walled, pressurized cylinder model for swimming vertebrates , 1996 .

[8]  A. Frantzis,et al.  Does acoustic testing strand whales? , 1998, Nature.

[9]  W. Richardson Marine Mammals and Noise , 1995 .

[10]  S. B. Blackwell,et al.  Onboard acoustic recording from diving northern elephant seals. , 1996, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[11]  Peter L. Tyack,et al.  Whale songs lengthen in response to sonar , 2000, Nature.

[12]  Hal Whitehead,et al.  Diving behaviour of the sperm whale, Physeter macrocephalus, off the Galapagos Islands , 1989 .

[13]  Lennart Ljung,et al.  System Identification: Theory for the User , 1987 .

[14]  R. Urick Ambient Noise in the Sea , 1986 .

[15]  Walter M. X. Zimmer,et al.  Combining data from a multisensor tag and passive sonar to determine the diving behavior of a sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) , 2003 .