期刊:Journal of the Acoustical Society of America [Acoustical Society of America] 日期:2024-03-01卷期号:155 (3_Supplement): A132-A132
标识
DOI:10.1121/10.0027058
摘要
As a part of the Canada’s Ocean Protection Plan, Fisheries and Oceans Canada has joined the efforts to better understand and monitor the effects of anthropogenic noise on marine environmental quality. Since 2017, underwater acoustic observatories were put in place across endangered whale habitats leading to the acquisition of big underwater acoustic dataset to process and analyze. In the Estuary and Gulf of St. Lawrence, underwater noise has been continuously monitored at 13 locations (6 to 10 simultaneously) between 2018 and 2023 at sampling rate up to 256 ksps in order to better understand the effect of shipping noise on marine environmental quality of the endangered St. Lawrence estuary beluga habitat. In this presentation, the data analysis pipeline from in situ sampling to processing is detailed, including recording schemes, data quality and control, soundscape cube, source separation, multi-scale statistics on noise levels and risk of impacts on habitat quality and visualization. These steps are used to identify, characterize and quantify daily to interannual spectral variability of underwater noise and their relationship with local environmental forcings such as shipping, wind, ice, tides, and currents at targeted locations. Ultimately, these results are used to provide support to (1) marine conservation and spatial planning initiatives from DFO and the Saguenay St. Lawrence Marine Parc; and (2) assess the predictability power of the outputs of soundscape modeling.