Dear Marmam community,

My colleagues and I are pleased to share our new paper "Beyond counting
calls: estimating detection probability for Antarctic blue whales reveals
biological trends in seasonal calling", in the Frontiers in Marine Biology,
Sec. Marine Megafauna. Access the manuscript and download the full text at
http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2024.1406678/full.

Cite this paper:
De Castro, F.R., Harris, D.V., Buchan, S.J., Balcazar, N. and Miller, B.S.,
Beyond counting calls: estimating detection probability for Antarctic blue
whales reveals biological trends in seasonal calling. *Frontiers in Marine
Science*, *11*, p.1406678.

Abstract
We explore the utility of estimating the density of calls of baleen whales
for better understanding acoustic trends over time. We consider as a case
study stereotyped ‘song’ calls of Antarctic blue whales (Balaenoptera
musculus intermedia) on their Antarctic feeding grounds over the course of
a year-long, continuous recording from 2014. The recording was made in the
Southern Ocean from a deep-water autonomous hydrophone moored near the
seafloor in the Eastern Indian sector of the Antarctic. We estimated call
density seasonally via a Monte-Carlo simulation based on the passive sonar
equation, and compared our estimates to seasonal estimates of detection
rate, which are commonly reported in acoustic studies of Antarctic blue
whales. The resulting seasonal call densities at our Antarctic site were
strongly influenced by seasonally varying noise levels, which in turn
yielded seasonal differences in detection range. Incorporating the seasonal
estimates of detection area into our analysis revealed a pattern of call
densities in accord with historic (non-acoustic) knowledge of Antarctic
blue whale seasonal distribution and migrations, a pattern that differed
from seasonal detection rates. Furthermore, our methods for estimating call
densities produced results that were more statistically robust for
comparison across sites and time and more meaningful for interpretation of
biological trends compared to detection rates alone. These advantages came
at the cost of a more complex analysis that accounts for the large
variability in detection range of different sounds that occur in Antarctic
waters, and also accounts for the performance and biases introduced by
automated algorithms to detect sounds. Despite the additional analytical
complexities, broader usage of call densities, instead of detection rates,
has the potential to yield a standardized, statistically robust,
biologically informative, global investigation of acoustic trends in baleen
whale sounds recorded on single hydrophones, especially in the remote and
difficult to access Antarctic.

Warm regards,
Franciele de Castro
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to