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The product of 15 years of citizen scientists listening for whales, Orcasound is now a cooperative hydrophone network and an innovative open-source hardware/software project.
Physical exhibits include: Seattle Aquarium; Port Townsend Marine Science Center; Langley Whale Center; Lime Kiln Visitor's Center (via FOLKS) |
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You can join Orcasound, too! Just e-sign the MOA and heed the Creative Commons BY-NC-SA license.
Basic ingredients (and costs):
60% of cost is hydrophones! (>75-95% for research nodes) |
Free open-source software to stream audio that "just works" on all devices/browsers
Amazon S3 for archiving data in the cloud
For free live-listening, browse to: live.orcasound.net
Orcasound 1.0 player published Nov. 1, 2018. Orcasound 2.0 is in beta-testing & will launch in fall, 2019.
Frequencies of vessel noise overlap
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Squeaky ship: |
Operational (temporary) and technological (permanent) options (see Williams+2019)
Images from the U.Vic./NEMES automated camera at Orcasound Lab. Smooth curve (black) is 1200-second running average broadband dB level. Now also tracking boat type & speed with M2 AIS/radar/camera system./p>
Maximum received noise level vs duration From ASA 2019 talk by V.Veirs with ref. to Holt et al., 2017, "Noise levels received by endangered killer whales..." |
Monitoring aircraft noise in Seattle |
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Mother-calf conversation! |
SRKWs "speak up" in noise from nearby boats (Holt, Noren, Veirs, Emmons & Veirs, 2009) |
2008: ASA talk by V.Veirs |
Emerging orca AI (in real-time?):
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Admiralty Inlet study (unpublished) -- Of 22 SRKW transits during local daytime,
humans detect 45%, Wholistener 64%, combined 77%.
Most recent SRKW "hearing"
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Upload a fluke photo; AI yields an ID! |
Members of the PSEMP Marine Mammal Work Group, and organizational members of Orcasound, will continue to study, test, and develop these apps and other pioneering ways to share marine mammal location data within Washington and across the Salish Sea. PSEMP Spatial Data Workshop, Oct. 31, Edmonds Through 2019, Orcasound 2.0 plans to provide real-time detections of SRKWs to the WRAS. |
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Right whale stress fell after 9/11 decreased ship noise in 2001 (Rolland et al., 2012) |
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