NOAA-Navy Sanctuary Soundscape Monitoring Project, Vessel Detection Events, Gray's Reef, SanctSound_GR02_05_ships
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NOAA and the U.S. Navy are working to better understand underwater sound within the U.S. National Marine Sanctuary System. From 2018 to 2021, these agencies will work with numerous scientific partners to study sound within seven national marine sanctuaries and one marine national monument, which includes waters off Hawai'i and the east and west coasts. Standardized measurements will assess sounds produced by marine animals, physical processes (e.g., wind and waves), and human activities. Collectively, this information will help NOAA and the Navy measure sound levels and baseline acoustic conditions in sanctuaries. This work is a continuation of ongoing Navy and NOAA research, including efforts by NOAA's Office of National Marine Sanctuaries This dataset represents the derived products from the raw acoustic data that are archived at NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information.
abstract=This record represents the individual vessel events detected from raw passive acoustic data. Events are identified from the long-term spectral average (LTSAs) created for each site with a 5 s, 48 kHz resolution. The LTSA is analyzed in blocks where the calibrated power spectral density estimates are averaged in user-defined low, medium and high frequency bands. These data were recorded at SanctSound Site GR02_05 between September 27, 2020 and February 13, 2021.
acknowledgement=This project received funding from the U.S. Navy.
cdm_data_type=TimeSeries
citation=Cite as: NOAA Office of National Marine Sanctuaries and U.S Navy. 2021. Vessel Detection Events Recorded at SanctSound Site GR02_05, SanctSound Data Products. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Accessed [date]. DOI: https://doi.org/http://doi.org/10.25921/q5b9-c749
comment=Data quality: Quality data were recorded for the duration of the deployment.
contributor_name=Simone Baumann-Pickering, Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Leila Hatch, NOAA Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary; John Joseph, U.S. Naval Postgraduate School; Anke Kuegler, Hawai'i Institute of Marine Biology, University of Hawai'i at Manoa; Marc Lammers, NOAA Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary; Tetyana Margolina, U.S. Naval Postgraduate School; Karlina Merkens, NOAA Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center; Lindsey Peavey Reeves, NOAA Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary; Timothy Rowell, NOAA Northeast Fisheries Science Center; Jenni Stanley, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution; Alison Stimpert, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories; Sofie Van Parijs, NOAA Northeast Fisheries Science Center; Eden Zang,NOAA Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary
contributor_role=Principal Investigator
Conventions=COARDS, CF-1.6, ACDD-1.3
featureType=TimeSeries
geospatial_bounds=POINT (31.376133 -80.839133)
history=Vessel events (individual events) were detected using Triton's Ship-Detector Remora. An LTSA is created for each site with a 5 s, 48 kHz resolution; events are identified from these LTSAs. Individual site settings are tested using the Interactive Detector and most conservative settings are run using the Batch Detector. The LTSA is analyzed in blocks of data (windows), where the calibrated sound pressure spectral density (PSD) estimates are averaged in three frequency bands; low, medium and high (defined by user). Start and end times of the events are detected and stored if the three averaged PSDs meet three conditions (all values set by user): 1. Amplitude is above a user-defined, time-dependent amplitude threshold computed using a histogram method of the averaged PSDs; 2. The event duration is above a user-defined time in the three bands. The duration in the higher band must be shorter that the medium band, or the event duration above the threshold in the lower and medium band must be longer than the user specified time, and the duration in the medium band must be shorter than the lower band; 3. Events are distinguished from weather events when averaged received levels of the event in the lower band are above a user specified percentage of the background sound in the window. The window length and the overlapping time with the next consecutive window is defined by the user. Once Batch Detector is run, user reviews results and corrects labelled events to either Ambient (non-ship source) or Ship. Low band limit (Hz): 100-2,000, Medium band limit: 2,000-3,000, High band limit: 3,000-4,000, Close passage duration threshold (s): 40, Distant passage duration threshold (s): 45, Received level threshold (%): 0.03, Time between passages (h): 0.1, Buffer time (min): 4, Window Size (h): 1, Sliding Time Overlapping Windows (h) 0.5. Data were processed with Triton - Soundscape Metrics Remora (Github commit '44f0f20'; Feb 9, 2020) and Matlab (2016b and newer; statistics toolbox).
id=http://doi.org/10.25921/q5b9-c749
infoUrl=https://ncei.noaa.gov
institution=NOAA
instrument=SoundTrap ST500
keywords_vocabulary=GCMD Science Keywords
naming_authority=NOAA-Navy
project=NOAA-Navy Sanctuary Soundscape Monitoring Project
sourceUrl=(local files)
standard_name_vocabulary=CF Standard Name Table v55
美国国家海洋和大气管理局(NOAA)与美国海军合作,旨在更深入地理解美国国家海洋保护区系统中的水下声音。自2018年至2021年,这些机构将与众多科学合作伙伴合作,研究七个国家海洋保护区和一个海洋国家纪念地的声音,包括夏威夷群岛以及东海岸和西海岸的水域。标准化测量将评估由海洋动物、物理过程(例如风和波浪)以及人类活动产生的声音。这些信息的综合将有助于NOAA和海军测量保护区内的声音水平和声学基准条件。这项工作是海军和NOAA持续研究工作的延续,包括NOAA国家海洋保护区办公室的努力。该数据集代表了存档于NOAA国家环境信息中心的原始声学数据的衍生产品。
提供机构:
NOAA NMFS SWFSC ERD



