DocumentCode
709199
Title
Habitat impact on acoustic bio-sonar characteristics of Irrawaddy dolphins across two distinct habitats
Author
Ingale, Chaitali ; Lokhande, Sunita ; Das, Arnab
Author_Institution
Sinhgad Coll. of Eng., Pune, India
fYear
2015
fDate
23-25 Feb. 2015
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
3
Abstract
Acoustic bio-sonar characteristics of non-marine toothed whales are very critical for any conservation efforts using passive acoustic monitoring. The acoustic surveys have now been recognized as effective methods for freshwater cetaceans monitoring and abundance estimation compared to the traditional visual surveys. These species have been declared as data deficient by the IUCN and acoustic surveys present themselves as the relatively cost-effective approach. Irrawaddy dolphins Orcaella brevirostris referred to as facultative freshwater cetaceans because they occupy both fresh- and near-shore marine waters are among the cetaceans at greatest risk to population extirpation and perhaps extinction. Their vulnerability stems from habitat requirements that are coupled to marine and freshwater habitats subjected to intense human intervention. The bio-sonar characteristics of these species are highly sensitive to their habitat and the Irrawaddy dolphins are spread across varied environments over distant geographic locations. A good understanding of their acoustic bio-sonar characteristics across habitats can potentially provide significant conservation inputs. The two habitats considered in this work are contrasting in their origin and evolution. The first is the rivers systems of the Sundarbans mangrove forest with a deltaic habitat and second is the Chilika Lagoon with rain water and high tide fed habitat. Detailed analysis of the Sundarbans Irrawaddy dolphins were reported in 2013 with well-defined acoustic signal parameters. The authors have applied the same parameters for a comprehensive comparison of the species in the two habitats with a critical review on the correlation of the habitat features and the acoustic bio-sonar characteristics. Long term recording of the dolphin clicks in the Chilika lagoon have been analyzed and compared with the Sunderbans results available in the open literature. The acoustic parameters and their physical correlation with the animal b- haviour and the habitat status have been presented. Multiple parameters such as centroid frequency, peak frequency, signal source level, bandwidth, duration of clicks, inter-click interval etc have been considered for the study.
Keywords
bioacoustics; biocommunications; underwater sound; zoology; Chilika Lagoon; Irrawaddy dolphins; Orcaella brevirostris; Sundarbans mangrove forest; acoustic biosonar characteristics; acoustic surveys; animal behaviour; deltaic habitat; dolphin click long term recording; dolphin habitat; freshwater cetacean abundance estimation; freshwater cetacean monitoring; high tide fed habitat; nonmarine toothed whales; passive acoustic monitoring; rain water fed habitat; Monitoring; Orcaella brevirostris; echolocation clicks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Underwater Technology (UT), 2015 IEEE
Conference_Location
Chennai
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-8299-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/UT.2015.7108261
Filename
7108261
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