| Literature DB >> 22969353 |
Huiying Ren1, Michele B Halvorsen, Zhiqun Daniel Deng, Thomas J Carlson.
Abstract
Fishes and marine mammals may suffer a range of potential effects from exposure to intense underwater sound generated by anthropogenic activities such as pile driving, shipping, sonars, and underwater blasting. Several underwater sound recording (USR) devices have been built to acquire samples of the underwater sound generated by anthropogenic activities. Software becomes indispensable for processing and analyzing the audio files recorded by these USRs. In this paper, we provide a detailed description of a new software package, the Aquatic Acoustic Metrics Interface (AAMI), specifically designed for analysis of underwater sound recordings to provide data in metrics that facilitate evaluation of the potential impacts of the sound on aquatic animals. In addition to the basic functions, such as loading and editing audio files recorded by USRs and batch processing of sound files, the software utilizes recording system calibration data to compute important parameters in physical units. The software also facilitates comparison of the noise sound sample metrics with biological measures such as audiograms of the sensitivity of aquatic animals to the sound, integrating various components into a single analytical frame. The features of the AAMI software are discussed, and several case studies are presented to illustrate its functionality.Entities:
Keywords: audiograms; noise recording; software; sound exposure level; underwater sound monitoring
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22969353 PMCID: PMC3435982 DOI: 10.3390/s120607438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.Main window of AAMI.
Figure 2.Scaling factor setting window of AAMI.
Figure 3.Audiograms of the 10 species of fish and marine mammals in the AAMI audiogram library [20–28].
Figure 4.The noise exposure test tank.
Figure 5.An example of a 1-minute segment of simulated tidal turbine sound in the time domain.
Figure 6.Spectrogram and power spectral density for exposure signal and control. Upper left: treatment 4, 1-minute spectrogram. Upper right: treatment 4, power spectral density. Bottom left: treatment control, 1-minute spectrogram. Bottom right: treatment control, power spectral density.
Figure 7.AEP derived audiogram for juvenile Chinook salmon overlaid on the sonogram of a noise sample.