| Literature DB >> 35145884 |
Johan Diepstraten1, Jacques Keumo Kuenbou2, Jacob Willie3.
Abstract
The study of soundscapes and biological sounds is becoming the focus of increasing scientific attention. Studying biological sounds involves the deployment of acoustic sensors to record sounds and the identification of animal species and other sources of sound in audio recordings. In addition, data extracted from audio recordings may be pooled together with ecological and human activity data to investigate the drivers of biological sounds. We provide a detailed method description of our study on biological sounds in a tropical forest and their drivers along a gradient of disturbance in Southeast Cameroon. We designed and implemented a research protocol to:•make large scale audio recordings and identify animal species detected;•collect ground-truth data on mammal and bird species;•collect climate, habitat, and human activity data and describe remoteness and accessibility.Entities:
Keywords: Audio recordings; Audiomoth; Bird surveys; Ecoacoustics; Human disturbance; Human listeners; Mammal surveys; Transects
Year: 2022 PMID: 35145884 PMCID: PMC8802115 DOI: 10.1016/j.mex.2022.101619
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MethodsX ISSN: 2215-0161
Overview of how the three study sites represent a disturbance gradient.
| Site | Population size (#) | Land-use type | Conservation management | Disturbance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ngouleminanga | 130 | Community forest | Absent | High |
| La Palestine | 176 | Community forest | Present | Medium |
| La Belgique | 182 | Forest management unit | Present | Low |
Fig. 1Location of the three study sites and the adjacent villages in the northern periphery of the Dja Faunal Reserve. Six 1-km transects were opened in each site using a cascading design. The transects were cut with a constant compass bearing of 140°, 180°, and 45° in Ngouleminanga, La Palestine, and La Belgique, respectively.
Fig. 2Audio sampling design. A) An AudioMoth bioacoustics sensor wrapped in a zip lock bag, placed in a protective, labelled case with foam in the back to keep the sensor in place and a small hole in the front at the location of the microphone. B) A sensor deployed in the forest, attached to a tree at a height of 2 m, orientated at 90°.
Recording schedule and number of recordings per sensor.
| Site | Sensor | # Recordings | Start date | End date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| La Belgique | BT1 | 1244 | 26-2-2020 | 26-4-2020 |
| La Belgique | BT2 | 1214 | 26-2-2020 | 25-4-2020 |
| La Belgique | BT3 | 1234 | 25-2-2020 | 25-4-2020 |
| La Belgique | BT4 | 1250 | 27-2-2020 | 27-4-2020 |
| La Belgique | BT5 | 1072 | 25-2-2020 | 25-4-2020 |
| La Belgique | BT6 | 810 | 25-2-20 | 8-4-2020 |
| La Palestine | PT1 | 1299 | 5-3-2020 | 5-5-2020 |
| La Palestine | PT2 | 1304 | 5-3-2020 | 5-5-2020 |
| La Palestine | PT3 | 1202 | 1-3-2020 | 25-4-2020 |
| La Palestine | PT4 | 1300 | 3-3-2020 | 3-5-2020 |
| La Palestine | PT5 | 1300 | 3-3-2020 | 3-5-2020 |
| La Palestine | PT6 | 1307 | 29-2-2020 | 29-4-2020 |
| Ngouleminanga | NT1 | 1322 | 8-3-2020 | 8-5-2020 |
| Ngouleminanga | NT2 | 1091 | 8-3-2020 | 30-4-2020 |
| Ngouleminanga | NT3 | 1030 | 9-3-2020 | 8-5-2020 |
| Ngouleminanga | NT4 | 1261 | 9-3-2020 | 9-5-2020 |
| Ngouleminanga | NT5 | 654 | 10-3-2020 | 8-4-2020 |
| Ngouleminanga | NT6 | 591 | 10-3-2020 | 4-4-2020 |
| Subject Area: | Environmental Science |
| More specific subject area: | Ecoacoustics |
| Method name: | Passive acoustic monitoring and analysis |
| Name and reference of original method: | N.A. |
| Resource availability: | AudioMoth: |