| Literature DB >> 35509916 |
Daniel P Zitterbart1, Alessandro Bocconcelli1, Miles Ochs1, Julien Bonnel1.
Abstract
Passive Acoustic Monitoring (PAM) has been used to study the ocean for decades across several fields to answer biological, geological and meteorological questions such as marine mammal presence, measures of anthropogenic noise in the ocean, and monitoring and prediction of underwater earthquakes and tsunamis. While in previous decades the high cost of acoustic instruments limited its use, miniaturization and microprocessor advances dramatically reduced the cost for passive acoustic monitoring instruments making PAM available for a broad scientific community. Such low-cost devices are often deployed by divers or on mooring lines with a surface buoy, which limit their use to diving depth and coastal regions. Here, we present a low-cost, low self-noise and hand-deployable PAM mooring design, called TOSSIT. It can be used in water as deep as 500 m, and can be deployed and recovered by hand by a single operator (more comfortably with two) in a small boat. The TOSSIT modular mooring system consists of a light and strong non-metallic frame that can fit a variety of sensors including PAM instruments, acoustic releases, additional power packages, environmental parameter sensors. The TOSSIT's design is rope-less, which removes any risk of entanglement and keeps the self-noise very low.Entities:
Keywords: Acoustical Oceanography; Bioacoustics; Mooring systems; Ocean ambient noise; Oceanography; Soundscape; Underwater sound
Year: 2022 PMID: 35509916 PMCID: PMC9058817 DOI: 10.1016/j.ohx.2022.e00304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HardwareX ISSN: 2468-0672
Fig. 1A) Drawing of the assembled TOSSIT mooring in a four section configuration with optional battery pack. B) Drawing of the assembled TOSSIT mooring in a three section configuration without optional battery pack. C) Picture of a TOSSIT mooring in a three section configuration and anchor weight attached.
Hardware design files.
| Design file name | File type | Open source license | Location of the file |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100,441 LONG STANDOFF | |||
| 100,443 END PLATE | |||
| 100,444 VEMCO MOUNT BUSHING | |||
| 100,451 BATTERY HOUSING CLAMP | |||
| 100,452 SHORT STANDOFF | |||
| 100,453 ST300 HOUSING CLAMP | |||
| 100,500 HANDLE | |||
| 100,532 RELEASE LINK COLLAR | |||
| 100,533 ANTI ROTATION COLLAR | |||
| 100,601 TOSSIT LINE PACK | |||
| 100,602 TOSSIT ANTI BACKLASH COLLAR |
Bill of Materials.
| Part Number Designator | Part Name | Quantity Needed Per | ,ost Per Unit - USE | Total Cost - USD | Source | Material Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SOUNDTRAP ST300 | Soundtrap ST300 STD | 1 | 3100 | 3100 | Ocean Instruments NZ | COTS Ectmnics |
| VEMCO ASCENT AR | /emco AscentAcoustic Release | 1 | 5000 | 5000 | Oceans Research | COTS Ectronics |
| 100,440 | FLOTATION RING | 8 | 50 | 400 | Stock DLB International | Divinycell PVC |
| 100,441 | LONG STANDOFF | 8 | 25 | 200 | Machine Shop | Delrin (Acetal) |
| 100,443 | END PLATE | 2 | 25 | 50 | Machine Shop | Delrin (Metal) |
| 100,444 | VEMCO MOUNT BUSHING | 2 | 25 | 50 | Machine Shop | Delrin (Metal) |
| 100,451 | BATERYHOUSINGCLAMP | 4 | 50 | 200 | MachineShop | Delrin(Acetal) |
| 100,452 | SHORT STANDOFF | 8 | 25 | 200 | Machine Shop | Delrin (Metal) |
| 100,453 | 5 T300 HOUSING CLAMP | 2 | 50 | 100 | Machine Shop | Delrin (Metal) |
| 100,500 | HANDLE | 1 | 50 | 50 | MachineShop | 6061-T6Juminum |
| 100,532 | RELEASE LINK COLLAR | 1 | 40 | 40 | McMaster Carr + Machine | Delrin (Metal) |
| 100,533 | ANTIROTATIONCOLLAR | 1 | 100 | 100 | MachineShop | Delrin(Metal) |
| 100,594 | LINE PACK RE WINDER | 1 | 500 | 500 | Machine Shop | Delrin (Metal) |
| 100,601 | TOSSITLINEPACK | 1 | 500 | 500 | MachineShop | Delrin(Metal) |
| 92185A517 | Socket Head Cap Screw 114– | 2 | 1.19 | 2.38 | McMaster Carr or other | 3l6StainlessSteel |
| 92185A544 | Socket Head Cap Screw 114– | 12 | 0.375 | 4.5 | McMaster Carr or other | 316 Stainless Steel |
| 92185A540 | Socket Head Cap Screw 114– | 2 | 0.306 | 0.612 | McMaster Carr or other | 316 Stainless Steel |
| 92186A569 | Socket Head Cap Screw 114– | 4 | 4.86 | 19.44 | McMaster Carr or other | 316 Stainless Steel |
| 90575A546 | Threaded Stud 114–20, 1.5 | 8 | 1.09 | 8.72 | McMaster Can orother | 3l6StainlessSteel |
| 90715Al25 | 114–20 Lock Nut (Nylock) | 2 | 0.12 | 0.24 | McMaster Can or other | 316 Stainless Steel |
| 90107A029 | 114 Flat Washer | 14 | 0.07 | 0.98 | McMaster Can or other | 316 Stainless Steel |
Fig. 2A) All parts needed for the assembly of a 3-section TOSSIT mooring frame. B – K, consecutive assembly steps.
Fig. 3L-Q) Assembly steps of the anti-shock collar and ring. R-U) Steps to attached the acoustic release to the TOSSIT frame. V) Assembled TOSSIT mooring without anchor.
Fig. 4A) Anchor example created from two pieces of U-profile steel (∼15 kg) with attached mooring lug in the center. B) Anchor example created from a round steel plate (∼12 kg) with a bail to hold the mooring lug. C) Tighten the TOSSIT mooring lug using two nut drivers for fast attachment. D) Example of TOSSIT mooring attached to the anchor weight.
Fig. 5A) Horizontal deployment of a TOSSIT mooring from a small rigid hull inflatable boat (RHIB). B) Upright deployment of a TOSSIT mooring from F/V Kathryn Marie using a slip-line.
Fig. 6A) Power Spectral Densities (PSD) recorded using TOSSIT moorings at three different locations and water depths (SAMBAY 5 m, SBCEX 200 m, SBCEX 400 m). B) Power Spectral Densities (PSD) recorded a TOSSIT mooring and a classic rope mooring deployment in shallow water (16 m).