Bernasconi M, Patel R, Nøttestad L, Pedersen G, Brierley A S
Institute of Marine Research, P.O. Box 1870, Nordnes 5817 Bergen, Norway.
CodeLab Bergen, Klostergaten 26, 5005 Bergen, Norway.
J Acoust Soc Am. 2013 Dec;134(6):4316. doi: 10.1121/1.4826178.
Marine mammals are very seldom detected and tracked acoustically at different depths. The air contained in body cavities, such as lungs or swimbladders, has a significant effect on the acoustic energy backscattered from whale and fish species. Target strength data were obtained while a humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) swam at the surface and dove underneath a research vessel, providing valuable multi-frequency echosounder recordings of its scattering characteristics from near surface to a depth of about 240 m. Increasing depth dramatically influenced the backscattered energy coming from the large cetacean. This study is tightly linked to the ultimate goal of developing an automated whale detection system for mitigation purposes.
海洋哺乳动物很少在不同深度通过声学手段被探测和追踪。体腔(如肺或鱼鳔)中所含的空气,对鲸类和鱼类物种反向散射的声能有显著影响。当一头座头鲸(Megaptera novaeangliae)在水面游动并潜入一艘研究船下方时,获取了目标强度数据,提供了从近水面到约240米深度的该鲸类散射特性的宝贵多频回声测深记录。深度增加极大地影响了来自大型鲸类的反向散射能量。这项研究与开发用于缓解目的的自动鲸鱼探测系统这一最终目标紧密相关。