Abstract

Passive acoustics is an effective mechanism for detection and recognition of species-specific sounds and can be a more cost-effective approach than visual techniques for monitoring populations of rare or endangered species. A network of moored buoys has been strategically deployed in and around Cape Cod Bay to report detections of northern right whales in critical habitat. Each buoy continuously and automatically monitors for right whale contact calls and transmits detection and ambient noise data by cell or satellite phone to Cornell University on a regular basis. Each day, validated data are automatically unloaded into a Website database to provide on-line graphical and numerical data summaries. The array of three buoys deployed in the Bay will eventually be synchronized to allow localization and tracking of individual animals. [Work supported by funds from the NOAA Right Whale Grants Program and augmented by funds from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries.]

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