Abstract

Acoustics play a central role in mankind’s interactions with the ocean and the life within. Passive listening to ocean “soundscapes” informs us about the physical and bio-acoustic environment from earthquakes to communication between fish. Active acoustic probing of the environment informs us about ocean topography, currents and temperature, and abundance and type of marine life vital to fisheries and biodiversity related interests. The two together in a multi-purpose network can lead to discovery and improve understanding of ocean ecosystem health and biodiversity, climate variability and change, and marine hazards and maritime safety. Passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) of sound generated and utilized by marine life as well as other natural (wind, rain, ice, seismics) and anthropogenic (shipping, surveys) sources, has dramatically increased worldwide to enhance understanding of ecological processes. Characterizing ocean soundscapes (the levels and frequency of sound over time and space, and the sources contributing to the sound field), temporal trends in ocean sound at different frequencies, distribution and abundance of marine species that vocalize, and distribution and amount of human activities that generate sound in the sea, all require passive acoustic systems. Acoustic receivers are now routinely acquiring data on a global scale, e.g., Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization International Monitoring System hydroacoustic arrays, various regional integrated ocean observing systems, and some profiling floats. Judiciously-placed low-frequency acoustic sources transmitting to globally distributed PAM and other systems provide: 1) high temporal resolution measurements of large-scale ocean temperature/heat content variability, taking advantage of the inherent integrating nature of acoustic travel-time data using tomography; and 2) acoustic positioning (“underwater GPS”) and communication services enabling basin-scale undersea navigation and management of floats, gliders, and AUVs. This will be especially valuable in polar regions with ice cover. Routine deployment of sources during repeat global-scale hydrographic ship surveys would provide high spatial coverage snapshots of ocean temperatures. To fully exploit the PAM systems, precise timing and positioning need to be broadly implemented. Ocean sound is now a mature Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS) “essential ocean variable”, which is one crucial step toward providing a fully integrated global multi-purpose ocean acoustic observing system.

Highlights

  • The mesoscale revolution in oceanography was enabled by the acoustic tracking of floats

  • Based on this, we suggest that the following recommendations be included in the outcomes from the OceanObs19 conference

  • This could be accomplished by transitioning GODAE Ocean View to operational status as part of GOOS

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The mesoscale revolution in oceanography was enabled by the acoustic tracking of floats. Support for underice navigation would apply to AUVs as well as gliders and floats (ANCHOR Working Group, 2008; Mikhalevsky et al, 2015; Smith et al, 2019) In this case, would basic navigation be enabled, precise geolocation would allow results between the various disparate sampling platforms to be combined coherently within the framework of ocean data assimilation models (running the joint positioning/ocean state estimation). When combined with the information obtained from passive acoustic systems related to physical conditions (e.g., surface conditions, ice cover, etc.), upper trophic level dynamics of marine mammals and other top predators, and even human use factors, underwater acoustics becomes a valuable tool in monitoring ecosystems in terms of overall function, biodiversity, and health. This technology has expanded in the form of a Whale Alert app, which aims to reduce lethal whale ship strikes worldwide and across all large whale species

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