Abstract

Noise analyses are crucial to understanding passive acoustic monitoring for marine mammals and their behavioral responses to natural and anthropogenic noises. Suspected biological sounds in the ambient noise data from hydrophones at the Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF), Kauai, Hawaii have been found. The sounds are suspected to be chorusing associated with the Deep Scattering Layer (DSL) upward daily vertical migration given they peak around 2 hours after sunset. They have been observed occurring daily including a period in January 2017 when high ambient noise levels during a storm was associated with baleen whale cessation of calling. The sounds occur from 1.4 to 1.8 kHz with the peak near 1650 Hz. They are detectable on multiple broadband hydrophones (21 to 68 km offshore) in deep water (1.5 to 4.7 km), suggesting a large spatial extent. The maximum spectrum level in the 1.6 kHz 1/3rd octave band observed to date was 71 dB re 1 μPa2/Hz. Individual sounds have not been identified to date given the geometries involved and the large spatial extent sensed using deep water hydrophones. These results have similarities to related chorusing research which has suggested a potential link with Myctophidae fishes.

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