Università degli Studi di PaviaCentro Interdisciplinare di Bioacustica e Ricerche AmbientaliVia Taramelli 24 - 27100 Pavia - Italye-mail : cibra@unipv.it
Marine BioacousticsThe first investigations on underwater sound were made by the Navies to detect and locate ships and submarines of the enemy by listening to the noise of their engines and propellers. The same equipment developed for military needs allowed to listen to unexpected sounds that for many years puzzled the experts and opened up new scientific research branches: acoustical oceanography and marine bioacoustics. In the aquatic environment the acoustic
communication among animals has a very important role
because the high speed of propagation (1500 m/sec - almost
five times greater than in air) and the scarce attenuation
with the distance allow an efficient transmission of the
sounds. In the aquatic environment the acoustic
communication has a very important role because the high
speed of propagation (1500 m/sec - almost five times
greater than in air) and the scarce attenuation with the
distance that allows an efficient transmission of the
sounds. Many aquatic organisms produce sounds.
Invertebrates (mostly crustaceans), fishes, marine mammals
(ceteaceans and pinnipeds) produce sounds with frequencies
ranging from infrasounds to ultrasounds. All these
acoustic signals are emitted in a complex noisy
environment to which man and its activities contributes
significantly. Marine MammalsThe zoological group of marine mammals includes animals who live underwater as well as terrestrial animals who spend only part of their time into water, for feeding, for example. Sirenians, Pinnipeds, Otters and Cetaceans spend all or most of their life into water and use sound extensively. CetaceansCetaceans are divided into two sub
orders, the Odontocete, or toothed whales, and the
Mysticete, or baleen whales, each one with peculiar
behaviours and acoustic features.
The Odontocetes are active hunter that
chase and capture their prey using a variety of senses.
They may range in size from 1.4 meters to 18 meters (sperm
whale). The Mysticetes are filter feeders feeding on plankton and small fish and are primarily the larger whales, ranging in size from the minke whale (8 meters on avg) up to the blue whale (28 meters and more), the largest living animal. They feed by capturing large quantities of water within their mouths and then expelling this water through filters formed by the baleen plates, which take the place of teeth. The filters capture the plankton and small fish, which are then swallowed. Because they do not need to chase the prey they have not developed echolocation in the same manner as the Odontocetes. The sounds they make are primarily low frequency tonals for inter-animal communication although there is some evidence that the fin and blue whales can transmit a FM sweep that can be potentially used to get a large scale "acoustic image" of the surrounfing environment for whole ocean basin navigation. As low frequencies propagate well into water, baleen whales sounds may propagate for hundreds of kilometers. Marine mammals and soundThe underwater environment has its own
acoustic peculiarities and cetaceans are extraordinarily
well adapted to them. In these mammals, acoustic
communication has acquired a privileged role compared with
other channels of communication. Auditory mechanisms
and sound producing organs are highly evolved and
diversified with the acquisition of the ability to
echolocate (biosonar, or biological sonar), which is
peculiar to the Odontocetes and among other animals has
only reached an equivalent level of sophistication in bats
(Chiroptera). Underwater sound and its analysisHydrophones are the transducers that
transform sounds propagating underwater into electrical
signals. They are usually omnidirectional (receive from
all directions at once) and may cover a wide range of
frequencies, from a few Hz to more than 100 kHz. More
complex hydrophone systems consisting of multiple
transducers are also used. These hydrophone arrays are
more directional and sensitive, typically used to locate
acoustic sources. Sound analysis can be based on dedicated
digital systems, or can be carried out with standard
computers equipped with suitable analog-to-digital
converters and specific Digital Signal Processing (DSP)
software. The spectrogram is a graph that shows the
structure of an acoustic event, either audible or
inaudible, in the time-frequency plan. In other words, the
spectrogram shows the sound decomposed in its frequency
components versus the time. On the x axis it is
represented the time and on the y axis the frequencies;
the intensity of the various components in the
time-frequency plane is given by colours or by different
grey levels. In origin produced by expensive and slow
analogical equipment, the spectrogram can be now generated
by a computer with a software that processes the sound
recorded in digital format. A digital spectrogram can be generated in
real-time to allow an immediate visualization of the
sounds received by an hydrophone, or in post-processing on
sound files previously recorded. Using hydrophones (towed
arrays, single hydrophones, sonobuoys and other types) we
can listen to the sounds in the ocean. This technology
allows us to detect presence of ships, and also of marine
mammals. To acoustically detect the presence of
marine mammals it's necessary to employ a system that is
sensitive to the range of frequencies emitted by the
animals. Each species emits its own set of signals. Some
animals' sounds appear similar to those emitted by other
species; other species are easy to identify because of
their profoundly different sounds. To know more about underwater
(bio)acoustics and required equipment, visit the page on underwater
bioacoustics. Spectrogram of Humpback whales' song Marine Mammals of the Mediterranean SeaIn the Mediterranean Sea, 19 species of cetaceans can be encountered; 8 of them are considered common (Fin whale Balaenoptera physalus, Sperm whale Physeter macrocephalus, Striped dolphin Stenella coeruleoalba, Risso's dolphin Grampus griseus, long finned Pilot whale Globicephala melas, Bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus, Common dolphin Delphinus delphis, Cuvier's beaked whale Ziphius cavirostris), while 4 are occasional (Minke whale Balaenoptera acutorostrata, Killer whale Orcinus orca, False killer whale Pseudorca crassidens, Rough toothed dolphin Steno bredanesis), and 6 accidental, alien to the Mediterranean, but occasionally sighted in the last 120 years (among them the Humpback whale Megaptera novaeangliae occasionally appears in italian waters); moreover, we have to consider the presence of a small population of Harbour porpoise Phocoena phocoena in the Black Sea. Among the occasional species, the Steno bredanensis has been observed frequently in recent years and thus it could be considered a common species rather than occasional. Particular areas, like the Ligurian Sea, have proved to be of special conservational interest. It is a primary concern to scientists to produce abundance estimates of cetaceans in these areas and to discover the environmental parameters which affect their presence in order to calibrate study and conservational efforts.
The Mediterranean Monk Seal (Monachus monachus) is the only pinniped to be found within the Mediterranean Sea. It is now very rare and listed as an endangered species. The only known colonies are in the Alboran Basin and in the Aegean Sea. It is very unlikely that any animals will be encountered around Sicily or Malta. The possible negative impact of
anthropogenic noise on the marine environment is now an
important concern for scientists. The noise and vibrations
produced by human activities, that may be defined as
"acoustic pollution", may interfere in various ways with
animal life. To know more about this problem visit the
pages about the impact of
noise on marine mammals and about current research projects
on mitigation
Example of noises that can be heard by lowering an hydrophone into the Liguria Sea. Sonar pings at 4.8 kHz from a far military ship, a fast-ferry turbine at about 1.4 kHz and, below 1 kHz, jack hammers working on the coast at more than 30 miles of distance. Selected Bibliography |