In:
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Acoustical Society of America (ASA), Vol. 150, No. 4_Supplement ( 2021-10-01), p. A79-A79
Abstract:
Passive acoustic data collection has grown exponentially over the past decade resulting in petabytes of data that document our ocean soundscapes. This effort has resulted in two big data challenges: the curation, management, and global dissemination of passive acoustic datasets and efficiently extracting critical information and comparing it to other datasets in the context of ecosystem-based research and management. To address the former, the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information established a passive acoustic data archive, which contains over 100 TB of audio files mainly collected from stationary recorders throughout waters in the U.S. These datasets are documented with standards-based metadata and are freely available to the public. To begin to address the latter, through standardized processing and centralized stewardship and access, we will present a previously unattainable comparison of first order sound level-patterns from archived data collected across three distinctly separate long-term passive acoustic monitoring efforts conducted at regional and national scales: NOAA/National Park Service Ocean Noise Reference Station Network, the NOPP-funded Atlantic Deepwater Ecosystem Observatory Network, and the NOAA-Navy Sanctuary Soundscape Monitoring Project. Further, we will propose the next frontier for scalable data stewardship, access, and processing flow to help the community collaboratively move forward.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0001-4966
,
1520-8524
Language:
English
Publisher:
Acoustical Society of America (ASA)
Publication Date:
2021
detail.hit.zdb_id:
1461063-2
detail.hit.zdb_id:
219231-7
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