scholarly journals Acoustic Censusing and Individual Identification of Birds in the Wild

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carol L. Bedoya ◽  
Laura E. Molles

Avian vocal individuality carries information that can be utilized as an alternative to physical tagging of individuals. However, it is rarely used in conservation tasks despite rapidly-expanding use of passive acoustic monitoring techniques. Reliable acoustic individual recognizers and accurate quantifiers of population size remain elusive, which discourages the use of vocal individuality for monitoring, wildlife management, and ecological research. We propose a neuro-fuzzy framework that allows discrimination of individuals by their calls, the discovery of unexpected individuals in a set of recordings, and estimation of population size using solely sound. Our method, tested using data collected in the wild, allows rapid individual identification and even acoustic censusing without prior information from the recorded individuals. We achieve this by integrating a fuzzy classification and clustering methodology (LAMDA) into a Convolutional Deep Clustering Neural Network (CDCN). Our approach will benefit monitoring for conservation, and paves the way towards robust individual acoustic identification in species whose handling is time-consuming, culturally or ethically problematic, or logistically difficult.

2020 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
pp. GCFI31-GCFI41
Author(s):  
Carlos M. Zayas Santiago ◽  
Richard S. Appeldoorn ◽  
Michelle T. Schärerer-Umpierre ◽  
Juan J. Cruz-Motta

Passive acoustic monitoring provides a method for studying grouper courtship associated sounds (CAS). For Red Hind (Epinephelus guttatus), this approach has documented spatio—temporal patterns in their spawning aggregations. This study described vocalizations produced by E. guttatus and their respective behavioral contexts in field and laboratory studies. Five sound types were identified, which included 4 calls recorded in captivity and one sound recorded in the wild, labeled as Chorus. Additionally, the Grunt call type recorded was presumed to be produced by a female. Call types consisted of variations and combinations of low frequency (50—450 Hz) pulses, grunts and tonal sounds in different combinations. Common call types exhibited diel and lunar oscillations during the spawning season, with both field and captive recordings peaking daily at 1800 AST and at 8 days after the full moon.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (7) ◽  
pp. 190598 ◽  
Author(s):  
Armando M. Jaramillo-Legorreta ◽  
Gustavo Cardenas-Hinojosa ◽  
Edwyna Nieto-Garcia ◽  
Lorenzo Rojas-Bracho ◽  
Len Thomas ◽  
...  

The vaquita ( Phocoena sinus ) is a small porpoise endemic to Mexico. It is listed by IUCN as Critically Endangered because of unsustainable levels of bycatch in gillnets. The population has been monitored with passive acoustic detectors every summer from 2011 to 2018; here we report results for 2017 and 2018. We combine the acoustic trends with an independent estimate of population size from 2015, and visual observations of at least seven animals in 2017 and six in 2018. Despite adoption of an emergency gillnet ban in May 2015, the estimated rate of decline remains extremely high: 48% decline in 2017 (95% Bayesian credible interval (CRI) 78% decline to 9% increase) and 47% in 2018 (95% CRI 80% decline to 13% increase). Estimated total population decline since 2011 is 98.6%, with greater than 99% probability the decline is greater than 33% yr −1 . We estimate fewer than 19 vaquitas remained as of summer 2018 (posterior mean 9, median 8, 95% CRI 6–19). From March 2016 to March 2019, 10 dead vaquitas killed in gillnets were found. The ongoing presence of illegal gillnets despite the emergency ban continues to drive the vaquita towards extinction. Immediate management action is required if the species is to be saved.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document