DocumentCode :
559371
Title :
Design and operation specifications of an active monitoring system for detecting southern resident killer whales
Author :
Deng, Z. Daniel ; Carlson, Thomas J. ; Xu, Jinshan ; Martinez, Jayson ; Weiland, Mark A. ; Mueller, Robert P. ; Myers, Joshua R. ; Jones, Mark E.
Author_Institution :
Pacific Northwest Nat. Lab., Richland, WA, USA
fYear :
2011
fDate :
19-22 Sept. 2011
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
6
Abstract :
Before final approval is given to the Snohomish County Public Utility District No. 1 for deploying the first tidal power devices in the United States in an open water environment, a system to manage the potential risk of injury to killer whales due to collision with moving turbine blades must be demonstrated. The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) is tasked with establishing the performance requirements for, constructing, and testing a prototype marine animal alert system for triggering temporary turbine shutdown when there is risk of collision with a killer whale. To develop a system that relies on active sonar two critical areas must be investigated-the target strength of killer whales and the frequency content of commercially available active sonar units. PNNL studied three target strength models: a simple model, the Fourier matching model, and the Kirchoff-ray mode model. Using target strength measurements of bottlenose dolphins obtained by previous researchers and assuming killer whales share similar morphology and structure, PNNL extrapolated the target strength of an adult killer whale 7.5 m in length at a frequency of 67 kHz. To study the frequency content of a commercially available sonar unit, direct measurements of the signal transmitted by the sonar head were obtained by using a hydrophone connected to a data acquisition system in both laboratory and field conditions. The measurements revealed a secondary frequency component at 90 kHz in addition to the primary frequency of 200 kHz. Preliminary results show that the amplitude of the 90-kHz frequency component is above the hearing threshold of killer whales but below the threshold for potential injuries.
Keywords :
data acquisition; geophysical signal processing; hydrophones; oceanographic regions; oceanographic techniques; risk management; sonar detection; sonar target recognition; tidal power stations; underwater sound; Fourier matching model; Kirchoff-ray mode model; Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Snohomish County Public Utility District No. 1; United States; active monitoring system; active sonar; bottlenose dolphin; commercially available sonar unit; data acquisition system; hydrophone; injury potential risk management; killer whale collision risk; marine animal alert system; open water environment; operation specification; performance requirement; signal transmission; sonar head; southern resident killer whale detection; target strength measurement; temporary turbine shutdown; tidal power device; turbine blades; Acoustics; Dolphins; Frequency measurement; Laboratories; Sonar measurements; Whales; Tidal power; active acoustic monitoring; sound propagation; underwater acoustics;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2011
Conference_Location :
Waikoloa, HI
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1427-6
Type :
conf
Filename :
6107179
Link To Document :
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