Visualization of temporal change in soundscape power of a Michigan lake habitat over a 4-year period
In: Ecological Informatics. Elsevier: Amsterdam. ISSN 1574-9541; e-ISSN 1878-0512, more
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| Author keywords |
Soundscape; NDSI; Biophony; Soundscape power; Ecosystem acoustics |
| Abstract |
Soundscape Ecology is an emerging area of science that does not focus on the identification of species in the soundscape but attempts to characterize sounds by organizing them into those produced by biological organisms such as birds, amphibians, insects or mammals; physical environmental factors such as thunder, rainfall or wind; and sounds produced by human entities such as airplanes, automobiles or air conditioners. The soundscape changes throughout the day and throughout the seasons. The soundscape components that create the sound occur at different frequencies. A set of metrics termed soundscape power was computed and visualized to examine the patterns of daily and seasonal change in the soundscape. Automated recorders were used to record soundscape samples every half hour for one minute duration from six sites on an uninhabited island in Twin Lakes located near Cheboygan in Michigan's northern Lower Peninsula. Each recording was divided into 1 kHz frequency intervals and visualization tools were used to examine the soundscape power in each interval during 48 half-hour time segments from April–October for four consecutive years. Daily patterns of soundscape power change were also examined during the seven month sample period. To synthesize the data set, three dimensional contour plots were used to visualize day of the year (x), time of day (y) and soundscape power (z) for several frequency intervals. A further synthesis was developed to visualize soundscape change using a Normalized Difference Soundscape Index (NDSI) which is a ratio of low to high frequencies. |
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