Acoustic Monitoring
What's one key way that researchers can monitor what's living in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary? Acoustic monitoring! With acoustic receivers, we can get the exact position of tagged animals like leopard sharks, sicklefin lemon sharks, juvenile white sharks, and sevengill sharks, which use the sanctuary as habitat and help maintain the ecosystem.
Transcript
NOAA's Office of National Marine Sanctuaries
works to protect several marine species, many
of which are vulnerable or endangered. So,
how do we do that?
We're looking at the
connectivity and the movement of animals in
and around the Channel Islands, off the West
Coast of Southern California.
So we put up
this equipment to listen for a variety of
animals that may be around the sanctuary—we're
partnered with a couple different researchers—and
we put out this array around the islands to
kind of watch where fish and different species
that we're interested in move in between
or around the islands.
In order to figure
out what organisms are in the sanctuary and
where they are travelling, we use VR2 acoustic
receivers. Our research team has used acoustic
measurements in the Channel Islands since
2010. My understanding is they can detect
the acoustic tag in a fish from a distance
of maybe, what, a quarter mile or so. Maybe
a half mile. Depends on the sea conditions
and the temperature and things.
So I'm surprised
at how many tags it actually detects, because
the fish have to swim within the range of
the receiver. This method works well because
we can get the exact position of the animals,
and the tags last several years. Satellite
tags have shorter lifespans and less exact
positions.
Here in the islands, we've detected
leopard sharks that come as far as La Hoya. We get white sharks that
have been tagged off LA and Malibu. We've
even gotten sevengills that come all the way
from San Francisco.
So, there's a wide variety of animals that come down and use the Channel Islands as habitat.
So, why is all of this important? One of the animals we tag,
the Juvenile White Shark, is at risk of endangerment.
White Sharks are top predators in their ecosystems,
essential to maintaining stable populations
and keeping diseases from spreading. If these
sharks go extinct, the ecosystems we depend
on in California for food and recreation are
more likely to deteriorate.
By understanding
their habitat, we can better aid in the preservation
of these sharks and other species.