This is a general invitation to join a mailing list concerning the development of a potential "American National Standard (ANSI)"--a technical standard on passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) of marine animals, organized through the Acoustical Society of America (ASA). Both members and non-members of the ASA are welcome to participate in the drafting of the standard.
The second meeting on the topic will occur at the upcoming Marine Mammal conference in San Diego, Thursday Dec. 15, from 19:00-22:00 in Betsy AB at the Manchester Grand Hyatt. To sign up for the list please access the following webstie: https://siomail.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/asa-pam-standard Background: The first step of the standard process is the formation of a working group, S1/WG28. The first meeting of the group was Oct. 19, 2005 at the most recent ASA meeting, but working group members do not have to be members of the ASA--hence this email to expand the outreach of the effort. There will be a meeting at the upcoming San Diego Marine Mammal Conference on this subject, TBA, and also at the ASA meeting at Providence, RI, June 2006. The working group will write the proposed draft, and then institutional members of the ASA standards committee will vote on the topic. If approved, the standard would be accepted by ANSI as a "voluntary consensus standard"-the use of the standard is not required, but organizations that report PAM activities would be encouraged to report compliance with the ANSI standard in their reports. The standard would be a US standard only, but ANSI is a member of the international ISO standards group, so any standard defined here could be used as a template for an eventual standard with a more international scope. Standards can be updated and revised with time. Further information about standards and the standards process is at http://asa.aip.org/standards/information/information.html. If you sign up for the mailing list you will have access to a strawman draft of the standard via the archives. Please note that the process is just starting so there is plenty of opportunity for feedback. Feel free to contact Aaron Thode at [EMAIL PROTECTED] directly with questions. The initial focus of the standard is on towed array systems, but may be expanded to other types of PAM if there is a consensus to do so. The standard would have several proposed purposes(can be adjusted): (1) To establish a set of minimum procedures that would enable a technical non-specialist to maximize the likelihood of acoustic detection of a marine animal vocalization, if such a vocalization is made. The non-specialist may not have been responsible for the selection of the equipment provided. Thus much of this standard focuses on procedures, not equipment selection. (2) To define a set of data archiving, documenting, and reporting procedures so that results and conclusions from different PAM activities can be objectively compared by a neutral observer. For example, PAM measurements made from a large ship and a small sailboat in the same area might reach different conclusions about the presence or absence of a particular species in the area. In this situation it would be extremely important that information about the background noise levels recorded on both systems be declared in the report, as well as the sampling rates, dynamic range, and frequency response of the two systems. (3) To provide a set of minimum metrics for characterizing and reporting marine animal vocalization features, particularly those features that concern the concept of source level. It is thus hoped that greater consistency in reporting sound characteristics is achieved. (4) To recommend a set of additional procedures that would permit data collected by non-specialists on non-research platforms to be used for research into marine animal source levels, directionality, and ocean sound propagation loss, which in turn may eventually have relevance to studies of sound impacts on marine mammals. For example, PAM monitoring that attains type C or type D criteria would provide data that would be very useful to study these topics. (5) To facilitate the drafting of regulations, cruise plans, and reports by standardizing some basic procedures for collecting acoustic data for PAM purposes. Rather than reiterating these procedures, these documents may simply refer to the ANSI document for the essential requirements. (6) To ensure that reports that use PAM data for non-research purposes explicitly state the limitations and uncertainties associated with PAM. (7) To encourage the market to develop an expendable, calibrated sound source to permit PAM detection range to be empirically measured. _______________________________________________ MARMAM mailing list [email protected] http://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam
