Spatiotemporal variations in the acoustic presence of dugongs and vessel traffic around Talibong Island, Thailand: Inputs for local coastal management from passive acoustical aspects

Examining the spatiotemporal habitat use by marine megafauna and human activities at a fine scale is important to achieve harmonised management of coastal areas. Passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) can provide this information by observing animal vocalisations and the sounds generated by motorised ves...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ocean & coastal management 2023-11, Vol.245, p.106810, Article 106810
Hauptverfasser: Tanaka, Kotaro, Ichikawa, Kotaro, Akamatsu, Tomonari, Kittiwattanawong, Kongkiat, Arai, Nobuaki, Mitamura, Hiromichi
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container_start_page 106810
container_title Ocean & coastal management
container_volume 245
creator Tanaka, Kotaro
Ichikawa, Kotaro
Akamatsu, Tomonari
Kittiwattanawong, Kongkiat
Arai, Nobuaki
Mitamura, Hiromichi
description Examining the spatiotemporal habitat use by marine megafauna and human activities at a fine scale is important to achieve harmonised management of coastal areas. Passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) can provide this information by observing animal vocalisations and the sounds generated by motorised vessels. Dugongs (Dugong dugon), which are endangered herbivorous mammals inhabiting coastal seas, communicate through social calls. Although their spatiotemporal acoustic presence on a fine scale could assist in prioritizing local marine spatial planning, such knowledge is limited. To address this gap, we examined the spatiotemporal pattern of the acoustic presence of dugongs and its correlation with environmental and anthropological factors; additionally, the overlap of these areas with vessel traffic was illustrated. Underwater recorders were deployed at 11 locations around Talibong Island, Thailand, for one month in both rainy and dry seasons. Based on the recorded sound stream, dugong calls and vessel sounds were automatically detected using custom-made software, and false detections were removed by manual examinations. In 2019 and 2020, 1933 h and 2719 h of recordings, respectively, revealed that while dugongs had a clear spatial preference for vocal communication at some locations, their temporal patterns varied among locations. Further, their acoustic presence was significantly correlated with environmental and anthropological factors at some locations, while these factors varied among other locations. However, the distribution of vessel traffic was spatially and temporally stable. These results suggested that (1) spatial management of vocalisation areas can effectively conserve dugongs by protecting their social behaviour and (2) temporal planning may reduce the potential disturbance risk to dugongs. Moreover, to achieve harmonised marine spatial planning in coastal areas, the PAM approach for social calls can be effectively employed to provide a unique layer of habitat use for vocalising species and vessel traffic on a fine scale. •Dugongs' acoustic presence and vessel traffic were examined in coastal Thailand.•Spatiotemporal overlap was illustrated on a fine scale.•This study provides a unique layer for harmonised local coastal management.•Passive acoustic monitoring can help in setting locally-optimized management measures.
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In 2019 and 2020, 1933 h and 2719 h of recordings, respectively, revealed that while dugongs had a clear spatial preference for vocal communication at some locations, their temporal patterns varied among locations. Further, their acoustic presence was significantly correlated with environmental and anthropological factors at some locations, while these factors varied among other locations. However, the distribution of vessel traffic was spatially and temporally stable. These results suggested that (1) spatial management of vocalisation areas can effectively conserve dugongs by protecting their social behaviour and (2) temporal planning may reduce the potential disturbance risk to dugongs. 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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects acoustics
Bioacoustics
coastal zone management
computer software
Dugong conservation
Dugong dugon
fauna
habitat preferences
Habitat use
herbivores
humans
Marine spatial planning
risk
social behavior
species
streams
Thailand
traffic
Vocal communication
vocalization
title Spatiotemporal variations in the acoustic presence of dugongs and vessel traffic around Talibong Island, Thailand: Inputs for local coastal management from passive acoustical aspects
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