4.3 Article

Validation of an acoustic location system to monitor Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii) long calls

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY
Volume 77, Issue 7, Pages 767-776

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajp.22398

Keywords

microphone array; triangulation; passive recording and monitoring; loud call

Categories

Funding

  1. Indonesian Institute of Science (LIPI)
  2. Indonesian State Ministry for Research and Technology (RisTek)
  3. Director General Departemen Kehutanan (PHKA)
  4. Departamen Dalam Negri
  5. local government in Central Kalimantan
  6. BKSDA Palangkaraya
  7. Bornean Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOSF)
  8. MAWAS in Palangkaraya

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The long call is an important vocal communication signal in the widely dispersed, semi-solitary orangutan. Long calls affect individuals' ranging behavior and mediate social relationships and regulate encounters between dispersed individuals in a dense rainforest. The aim of this study was to test the utility of an Acoustic Location System (ALS) for recording and triangulating the loud calls of free-living primates. We developed and validated a data extraction protocol for an ALS used to record wild orangutan males' long calls at the Tuanan field site (Central Kalimantan). We installed an ALS in a grid of 300ha, containing 20 SM2+ recorders placed in a regular lattice at 500m intervals, to monitor the distribution of calling males in the area. The validated system had the following main features: (i) a user-trained software algorithm (Song Scope) that reliably recognized orangutan long calls from sound files at distances up to 700m from the nearest recorder, resulting in a total area of approximately 900ha that could be monitored continuously; (ii) acoustic location of calling males up to 200m outside the microphone grid, which meant that within an area of approximately 450ha, call locations could be calculated through triangulation. The mean accuracy was 58m, an error that is modest relative to orangutan mobility and average inter-individual distances. We conclude that an ALS is a highly effective method for detecting long-distance calls of wild primates and triangulating their position. In combination with conventional individual focal follow data, an ALS can greatly improve our knowledge of orangutans' social organization, and is readily adaptable for studying other highly vocal animals. Am. J. Primatol. 77:767-776, 2015. (c) 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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