4.7 Article

The use of acoustic indices to determine avian species richness in audio-recordings of the environment

Journal

ECOLOGICAL INFORMATICS
Volume 21, Issue -, Pages 110-119

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoinf.2013.11.007

Keywords

Acoustic sensing; Biodiversity monitoring; Species richness; Acoustic sampling; Automated bird call analysis; Ecological indices

Categories

Funding

  1. QUT Science and Engineering Faculty
  2. QUT Institute of Future Environments
  3. QUT Samford Ecological Research Facility (SERF)
  4. Microsoft QUT eResearch Centre (MQUTER)

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Interpreting acoustic recordings of the natural environment is an increasingly important technique for ecologists wishing to monitor terrestrial ecosystems. Technological advances make it possible to accumulate many more recordings than can be listened to or interpreted, thereby necessitating automated assistance to identify elements in the soundscape. In this paper we examine the problem of estimating avian species richness by sampling from very long acoustic recordings. We work with data recorded under natural conditions and with all the attendant problems of undefined and unconstrained acoustic content (such as wind, rain, traffic, etc.) which can mask content of interest (in our case, bird calls). We describe 14 acoustic indices calculated at one minute resolution for the duration of a 24 hour recording. An acoustic index is a statistic that summarizes some aspect of the structure and distribution of acoustic energy and information in a recording. Some of the indices we calculate are standard (e.g. signal-to-noise ratio), some have been reported useful for the detection of bioacoustic activity (e.g. temporal and spectral entropies) and some are directed to avian sources (spectral persistence of whistles). We rank the one minute segments of a 24 hour recording in descending order according to an acoustic richness score which is derived from a single index or a weighted combination of two or more. We describe combinations of indices which lead to more efficient estimates of species richness than random sampling from the same recording, where efficiency is defined as total species identified for given listening effort Using random sampling, we achieve a 53% increase in species recognized over traditional field surveys and an increase of 87% using combinations of indices to direct the sampling. We also demonstrate how combinations of the same indices can be used to detect long duration acoustic events (such as heavy rain and cicada chorus) and to construct long duration (24 h) spectrograms. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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