Soundscapes Spanning the Oregon Margin and 300 Miles Offshore

Figure 32: An example of a daily spectrogram generated by the RCA Data Team spectrogram viewer. A Humpback whale song is visible throughout the day at ~40-1000 Hz. A chorus of Fin Whale vocalizations is visible at 20-40 Hz. A weather event is visible at 0100, and a ship passage at 2200.

The Regional Cabled Array (RCA) operates six broadband hydrophones that continuously capture soundscapes across the Cascadia Margin (Oregon Shelf and Oregon Offshore – seafloor), near the toe of the margin (Slope Base -seafloor and 200 m water depth) and 300 miles offshore at Axial Seamount (Axial Base – seafloor and 200 m water depth). The hydrophones, operational since 2014, capture signals from 10-64,000 Hz, including vessel traffic, marine mammal vocalization, wind, surf, and seismic events. The RCA broadband acoustic archive currently contains forty years (350,000 hours) of acoustic data in miniSeed format.

The RCA Data Team has developed a pipeline that can summarize and visualize a year of hydrophone data in 30 minutes. The spectrograms output (see Figure 32) by this pipeline are now easily accessible through an interactive viewer on the RCA’s Data Dashboard. The spectrogram viewer will make OOI-RCA broadband hydrophone data more searchable and accessible to data users and strengthen QA/QC of RCA acoustic data. Any day of hydrophone data, since 2014, will be viewable in minute/hybrid-millidecade resolution. The pipeline also enables users to convert RCA acoustic data to audio format (FLAC or WAV) in bulk. The spectrogram viewer was developed with input and guidance from the Ocean Data Lab at University of Washington and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute Soundscape team. It utilizes open source acoustic software tools – ooipy, pypam, and mbari-pbp.