This project processes the telemetry from Artic-region whales tagged with
satellite transmitters that record depth and duration of their dives.
Geo-tracking was also done, but handled separately from this analysis.
The transmitters record information about depth and duration of dives, and when the whale surfaces, attempts to burst-transmit to any ARGOS satellite available. Because band-width is very limited, and the whale may spend only a short time at the surface, the data format used is very compact. When ARGOS comes in range of a ground station, the data is downloaded. Eventually batches of accumulated data from a given tag are made available to end-users.
To produce the Excel-style format required by the end-users, the dive analysis software must 'decode' the terse telemetry format, and handle the following conditions:
- data drop-outs
- duplicate data
- garbled data
After this step, the sanitized data is processed to provide derived information of interest to marine-mammal biologists and wildlife managers, such as
- descent and ascent dive-rates
- maximum dive depth
- dive duration
- time spent in dive-depth 'bins'
- non-feeding intervals
and so forth...
Sample data available to browse.
A slightly more technical introduction to the analysis system at available at http://www.davidhoekman.com/argos
For this project, the whales tagged were belugas and narwhals around Greenland and in the Canadian high Artic. The focus of the research was to investigate the depth and duration of their dives, as this yields information about their feeding behaviors. The transmitter technology is from from Wildlife Computers. More information available at the Web site http://www.wildlifecomputers.com