Broadband sound propagation in a seagrass meadow throughout a diurnal cycle

Academic Article

Abstract

  • Acoustic propagation measurements were conducted in a Thalassia testudinum meadow in the Lower Laguna Madre, a shallow bay on the Texas Gulf of Mexico coast. A piezoelectric source transmitted frequency-modulated chirps (0.1 to 100 kHz) over a 24-h period during which oceanographic probes measured environmental parameters including dissolved oxygen and solar irradiance. Compared to a nearby less vegetated area, the received level was lower by as much as 30 dB during the early morning hours. At the peak of photosynthesis-driven bubble production in the late afternoon, an additional decrease in level of 11 dB was observed.
  • Authors

  • Lee, Kevin M
  • Ballard, Megan S
  • Venegas, Gabe
  • Sagers, Jason D
  • McNeese, Andrew R
  • Johnson, Jay R
  • Wilson, Preston S
  • Rahman, Abdullah F
  • Status

    Publication Date

  • October 1, 2019
  • Has Subject Area

    Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Start Page

  • EL335
  • End Page

  • EL341
  • Volume

  • 146
  • Issue

  • 4