Please select your home edition
Edition
Henri-Lloyd - For the Obsessed

Spooky sounds at sea: Listening for bats offshore with USVs

by Saildrone 26 Oct 2023 14:07 UTC
A Saildrone Explorer equipped with an ultrasonic microphone spent a month surveying near South Farallon Island, an area known as a migratory bat roost © Saildrone

There are more than 1,400 species of bats, and bats make up about 25% of all mammals. In North America, bats contribute about $23 billion in pest control services to the agricultural industry.

Around the world, bats are crucial for pollination and seed dispersal and consume insects that transmit diseases. But, bats are under threat from habitat destruction and other human activities.

Bats aren't actually blind, they have extremely sensitive eyes that allow them to see in the dark. But to navigate and hunt, most bats use sound. Known as echolocation, bats listen to the echoes of their ultrasonic calls bouncing off their prey—fishing bats have echolocation so sophisticated they can detect the fin of a minnow protruding only two millimeters above the water's surface.

Saildrone and Bat Conservation International (BCI), a global conservation organization dedicated to ending bat extinctions, have completed a first-of-its-kind mission to study bats in an offshore environment using the bats' own echolocation calls.

Bats have been known to fly from the US mainland to Hawaii in about three days, at an average speed of 60 mph, and, flying at speeds up to 100 mph, the Mexican free-tailed bat is the fastest bat in the world.

The US Geological Survey studies bat roosting, disease, long-distance movements, and migratory bat species like the hoary bat, the silver-haired bat, the western red bat, and the Mexican free-tailed bat along the US West Coast and offshore. Offshore sites are typically deployed on coastal rock formations, which are difficult to reach and maintain.

Saildrone and BCI equipped a Saildrone Explorer with an ultrasonic microphone, mounted at the top of the wing. Saildrones are deployed from any dock and transit autonomously to and from the area of operation. Powered by wind for propulsion and solar for onboard sensors, they are virtually silent and have a zero operational carbon footprint.

From September 2-October 2, the saildrone sampled near a known offshore bat migratory roost on South Farallon Island, approximately 25 nm west of the Golden Gate Bridge. Over 31 nights, the saildrone recorded over two hours of bat activity—965 bat calls across five known species, including 276 hoary bats and 209 Mexican free-tailed bats.

"With a zero operational carbon footprint, no impact to the marine ecosystem, a diverse payload, and the ability to stay at sea for extended lengths of time, Saildrone is ideally suited to provide never-before-collected information about offshore bat migration patterns. This important information will allow us to understand and minimize the potential impacts of offshore wind energy development on bat populations," said Michael Whitby, BCI director of Bats & Wind Energy Program.

The mission is funded by the Department of Energy in collaboration with EPRI, an independent, non-profit energy research and development organization. The goal is to help demonstrate the viability of the Saildrone platform as a tool for bat research and environmental impact assessments to evaluate the risk of offshore wind energy development to bats.

"The need to monitor bats in the offshore environment is increasing," said Christian Newman, technical executive for environmental aspects of renewables, EPRI. "EPRI's expertise and focus on collaboration supports the project team well, helping test a new type of technology that can help fill in data gaps for offshore wind decision-makers."

Renewable energy solutions like offshore wind are seen as a key element of reducing global demand on fossil fuels. BCI works with diverse partners, including the offshore wind industry, to facilitate renewable energy while minimizing impacts on bat species and develop technological tools to better understand and minimize fatality risk to species at proposed OSW sites.

Saildrone USVs also carry a standard suite of science-grade instruments to collect meteorological and oceanographic data. This data is useful for better understanding bat behavior, what conditions put bats more at risk for collisions, and providing environmental data for modeling potential offshore wind sites.

Saildrone's underwater acoustic data collection includes surveys of fish biomass for sustainable fisheries management and has previously used sound to track sharks, marine mammals, and crustaceans. The company is currently developing new underwater acoustic technology to detect, classify, and localize marine mammals, especially whales, which are highly sensitive to underwater noise.

"Saildrone's quiet platform has long been valued for underwater acoustic research, and we are thrilled to leverage it in this new way to help protect the world's bat populations," said Cristina Castillo, Saildrone Sr. Program Manager for Ocean Data Programs.

Related Articles

Saildrone fleet reaches new milestone
1,000,000 nautical miles and 32,000 days at sea The accomplishment comes just 10 years after the first Saildrone USV crossed the Pacific Ocean and confirms Saildrone's position as the only proven long-range, long-endurance uncrewed platform. Posted on 18 Oct 2023
Explorer SD 1045 entered into Guinness Book
Saildrone Explorer SD 1045 measured the “highest wind speed recorded by a USV” during Hurricane Sam Saildrone Explorer SD 1045 made global headlines when it spent 24 hours inside Category 4 Hurricane Sam, delivering the world's first video footage from inside a major hurricane barreling across the Atlantic Ocean. Posted on 13 Sep 2023
Saildrone sails back into the eye of the storm
SD 1045 is one of 12 saildrones collecting data about hurricane rapid intensification for NOAA Saildrone team—mission managers, pilots, and software and hardware engineers—along with our science partners at the NOAA, anxiously watched as Saildrone Explorer SD 1045 sailed closer and closer to a category 4 hurricane. Posted on 19 Jul 2023
More saildrones deploy for the hurricane season
3rd Atlantic Hurricane mission will provide data to NOAA researchers to better understand the storms The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) predicts a "near normal" hurricane season—but it only takes one big storm to cause widespread damage to coastal communities. Posted on 30 Jun 2023
ABS issues first Approval in Principle certificate
To Saildrone, including the first AIP for a 33-foot commercial uncrewed surface vehicle The American Bureau of Shipping (ABS) has issued Approval in Principle (AIP) certificates to Saildrone, including the first AIP for a 33-foot (10-meter) commercial uncrewed surface vehicle (USV), the Saildrone Voyager. Posted on 9 Jun 2023
Capturing the ocean carbon dioxide signal
Societal emissions of climate-warming carbon dioxide have risen year-on-year since the mid-1800s To date, societal emissions of climate-warming carbon dioxide (CO2) have risen year-on-year since the mid-1800s. Over this period, the ocean has absorbed about one third of the emitted CO2 pollution. Posted on 8 Jun 2023
Saildrone scales production of new mid-size USV
Meet the new method for advanced data-collection capabilities at sea To meet the growing demand for advanced data-collection capabilities at sea, Saildrone has developed the 33-foot Voyager designed for near-shore ocean mapping and maritime security missions. Posted on 29 Mar 2023
Saildrone completes Alaska Ocean Mapping Mission
Surveying more than 45,000 square kilometers of previously unknown ocean floor Saildrone surveyed more than 45,000 square kilometers of previously unknown ocean floor around Alaska's Aleutian Islands and off the California coast to address ocean exploration gaps in remote areas. Posted on 9 Mar 2023
Hacking the Anthropocene with Survivalist Robots
New mini-documentary from Freethink* Media's Hard Reset series Saildrone is thrilled to announce this new mini-documentary from Freethink* Media's Hard Reset series! Posted on 17 Dec 2022
Saildrone captures video inside Hurricane Fiona
NOAA and Saildrone are hurricane chasing with uncrewed wind-powered vehicles Today, Saildrone, Inc. and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) released video footage gathered by a Saildrone uncrewed surface vehicle (USV) from inside Hurricane Fiona, a Category 4 hurricane, barreling across the Atlantic Ocean. Posted on 23 Sep 2022
Cure Marine - Cure 55 - FOOTERCrewsaver 2021 Safetyline FOOTERSelden 2020 - FOOTER