Acoustics

Latest news

NIWA researchers are out on Lake Whakatipu for the next week mapping the lake floor for the first time.

The critically endangered Māui dolphin is getting a helping hand from scientists this month who are beginning a year-long research project to listen in on them.

The findings of the most complex underwater coastal survey of the seafloor undertaken in New Zealand, including previously undiscovered natural features and sunken boats, are to be formally presented to the Marlborough community tomorrow.
Scientists have discovered an extensive body of freshwater off the Canterbury coast between Timaru and Ashburton.

Latest videos

Mapping the oceans through citizen science

Are you interested in helping map the seafloor? Small data loggers can be used to record information from the positioning (GPS) and echosounding (fish finder) systems of any type of vessel. The Seabed 2030 team can even send a technician to install the device correctly for you.

If you are in the Pacific and keen to be part of a growing community for the Crowdsourced Bathymetry Initiative, please contact: [email protected]

For more info, visit seabed2030.org/crowd-sourced-bathymetry.

Seabed 2030 - filling in the gaps

We know more about the surface of the moon than we do about the surface of our seafloor, with only about 20% of the seafloor properly mapped. The Seabed 2030 project aims to change that with an ambitious target of 100% mapped by 2030. It’s being coordinated through four regional centres around the globe, with NIWA, GNS Science, and Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) jointly governing the South and West Pacific Ocean Regional Center. The area is equivalent to a quarter of the world’s oceans - some 124 million km2. It covers the Pacific Ocean from South America to Australia and the western part of the Northern Pacific Ocean to Japan, taking in 39 countries and territories, and the world’s two deepest trenches. People with common commercial echosounders and Global Navigation Satellite System receivers can be part of this global effort. Check out https://www.gebco.net/about_us/contributing_data/ for more info.

Eavesdropping on sperm whales in Antarctica

Whale researchers such as NIWA Marine Mammal Acoustician Dr Giacomo Giorli are eagerly awaiting the return of RV Tangaroa after its five-week Antarctic voyage.

The moorings team is bringing back precious data from long-term underwater listening devices which the researchers are using to search for signs that sperm whales are finally returning in numbers to the Ross Sea.

Sperm whales were targeted by the whaling industry in the 19th and 20th centuries and more than 70 per cent of their population wiped out. Scientists are now trying to establish if the sperm whale population is making a comeback.
Fisheries scientists use an autonomous vessel

A six metre-long autonomous trimaran fitted out with a battery-powered NIWA echosounder is being used at sea as part of an innovative research collaboration with specialist New Zealand drone company X-Craft Enterprises. The aim is to collect good quality fisheries acoustic data by combining autonomous surface vessels (ASVs) and echosounding technology. Fisheries scientist Richard O’Driscoll is very hopeful this type of technology will help complement the work being done on the larger research ships, as NIWA is trying to improve the way it collects information on fisheries by using alternative survey platforms.

The main advantages of using this type of autonomous vessel to do research are:

(1) It is quiet, minimising fish avoidance;

(2) It is cost-effective, potentially allowing acoustic surveys to be carried out more frequently;

(3) It can cover areas not covered by large research or fishing vessels (e.g nearshore and in lakes).

In its current configuration, the ASV being used by NIWA can collect good quality acoustic data in depths of at least 50 metres and at speeds of over five knots. The electrically-powered vessel can be programmed to follow a specific track, is very quiet, and is equipped with anti-collision technology. The echosounder, attached to the bow of X-Craft's sleek autonomous vessel records internally and is configured to start and stop whenever it gets power.

Although fisheries researchers are now able to combine technologies like these to collect more data at a lower cost, the autonomous vessels will never fully replace larger research ships. Physical sampling to identify what species of fish you are looking at is difficult, for instance. Potential applications for the current technology include NIWA inshore and freshwater fisheries surveys. The next phase of the project is to install and trial a deepwater acoustic system on the ASV, capable of collecting acoustic  data to depths of 1000 m in open ocean environments.

KAIKOURA - AUV

This campaign brings together two Eurofleets+ Infrastructures, the RV Tangaroa - the flagship research vessel of New Zealand’s National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) - and the autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) from Sweden’s University of Gothenburg (UGOT). 

Eurofleets+ aims at providing, integrating and improving access to key research vessels and associated major equipment. It includes innovative initiatives to ensure a more efficient and coordinated operation of fleets, to develop synergies with complementary observing systems and infrastructures and to set-up sustained integrated services to the user communities. 

Rob Christie, Manager Marine Resources, talks about the important relationship NIWA has with Eurofleets+
The primary objective is to re-map the Kaikōura Canyon and nearby targets using an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV RAN operated by the University of Gothenburg, Sweden).
Hoki is New Zealand's largest finfish fishery. During this voyage, hoki eggs reveal a few secrets that surprise scientists.
Dr Yoann Ladroit, Whakaari TAN2007 Voyage

NIWA Marine Acoustician Dr Yoann Ladroit uses multi-beam echo sounders to map the bathymetry around Whakaari/White Island very quickly and with pinpoint precision.

Yoann is also leading research into using acoustics to find underwater gas bubble flares and then compare these to the chemical composition of water samples taken at the same locations.

Arne Pallentin, Whakaari TAN2007 Voyage

NIWA marine geologist Arne Pallentin is looking for telltale gas bubble 'flares"—using a multibeam echosounder—that indicate new volcanic activity in the Calypso Vent Field. The research adds to a series of previous surveys that show how volcanic activity is changing over time in the surrounding Bay of Plenty area.

Joshu Mountjoy, Whakaari Voyage

Marine geologist - Dr Joshu Mountjoy - is mapping the seafloor landscape around Whakaari/White Island to understand how much sediment was dislodged in the eruption and where it has gone.

“What is visible from sea level is only a small part of the volcano – most of it is under the ocean so we want to see how that submarine environment has changed.”

During the TAN2007 voyage NIWA scientists headed to the waters around Whakaari/White Island in the Bay of Plenty to survey changes to the seafloor since the volcanic eruption in December 2019. They surveyed the chemical composition of gases released by the hydrothermal vents on what is known as the Calypso vent field in the Bay of Plenty.
Fisheries researchers combine technologies to collect more data at a lower cost.
Nick Eton, electronics support, knows a thing or two about fixing things at sea!
Scientists have discovered an extensive body of freshwater off the Canterbury coast between Timaru and Ashburton.
NIWA researchers are out on Lake Whakatipu for the next week mapping the lake floor for the first time.
Marlborough Sounds Seabed Survey

Hidden under the surface of the Marlborough Sounds is a fascinating underwater world of shipwrecks and seabed ridges the size of sand dunes in the Sahara Desert.

Marlborough Sounds Survey

NIWA in association with Discovery Marine Limited, carried out the hydrographic survey on behalf of the Marlborough District Council and Land Information New Zealand.

NIWA's research vessels Ikatere and Rukuwai spent more than nine months on the water using the latest multibeam echo sounder technology to gather more than 5 billion data points and reveal exactly what lies beneath the surface.

Southern right whale observed in Wellington Harbour

On 4 July 2018 NIWA photographer Dave Allen took some close-up footage of a southern right whale seen surfacing in Wellington Harbour for several days. Dave worked alongside marine ecologist Kim Goetz, fisheries technician Pete Notman and Department of Conservation staff to take a biopsy sample for genetic analysis and acoustic recordings taken for NIWA's ongoing whale research.

The critically endangered Māui dolphin is getting a helping hand from scientists this month who are beginning a year-long research project to listen in on them.

Water flow instruments range from small acoustic doppler current profiling devices or small prop type meters for measuring very low flows in small streams, up to NIWA's flood-gauging POEM.

The findings of the most complex underwater coastal survey of the seafloor undertaken in New Zealand, including previously undiscovered natural features and sunken boats, are to be formally presented to the Marlborough community tomorrow.

Scientists from around the globe are meeting in Nelson next week to discuss the latest advances in fisheries technology.

Unique research records rare whale species in Cook Strait

The sounds of whales and dolphins rarely seen in New Zealand waters have been recorded by NIWA scientist in a pioneering underwater sound project. In 2016 NIWA marine ecologist Dr Kim Goetz led a programme to deploy seven acoustic moorings in Cook Strait that recorded the sounds of marine mammals for six months until they were retrieved in December.

The sounds of whales and dolphins rarely seen in New Zealand waters have been recorded by a NIWA scientist in a pioneering underwater sound project.

Earthquake's unseen impact

NIWA scientists on board RV Ikatere have been surveying the coastal area around Kaikoura for the first time since November's magnitude 7.8 earthquake in 2016. Their work has revealed significant changes to the sea floor...

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All staff working on this subject

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Marine Ecologist - Quantitative Modeller
Regional Manager - Christchurch
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Fisheries Acoustics Scientist
Strategy Manager - Oceans
Marine Geology Technician
Marine Electronics Technician
Regional Manager - Wellington
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