An open-source bio-logger for studying cetacean behavior and communication

  • Daniel M. Vogt
  • , Joseph DelPreto
  • , Michael Salino-Hugg
  • , Matthew R. Cummings
  • , Michael A. Bell
  • , Aidan Kenny
  • , Peter Malkin
  • , Alyssa M. Hernandez
  • , Andrew L. Wright
  • , Molly A. Duncan
  • , Matthew R. Davidsen
  • , Kaveet Grewal
  • , Saksham Ahuja
  • , Kelly Ostrom
  • , Matthew Garcia
  • , Phillip Shahviri
  • , Chanuth Weeraratna
  • , Hannah Zink
  • , Stefano Pagani
  • , Germain Meyer
  • Roee Diamant, Daniela Rus, David F. Gruber, Shane Gero, Robert J. Wood

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Over the past decade, bioacoustics associated with diverse marine life has become the focus of increasing research. While fixed acoustic devices play important roles in characterizing localized soundscapes, animal-worn devices that record audio alongside physiological metrics provide richer portals to understanding cetacean communication and characterizing sounds in their environment. To facilitate scaling the collection of such multimodal datasets for deep learning applications and to encourage rapid prototyping for new recording capabilities, we present an open-source noninvasive bio-logger that can be deployed on marine animals to record high-quality audio synchronized with an extensible suite of behavioral and environmental sensors. The current implementation is tailored to investigating sperm whale communication and biology. It features four suction cups, three high-bandwidth synchronized hydrophones for audio analysis including directionality, GPS logging and transmission, and sensors for pressure, motion, orientation, temperature, and light. Its hardware and software are both open-source, with designs, fabrication details, and code available online. Lab-based experiments characterize and validate performance including shear adhesion forces, withstanding pressures equivalent to 560 m depths, battery life up to 16.8 hours, audio sensitivity of –205 dB re FS/μPa with a 96 dB dynamic range, multi-threaded data acquisition, drone-based deployments, and GPS-based recoveries. Field experiments record sperm whale vocalizations and behaviors spanning 10 deployments, 44 hours of recording, 20 dives, and up to 967 m depths. Altogether, this platform aims to advance the understanding of marine animal biology and communication within the rapidly evolving and intersecting areas of robotics, bioacoustics, and machine learning.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere0337093
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume20
Issue number12 December
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Vogt et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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