Dear colleagues, On behalf of my co-authors, I am happy to share our recent publication in Ocean & Coastal Management:
Szesciorka, A.R., Severy, M., Ampela, K., Hein, C., Richlen, M., Haxel, J., Clerc, J. (2026). Application of Standardized Metrics for Monitoring Baleen Whales near Marine Construction Activities. Ocean and Coastal Management, 276, 108147. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2026.108147 Article link: https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1mf1M3RKL07TUs Abstract: Effective monitoring is necessary to protect marine mammal species during the construction of offshore infrastructure. The tools for detecting or monitoring marine mammals span traditional (e.g., visual observers, optical cameras), to newer (e.g., passive acoustic monitoring, infrared cameras, tags), and emerging (e.g., satellite imagery, environmental DNA, dimethyl sulfide concentration) technologies. Some are better suited for use during offshore development; however, peer-reviewed literature does not typically evaluate and report on the performance of these various technologies. We define a minimum set of metrics related to efficacy (i.e., confusion matrix, precision and recall, probability of missed mitigation), detection range (i.e., maximum and reliable detection range, spatial resolution), and data delivery (i.e., detection latency, system reliability, temporal resolution) that we recommend are needed to assess the utility of monitoring technologies for this purpose. Following a literature review of relevant studies, we highlight which publications reported these metrics and used multiple technologies to compare relative performance. We also emphasize the benefits of multi-modal approaches and recommend performance assessments through modeling or large-scale collaborative field testing. These metrics will standardize data collection, reporting, and analysis; promote consistent and comparable results; and foster collaboration among developers, regulatory agencies, and scientists. This may lead to the co-development of technology that achieves multiple goals, has greater application, and can answer research questions while collecting data to fulfill permitting requirements. These metrics may also inform decisions on what systems regulatory agencies might consider using and reduce monitoring costs, which is critical to support the marine sector's rapid growth alongside marine mammal conservation. Feel free to reach out to me at [email protected] if you would like a PDF of the paper or if you have any questions. Best, Angela Szesciorka, Ph.D. Research Associate, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Faculty Affiliate, Marine Mammal Institute, Oregon State University
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