Compatibility in acoustic telemetry

Abstract Acoustic telemetry is widely used to investigate aquatic animal movement. Pulse position modulation (PPM) is an acoustic telemetry method that allows multiple unique identification codes to be transmitted at a single acoustic frequency, typically in the 69 kHz range. However, because the po...

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Main Authors: Jan Reubens, Kim Aarestrup, Carl Meyer, Andy Moore, Finn Okland, Pedro Afonso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-08-01
Series:Animal Biotelemetry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40317-021-00253-z
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spelling doaj-d94e128b98a24904a3384a9b508802b62021-08-29T11:42:49ZengBMCAnimal Biotelemetry2050-33852021-08-01911610.1186/s40317-021-00253-zCompatibility in acoustic telemetryJan Reubens0Kim Aarestrup1Carl Meyer2Andy Moore3Finn Okland4Pedro Afonso5Flanders Marine InstituteNational Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of DenmarkHawai’i Institute of Marine Biology, Hawaii University at ManoaCenter for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture ScienceNorwegian Institute for Nature ResearchOKEANOS/Institute of Marine Research, University of the AzoresAbstract Acoustic telemetry is widely used to investigate aquatic animal movement. Pulse position modulation (PPM) is an acoustic telemetry method that allows multiple unique identification codes to be transmitted at a single acoustic frequency, typically in the 69 kHz range. However, because the potential number of unique identification codes (i.e. tags) is ultimately limited by the number of pulses in the PPM signal, this poses a practical limitation. In addition, different manufacturers have developed different approaches to encoding the transmitted data, hampering compatibility across brands. A lack of broad compatibility across telemetry systems restricts users to a single manufacturer and operating system, reduces market competition and limits innovation. As the aquatic animal tracking research community organises towards networks of devices and data, incompatibility becomes more problematic and jeopardizes the unique scientific benefits offered by the networking approach. Here, we make a plea for collaboration among the manufacturers globally and propose a set of open protocols to ensure equipment interoperability as a medium-term solution.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40317-021-00253-zAcoustic telemetryEquipment interoperabilityOpen ProtocolPulse position modulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jan Reubens
Kim Aarestrup
Carl Meyer
Andy Moore
Finn Okland
Pedro Afonso
spellingShingle Jan Reubens
Kim Aarestrup
Carl Meyer
Andy Moore
Finn Okland
Pedro Afonso
Compatibility in acoustic telemetry
Animal Biotelemetry
Acoustic telemetry
Equipment interoperability
Open Protocol
Pulse position modulation
author_facet Jan Reubens
Kim Aarestrup
Carl Meyer
Andy Moore
Finn Okland
Pedro Afonso
author_sort Jan Reubens
title Compatibility in acoustic telemetry
title_short Compatibility in acoustic telemetry
title_full Compatibility in acoustic telemetry
title_fullStr Compatibility in acoustic telemetry
title_full_unstemmed Compatibility in acoustic telemetry
title_sort compatibility in acoustic telemetry
publisher BMC
series Animal Biotelemetry
issn 2050-3385
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract Acoustic telemetry is widely used to investigate aquatic animal movement. Pulse position modulation (PPM) is an acoustic telemetry method that allows multiple unique identification codes to be transmitted at a single acoustic frequency, typically in the 69 kHz range. However, because the potential number of unique identification codes (i.e. tags) is ultimately limited by the number of pulses in the PPM signal, this poses a practical limitation. In addition, different manufacturers have developed different approaches to encoding the transmitted data, hampering compatibility across brands. A lack of broad compatibility across telemetry systems restricts users to a single manufacturer and operating system, reduces market competition and limits innovation. As the aquatic animal tracking research community organises towards networks of devices and data, incompatibility becomes more problematic and jeopardizes the unique scientific benefits offered by the networking approach. Here, we make a plea for collaboration among the manufacturers globally and propose a set of open protocols to ensure equipment interoperability as a medium-term solution.
topic Acoustic telemetry
Equipment interoperability
Open Protocol
Pulse position modulation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40317-021-00253-z
work_keys_str_mv AT janreubens compatibilityinacoustictelemetry
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AT pedroafonso compatibilityinacoustictelemetry
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