The Chinese White Dolphin, or Sousa Chinensis, is renowned as the “panda of the ocean.” It was classed as “vulnerable” on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. The Pearl River Delta is home to the world’s largest population of Chinese white dolphins.
An OceanAlpha M40P autonomous survey vessel equipped with sonar devices sailed on the designed route within the natural reserve. The acoustic equipment towed at the stern quietly recorded the sounds of the white dolphins, which provide essential data support for the scientific research.
“Every voice track represents a Chinese White Dolphin. We have successfully applied sonar devices and acoustic technologies to our population and distribution feature research,” said Chen Yuwei, an engineer with the Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Fishing boats used to be the primary tool for Chinese white dolphin study. To avoid noise interference generated by the traditional crafts, the professionals usually tow the sonars by ropes up to 80 meters or even longer, which is challenging to operate and dangerous for the towed acoustic devices.
The OceanAlpha M40P USV is electrically driven, generating little noise, which won’t scare the dolphin and provide a quiet working condition for acoustic equipment. Thus, the towing rope for the acoustic equipment can be shortened to 10 meters, and the instrument’s safety is also guaranteed.
“We observed that Chinese White Dolphins here (in the National Nature Reserve) are mostly young. It is good to see that there are young or baby dolphins. The dolphin population is moving towards a strong trend,” said Chen Xi, the leader of the technology department with Pearl River Estuary Chinese White Dolphin National Nature Reserve.
Besides population exploitation, USV technologies also play significant roles in guarding the natural reserve. An autonomous surveillance and rescue vessel is also used for daily patrolling along the set route. Radar and AIS (Automatic Identification System) are applied to real-time monitoring, automatically recording vessels’ sailing paths and alerting suspected vessels. Natural reserve protection has become more intelligent and efficient with advanced USV technologies.