Dependence of ocean surface filaments on wind speed: An observational study of North Atlantic right whale habitat
Richard E. Danielson, Hui Shen, Jing Tao, William Perrie

TL;DR
This study investigates how ocean surface filaments observed via SAR are affected by wind speed, revealing an inverse relationship that can improve habitat detection for North Atlantic right whales.
Contribution
It introduces a wind speed adjustment method for SAR filament contrast analysis, enhancing habitat detection accuracy for marine mammals.
Findings
Inverse relationship between SAR contrast and wind speed quantified.
Wind speed weighting improves correlation in filament analysis.
Enhanced habitat detection potential for North Atlantic right whales.
Abstract
Coherent filaments at the ocean surface often appear to be transient watermass boundaries, where currents converge, surfactants accumulate, and frontal structure at depth can possibly delineate enhanced biological activity in the upper water column. Spaceborne synthetic aperture radar (SAR) permits filaments to be observed at O[1-km] resolution, but extensive coherent structures are more apparent in weaker winds. A wind speed adjustment is proposed for filaments (i.e., contiguous SAR contrasts) of at least 10 km in length. Measures of dependence (distance correlation and the linear and nonlinear components of Pearson correlation) are examined to identify a broad peak in the relationship between filament contrast and weak or moderate values of surface wind speed, where a variable wind speed exponent is employed to maximize these measures. Three locations of recent North Atlantic right…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine animal studies overview · Underwater Acoustics Research · Underwater Vehicles and Communication Systems
