| Project Summary:
The "Clickable Ecosystem" is being developed by Stuart Gage and his students at Michigan State University.
Access via the web to a digital library of environmental acoustics enables the public to select different
places at different times of the day to hear the "heartbeat" of ecosystems and it allows them to assess
ecosystem health. The system is based on ½ hourly recording of acoustic signals to assess changes in the
environment. A computer system automates recording of acoustic signals, weather data and images.
Immediately after being recorded, acoustic signals are sent to a data server in the Computational Ecology
and Visualization Laboratory via wireless, broadband, DSL or satellite communications depending on
location and network availability.

When an acoustic signal is received by the server from a location, each of 11-1 KHz frequency bands
is analyzed and the mean acoustic intensity is computed. Biological indices are also computed based
on ratios of acoustic intensity in selected frequency bands. Acoustic signals, analysis results,
ancillary observations (temperature, precipitation) and images are placed into a digital library using
relational database technology and a web tool provides near real-time access to the library.
Forty eight acoustic signals recorded each day provide an acoustic signature of each location
monitored. The library of acoustic signals provides a rich accessible database to examine sounds
produced by biological, mechanical and natural physical phenomena in the environment.
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