“Is it like a tiny submarine?”
“I suppose you could say so, only that it is attached to the streamer. It is made up of a body with three wings, and the body is included as a joining piece in the streamer, preferably one for every 300 metres of cable. A seismic streamer can reach lengths of up to 12 km, and the largest trails can comprise more than 15 parallel streamers.”
“It would be a real mess if they all got tangled together?”
“Absolutely. And there you have the perfect argument for using eBird. It gives you much more operational control over the streamers.”
“So by having the streamers as parallel as possible provides more accurate readings. Why is that?”
“The hydrophones are fitted tightly together along the streamer. However, if there is too much distance between two streamers, there will be areas with poor readings. These readings have an extremely high requirement on sensitivity. The streamers are often at distances of 50 to 100 metres from each other. So an entire spread, as we call it, can quickly be 1.5 km wide on the largest boats.”
“And with lengths of up to 12 km, we’re talking about a huge area.”
“That’s right. We’re actually dealing with the largest man-made movable object ever.”
“The seismic boat pulls the spread through the water while somebody sits and monitors the eBirds which in turn make sure that the streamers remain as parallel as possible?”