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Journal ArticleDOI

Responses of cetaceans to anthropogenic noise

TLDR
In this paper, a review of the effects of anthropogenic noise on cetaceans has been published and their ability to document response(s), or the lack thereof, has improved.
Abstract
1 Since the last thorough review of the effects of anthropogenic noise on cetaceans in 1995, a substantial number of research reports has been published and our ability to document response(s), or the lack thereof, has improved. While rigorous measurement of responses remains important, there is an increased need to interpret observed actions in the context of population-level consequences and acceptable exposure levels. There has been little change in the sources of noise, with the notable addition of noise from wind farms and novel acoustic deterrent and harassment devices (ADDs/AHDs). Overall, the noise sources of primary concern are ships, seismic exploration, sonars of all types and some AHDs. 2 Responses to noise fall into three main categories: behavioural, acoustic and physiological. We reviewed reports of the first two exhaustively, reviewing all peer-reviewed literature since 1995 with exceptions only for emerging subjects. Furthermore, we fully review only those studies for which received sound characteristics (amplitude and frequency) are reported, because interpreting what elicits responses or lack of responses is impossible without this exposure information. Behavioural responses include changes in surfacing, diving and heading patterns. Acoustic responses include changes in type or timing of vocalizations relative to the noise source. For physiological responses we address the issues of auditory threshold shifts and ‘stress’, albeit in a more limited capacity; a thorough review of physiological consequences is beyond the scope of this paper. 3 Overall, we found significant progress in the documentation of responses of cetaceans to various noise sources. However, we are concerned about the lack of investigation into the potential effects of prevalent noise sources such as commercial sonars, depth finders and fisheries acoustics gear. Furthermore, we were surprised at the number of experiments that failed to report any information about the sound exposure experienced by their experimental subjects. Conducting experiments with cetaceans is challenging and opportunities are limited, so use of the latter should be maximized and include rigorous measurements and or modelling of exposure.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Underwater noise levels in UK waters

TL;DR: Comparison of acoustic metrics found that the RMS level (conventionally used to represent the mean) was highly skewed by outliers, exceeding the 97th percentile at some frequencies, so environmental indicators of anthropogenic noise should instead use percentiles, to ensure statistical robustness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Variation in harbour porpoise activity in response to seismic survey noise

TL;DR: This work used an array of passive acoustic loggers coupled with calibrated noise measurements to test whether the seismic survey influenced the activity patterns of porpoises remaining in the area and showed that the probability of recording a buzz declined by 15% in the ensonified area and was positively related to distance from the source vessel.
Journal ArticleDOI

Harbour porpoises react to low levels of high frequency vessel noise

TL;DR: It is shown that low levels of high frequency components in vessel noise elicit strong, stereotyped behavioural responses in porpoise, suggesting that vessel noise is a, so far, largely overlooked, but substantial source of disturbance in shallow water areas with high densities of both porpoises and vessels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental field studies to measure behavioral responses of cetaceans to sonar

TL;DR: Funding was provided by a variety of military and governmental funding sources from several nations acknowledged within referenced publications, notably the US Office of Naval Research, US Navy Living Marine Resources Program, and the navies of the USA, Norway, andThe Netherlands.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behavioral biology of marine mammal deterrents: A review and prospectus

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the underlying behavioral basis of how deterrents generate avoidance and suggest that fear conditioning could be useful in this context, in the context of some potential management concerns of application of non-lethal deterrents in the wild.
References
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Book

Marine mammals and noise

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-anatomy of Marine Mammal Hearing, a probabilistic assessment of the response of marine mammals to man-made noise, and its consequences.
Journal ArticleDOI

A digital acoustic recording tag for measuring the response of wild marine mammals to sound

TL;DR: In this paper, a novel archival tag, called the DTAG, has been developed to monitor the behavior of marine mammals, and their response to sound, continuously throughout the dive cycle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gas-bubble lesions in stranded cetaceans

TL;DR: Evidence of acute and chronic tissue damage in stranded cetaceans that results from the formation in vivo of gas bubbles is presented, challenging the view that these mammals do not suffer decompression sickness.
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