Experimental field studies to measure behavioral responses of cetaceans to sonar

Substantial recent progress has been made in directly measuring behavioral responses of free-ranging marine mammals to sound using controlled exposure experiments. Many studies were motivated by concerns about observed and potential negative effects of military sonar, including stranding events. Wel...

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Main Authors: Southall, BL, Nowacek, DP, Miller, PJO, Tyack, PL
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Inter-Research 2016-12-01
Series:Endangered Species Research
Online Access:https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/esr/v31/p293-315/
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spelling doaj-b7f2fc5d98d5442eab7c307cf97ae7af2020-11-25T03:47:19ZengInter-ResearchEndangered Species Research1863-54071613-47962016-12-013129331510.3354/esr00764Experimental field studies to measure behavioral responses of cetaceans to sonarSouthall, BLNowacek, DPMiller, PJOTyack, PLSubstantial recent progress has been made in directly measuring behavioral responses of free-ranging marine mammals to sound using controlled exposure experiments. Many studies were motivated by concerns about observed and potential negative effects of military sonar, including stranding events. Well-established experimental methods and increasingly sophisticated technologies have enabled fine-resolution measurement of many aspects of baseline behavior and responses to sonar. Studies have considered increasingly diverse taxa, but primarily odontocete and mysticete cetaceans that are endangered, particularly sensitive, or frequently exposed to sonar. This review focuses on recent field experiments studying cetacean responses to simulated or actual active military sonars in the 1 to 8 kHz band. Overall results demonstrate that some individuals of different species display clear yet varied responses, some of which have negative implications, while others appear to tolerate relatively high levels, although such exposures may have other consequences not measured. Responses were highly variable and may not be fully predictable with simple acoustic exposure metrics (e.g. received sound level). Rather, differences among species and individuals along with contextual aspects of exposure (e.g. behavioral state) appear to affect response probability. These controlled experiments provide critically needed documentation of identified behavioral responses occurring upon known sonar exposures, and they directly inform regulatory assessments of potential effects. They also inform more targeted opportunistic monitoring of potential responses of animals during sonar operations and have stimulated adaptations of field methods to consider increasingly realistic exposure scenarios and how contextual factors such as behavioral state and source proximity influence response type and probability.https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/esr/v31/p293-315/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Southall, BL
Nowacek, DP
Miller, PJO
Tyack, PL
spellingShingle Southall, BL
Nowacek, DP
Miller, PJO
Tyack, PL
Experimental field studies to measure behavioral responses of cetaceans to sonar
Endangered Species Research
author_facet Southall, BL
Nowacek, DP
Miller, PJO
Tyack, PL
author_sort Southall, BL
title Experimental field studies to measure behavioral responses of cetaceans to sonar
title_short Experimental field studies to measure behavioral responses of cetaceans to sonar
title_full Experimental field studies to measure behavioral responses of cetaceans to sonar
title_fullStr Experimental field studies to measure behavioral responses of cetaceans to sonar
title_full_unstemmed Experimental field studies to measure behavioral responses of cetaceans to sonar
title_sort experimental field studies to measure behavioral responses of cetaceans to sonar
publisher Inter-Research
series Endangered Species Research
issn 1863-5407
1613-4796
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Substantial recent progress has been made in directly measuring behavioral responses of free-ranging marine mammals to sound using controlled exposure experiments. Many studies were motivated by concerns about observed and potential negative effects of military sonar, including stranding events. Well-established experimental methods and increasingly sophisticated technologies have enabled fine-resolution measurement of many aspects of baseline behavior and responses to sonar. Studies have considered increasingly diverse taxa, but primarily odontocete and mysticete cetaceans that are endangered, particularly sensitive, or frequently exposed to sonar. This review focuses on recent field experiments studying cetacean responses to simulated or actual active military sonars in the 1 to 8 kHz band. Overall results demonstrate that some individuals of different species display clear yet varied responses, some of which have negative implications, while others appear to tolerate relatively high levels, although such exposures may have other consequences not measured. Responses were highly variable and may not be fully predictable with simple acoustic exposure metrics (e.g. received sound level). Rather, differences among species and individuals along with contextual aspects of exposure (e.g. behavioral state) appear to affect response probability. These controlled experiments provide critically needed documentation of identified behavioral responses occurring upon known sonar exposures, and they directly inform regulatory assessments of potential effects. They also inform more targeted opportunistic monitoring of potential responses of animals during sonar operations and have stimulated adaptations of field methods to consider increasingly realistic exposure scenarios and how contextual factors such as behavioral state and source proximity influence response type and probability.
url https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/esr/v31/p293-315/
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