Behavioural responses of fin whales to military mid-frequency active sonar

Author:

Southall Brandon L.12ORCID,Allen Ann N.34ORCID,Calambokidis John3,Casey Caroline12ORCID,DeRuiter Stacy L.5,Fregosi Selene1,Friedlaender Ari S.12ORCID,Goldbogen Jeremy A.6,Harris Catriona M.7,Hazen Elliott L.28,Popov Valentin7,Stimpert Alison K.9

Affiliation:

1. Southall Environmental Associates, 9099 Soquel Drive, Suite 8, Aptos, CA 95003, USA

2. Institute of Marine Sciences, Long Marine Laboratory, University of Santa Cruz, 115 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz, CA 95060, USA

3. Cascadia Research Collective, 218 ½ W 4th Avenue, Olympia, WA 98501, USA

4. NOAA Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center, 1845 Wasp Boulevard, Building 176, Honolulu, HI 96818, USA

5. Calvin University, 3201 Burton Street SE, Grand Rapids, MI 49546, USA

6. Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University, 120 Ocean View Boulevard, Pacific Grove, CA 93950, USA

7. Centre for Research into Ecological and Environmental Modelling, University of St Andrews, The Observatory, St Andrews KY16 9LZ, UK

8. NOAA Southwest Fisheries Science Center, Environmental Research Division, 99 Pacific Street, Suite 255A, Monterey, CA 93940, USA

9. Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, San Jose State University, 8272 Moss Landing Road, Moss Landing, CA 95039, USA

Abstract

The effect of active sonars on marine mammal behaviour is a topic of considerable interest and scientific investigation. Some whales, including the largest species (blue whales, Balaenoptera musculus ), can be impacted by mid-frequency (1–10 kHz) military sonars. Here we apply complementary experimental methods to provide the first experimentally controlled measurements of behavioural responses to military sonar and similar stimuli for a related endangered species, fin whales ( Balaenoptera physalus ). Analytical methods include: (i) principal component analysis paired with generalized additive mixed models; (ii) hidden Markov models; and (iii) structured expert elicitation using response severity metrics. These approaches provide complementary perspectives on the nature of potential changes within and across individuals. Behavioural changes were detected in five of 15 whales during controlled exposure experiments using mid-frequency active sonar or pseudorandom noise of similar frequency, duration and source and received level. No changes were detected during six control (no noise) sequences. Overall responses were more limited in occurrence, severity and duration than in blue whales and were less dependent upon contextual aspects of exposure and more contingent upon exposure received level. Quantifying the factors influencing marine mammal responses to sonar is critical in assessing and mitigating future impacts.

Funder

Office of Naval Research

US Navy Living Marine Resources Program

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference43 articles.

1. Southall BL. 2017 Noise. In Encyclopedia of marine mammals (eds B Würsig, H Thiewesson), pp. 699-707, 3rd edn. New York, NY: Academic Press.

2. National Research Council (US) and National Academies Press (US). 2005 Marine mammal populations and ocean noise: determining when noise causes biologically significant effects. Washington, DC: National Academies Press.

3. Overview

4. Synthesis of experimental behavioral response studies using human sonar and marine mammals;Southall BL;Endang. Species Res.,2016

5. Behavioral responses of individual blue whales (Balaenoptera musculus) to mid-frequency military sonar

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