Harbour porpoise movement strategy affects cumulative number of animals acoustically exposed to underwater explosions
Authored by Geert Aarts, Benda-Beckmann Alexander M von, Klaus Lucke, H Ozkan Sertlek, Bemmelen Rob van, Steve C V Geelhoed, Sophie Brasseur, Meike Scheidat, Frans-Peter A Lam, Hans Slabbekoorn, Roger Kirkwood
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.3354/meps11829
Sponsors:
Netherlands Ministry of Defence
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Anthropogenic sound in the marine environment can have negative
consequences for marine fauna. Since most sound sources are intermittent
or continuous, estimating how many individuals are exposed over time
remains challenging, as this depends on the animals' mobility. Here we
explored how animal movement influences how many, and how often, animals
are impacted by sound. In a dedicated study, we estimated how different
movement strategies affect the number of individual harbour porpoises
Phocoena phocoena receiving temporary or permanent hearing loss due to
underwater detonations of recovered explosives (mostly WWII aerial
bombs). Geo-statistical distribution models were fitted to data from 4
marine mammal aerial surveys and used to simulate the distribution and
movement of porpoises. Based on derived doseresponse thresholds for
temporary (TTS) or permanent threshold shifts (PTS), we estimated the
number of animals affected in a single year. When individuals were
free-roaming, an estimated 1200 and 24 000 unique individuals would
suffer PTS and TTS, respectively. This equates to respectively 0.50 and
10\% of the estimated North Sea population. In contrast, when porpoises
remained in a local area, fewer animals would receive PTS and TTS (1100
{[}0.47\%] and 15 000 {[}6.5\%], respectively), but more individuals
would be subjected to repeated exposures. Because most anthropogenic
sound-producing activities operate continuously or intermittently, snapshot distribution estimates alone tend to underestimate the number
of individuals exposed, particularly for mobile species. Hence, an
understanding of animal movement is needed to estimate the impact of
underwater sound or other human disturbance.
Tags
behavior
models
noise
population
mammals
Density
Clearance
Abundance
Shelf
Phocoena-phocoena