MARMAM,

We are very pleased to announce the publication of a new paper on the 
behavioral responses of individual blue whales to controlled exposure 
experiments with military mid-frequency sonars. This study included one of the 
largest sample sizes (n=42) for marine mammal studies of behavioral responses 
to sonar and also the first-ever coordination with full-scale operational Navy 
vessels within a behavioral response study. The full reference and abstract are 
given below.
The paper is available online at: 
http://jeb.biologists.org/content/222/5/jeb190637
A .pdf is also upon email request to: 
brandon.south...@sea-inc.net<mailto:brandon.south...@sea-inc.net>

Many thanks,
Brandon Southall on behalf of my co-authors

——

Southall, B. L., DeRuiter, S. L., Friedlaender, A., Stimpert, A.K.,.Goldbogen, 
J.A., Hazen, E., Casey, C., Fregosi, S., Cade, D.E., Allen, A.N., Harris, C.M., 
Schorr, G., Moretti, D., Guan, S., and Calambokidis, J. (2019). Behavioral 
responses of individual blue whales (Balaenoptera musculus) to mid-frequency 
military sonar. Journal of Experimental Biology, 222, jeb190637. 
doi:10.1242/jeb.190637

This study measured the degree of behavioral responses in blue whales 
(Balaenoptera musculus) to controlled noise exposure off the southern 
California coast. High-resolution movement and passive acoustic data were 
obtained from non-invasive archival tags (n=42) while surface positions were 
obtained with visual focal follows. Controlled exposure experiments (CEEs) were 
used to obtain direct behavioral measurements before, during, and after 
simulated and operational military mid-frequency active sonar (MFAS), 
pseudorandom noise (PRN), and controls (no noise exposure). For a subset of 
deep-foraging animals (n=21), active acoustic measurements of prey were 
obtained and used as contextual covariates in response analyses. To investigate 
potential behavioral changes within individuals as a function of controlled 
noise exposure conditions, two parallel analyses of time-series data for 
selected behavioral parameters (e.g., diving, horizontal movement, feeding) 
were conducted. This included expert scoring of responses according to a 
specified behavioral severity rating paradigm and quantitative change-point 
analyses using Mahalanobis distance statistics. Both methods identified clear 
changes in some conditions. More than 50% of blue whales in deep feeding states 
responded during CEEs, while no changes in behavior were identified in 
shallow-feeding blue whales. Overall, responses were generally brief, of low to 
moderate severity, and highly dependent on exposure context such as behavioral 
state, source-to-whale horizontal range, and prey availability. Response 
probability did not follow a simple dose-response model based on received 
exposure level. These results, in combination with additional analytical 
methods to investigate different aspects of potential responses within and 
among individuals, provide a comprehensive evaluation of how free-ranging blue 
whales responded to mid-frequency military sonar.
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to