Colleagues,
The final report from the U.S. federal government's Interagency Task
Force on Anthropogenic Sound and the Marine Environment, /Addressing the
Effects of Human-Generated Sound on Marine Life: An Integrated Research
Plan for U.S. Federal Agencies/, is now available. The report's direct
link is http://ocean.ceq.gov/about/docs/iatf_finalreport_09.pdf
The suggested reference for this report is:
Southall, B., Berkson, J., Bowen, D., Brake, R., Eckman, J., Field, J.,
Gisiner, R., Gregerson, S., Lang, W., Lewandoski, J., Wilson, J., and
Winokur, R. 2009. Addressing the Effects of Human-Generated Sound on
Marine Life: An Integrated Research Plan for U.S. federal agencies.
Interagency Task Force on Anthropogenic Sound and the Marine Environment
of the Joint Subcommittee on Ocean Science and Technology. Washington, DC.
The following overview is from the cover letter of the report, co-signed
by the heads of the Council on Environmental Quality and the Office of
Science and Technology Policy (Executive Office of the President of the
United States of America):
"Whether and how human-generated sounds in the ocean affect marine life
has become an issue of increasing awareness, within scientific and
regulatory circles as well as among the general public. Many activities
vital to our society, including the actions of many U.S. Federal
agencies, introduce sound into the marine environment. Consequently,
there is much interest and effort involved in understanding associated
environmental impacts and developing ways of minimizing them. A number
of U.S. Federal agencies are actively engaged in advancing the science
and technologies needed to address these challenging issues.
This report provides an explicit interagency roadmap for the next decade
to focus and prioritize research efforts addressing this issue. It
summarizes collective research efforts by U.S. Federal agencies in
several key areas and includes a number of specific and prioritized
research recommendations regarding future efforts, with particular
emphasis on interagency collaboration. Finally, it summarizes some
general coordinating actions and means of increasing the transparency
and public recognition of ongoing interagency efforts in this field. The
findings indicate that many of the challenging scientific, regulatory,
and legal issues regarding underwater sound can be addressed with
focused, prioritized, and sustained effort coordinated among the U.S.
Federal agencies. We hope it will be useful to a broad range of
interested parties."
Thank you for your interest and help in ensuring that this document is
as useful as possible in guiding future research efforts.
Brandon Southall
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Brandon L. Southall, Ph.D.
Director, NOAA Ocean Acoustics Program
National Marine Fisheries Service
Office of Science and Technology
1315 East West Hwy, SSMC III #12539
Silver Spring, MD 20910-6233
brandon.south...@noaa.gov
301-713-2363 x163 (office)
301-713-1875 (FAX)
http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/acoustics/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Brandon L. Southall, Ph.D.
Director, NOAA Ocean Acoustics Program
National Marine Fisheries Service
Office of Science and Technology
1315 East West Hwy, SSMC III #12539
Silver Spring, MD 20910-6233
brandon.south...@noaa.gov
301-713-2363 x163 (office)
301-713-1875 (FAX)
http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/acoustics/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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