Dear MARMAM readers

We are pleased to announce the publication of the following article in Ecology 
and Evolution:

“Long‐term sound and movement recording tags to study natural behavior and 
reaction to ship noise of seals”.

By: Lonnie Mikkelsen, Mark Johnson, Danuta Maria Wisniewska, Abbo van Neer,  
Ursula Siebert, Peter Teglberg Madsen & Jonas Teilmann.
Ecol Evol. 2019;00:1-14.

Open access: https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4923


Abstract:
1. The impact of anthropogenic noise on marine fauna is of increasing 
conservation concern with vessel noise being one of the major contributors. 
Animals that rely on shallow coastal habitats may be especially vulnerable to 
this form of pollution.
2. Very limited information is available on how much noise from ship traffic 
individual animals experience, and how they may react to  it due to a lack of 
suitable methods. To address this, we developed long‐duration audio and 
3D‐movement tags (DTAGs) and deployed them on three harbor seals and two gray 
seals in the North Sea during 2015-2016.
3. These tags recorded sound, accelerometry, magnetometry, and pressure 
continuously for up to 21 days. GPS positions were also sampled for one seal 
continuously throughout the recording period. A separate tag, combining a 
camera and an accelerometer logger, was deployed on two harbor seals to 
visualize specific behaviors that helped interpret accelerometer signals in the 
DTAG data.
4. Combining data from depth, accelerometer, and audio sensors, we found that 
animals spent 6.6%-42.3% of the time hauled out either on land or partly 
submerged), and 5.3%-12.4% of their at‐sea time resting at the sea bottom, 
while the remaining time was used for traveling, resting at surface, and 
foraging. Animals were exposed to audible vessel noise 2.2%-20.5% of their time 
when in water, and we demonstrate that interruption of functional behaviors 
(e.g., resting) in some cases coincides with high‐level vessel noise. 
Two‐thirds of the ship noise events were traceable by the AIS vessel tracking 
system, while one‐third comprised vessels without AIS.
5. This preliminary study demonstrates how concomitant long‐term continuous 
broadband on‐animal sound and movement recordings may be an important tool in 
future quantification of disturbance effects of anthropogenic activities at sea 
and assessment of long‐term population impacts on pinnipeds.


For any questions, please feel free to contact me at: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Cheers

Lonnie


-------------------------------------------------------------
Lonnie Mikkelsen, PhD student
Aarhus University - Department of Bioscience
Frederiksborgvej 399
DK - 4000 Roskilde
Denmark
Tlf.: +45 87158716
Mobile: +45 20450260
Mail: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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