Dear MARMAM readers,


I would like to share the following publication:



‘An Overview of Potential Impacts of Hydrocarbon Exploration and Production on 
Marine Mammals and Associated Monitoring and Mitigation Measures’



Abstract
Offshore hydrocarbon exploration and production (E&P) activities can overlap in 
space and time with marine mammal populations. These activities, especially 
seismic surveys, can generate loud sound levels that propagate well in the 
marine environment. Exposure of marine mammals at varying distances from the 
source of these sounds can result in a range of different impacts, from 
auditory injury to behavioral responses and masking. The 
source-pathway-receiver (SPR) model is a framework often used in environmental 
impact assessments. In this overview, the SPR model is applied to summarize the 
current understanding of 1) E&P impulsive sound sources such as air gun arrays 
and continuous sounds originating from drilling (source), 2) the propagation of 
sound generated by these sources through the ocean’s water column (pathway) 
and, 3) the impacts of these sounds on marine mammals (receiver). Potential 
unmitigated impacts of E&P activities on marine mammals can be categorized 
according to their impact severity and spatial scale, ranging from severe 
impacts occurring at a small spatial scale to lower level impacts occurring at 
larger scales (typically, but not always, in the following order:  Permanent 
Threshold Shift → Temporary Thresholds Shift → behavioral disturbance → 
masking). Available monitoring techniques, applied to enhance our understanding 
of marine mammals as related to the potential full range of E&P impacts from 
individual behavioral responses up to population level consequences are also 
described using the SPR model. Additionally, the range of mitigation measures 
applied in the E&P industry to prevent unacceptable impacts to marine mammals 
are provided and categorized according to a mitigation hierarchy (avoid > 
minimize > restore > offset). Finally, a case is made for application of the 
ALARP (As Low As Reasonably Practical) principle in seismic mitigation 
guidelines; that is, the applied mitigation measures in specific E&P activities 
should be proportional with the assessed risk on marine mammal populations, as 
well as reasonably practicable to achieve.



Broker, K.. (2019). An Overview of Potential Impacts of Hydrocarbon Exploration 
and Production on Marine Mammals and Associated Monitoring and Mitigation 
Measures. Aquatic Mammals, 45(6): 573-575.



The open access paper can be downloaded 
here<https://www.aquaticmammalsjournal.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1968:an-overview-of-potential-impacts-of-hydrocarbon-exploration-and-production-on-marine-mammals-and-associated-monitoring-and-mitigation-measures&catid=178&Itemid=326>
 or 
here<https://www.researchgate.net/publication/337261633_An_Overview_of_Potential_Impacts_of_Hydrocarbon_Exploration_and_Production_on_Marine_Mammals_and_Associated_Monitoring_and_Mitigation_Measures>.



Best regards,



Koen  Broker
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