Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our recent publication "Influence
of vessel disturbance on Pacific harbour porpoise (*Phocoena phocoena
vomerina) *echolocation" in Ecological Applications.


ABSTRACT: Vessel disturbance is one of many anthropogenic threats that are
negatively impacting coastal cetacean populations worldwide. Noise
pollution from vessels can cause varying levels of disturbance in
cetaceans, depending on several factors such as vessel type and speed.
Pacific harbour porpoises (*Phocoena phocoena vomerina*) are distributed
throughout coastal waters of the North Pacific Ocean, with large
aggregations observed near the entrance to the Port of Prince Rupert in
British Columbia, Canada. This area serves as an important year-round
foraging ground for harbour porpoises. However, it is also one of the
fastest growing container ports in North America, with planned increases in
activity. Harbour porpoises are highly sensitive to vessel-related acoustic
disturbances, but the effects of vessel activity on their foraging rates
remain unclear. In this study, we used a combination of land-based surveys,
passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) devices (C-PODs and F-PODs), and
automatic identification system (AIS) data to investigate the relationship
between vessel activity and harbour porpoise echolocation activity—both
foraging and non-foraging— adjacent to the Port. Our results show that an
increase in the total number of vessels negatively affected both foraging
and non-foraging echolocation activity, with less echolocation observed in
the presence of more ferries and tugs. Similarly, vessels traveling at
higher speeds (>6 m/s kn) had a negative effect on echolocation activity.
Tugboats and passenger vessels, in particular, had a wider range of effects
on all harbour porpoise echolocation activity. Our findings indicate that
implementing a vessel slowdown (~5 m/s) along the approach to the Port of
Prince Rupert could reduce disturbances to harbour porpoises and likely
benefit other coexisting species that rely on quiet oceans for
communication and foraging.


Dracott, K., Robinson, C. V., Dares, L., Woodley, E., Migneault, A., &
Birdsall, C. (2025). Influence of vessel disturbance on Pacific harbour
porpoise (*Phocoena phocoena vomerina*) echolocation. *Ecological
Applications*, *35*(6), e70076.


Please find the open access publication at:
*https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.70076* <https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.70076>



Kind regards,
Karina Dracott

-- 

Karina Dracott <https://www.karinadracott.com/about>

MRM, Coastal and Marine Resource Management

MERS Research Associate

Email: [email protected]
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