With the receding sea ice pristine areas of the Arctic opens up for resource 
exploitation. This imposes new and unprecedented threats to marine mammals. 
Here we present the first of eight papers about the effects of ship traffic and 
seismic on narwhals:

Heide-Jørgensen, M.P., S.B. Blackwell, O.M. Tervo, A.L. Samson, A.S. Conrad, E. 
Garde, R.G. Hansen, M.C.Ngô, A.S. Conrad, P. Trinhammer, H.C. Schmidt, M.-H. S. 
Sinding, T.M. Williams, S. Ditlevsen, 2021. Behavioral response study on 
seismic airgun and vessel exposures in narwhals. Frontiers in Marine Science. 
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.658173

The publication is open access and can be found here: 
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.658173/full<applewebdata://AEA57C3C-D12D-478C-883E-93909D1716C5/The%20publication%20is%20open%20access%20and%20can%20be%20found%20here:%20https:/www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.658173/full>


ABSTRACT

One of the last pristine marine soundscapes, the Arctic, is exposed to 
increasing anthropogenic activities due to climate-induced decrease in sea ice 
coverage. In this study, we combined movement and behavioral data from 
animal-borne tags in a controlled sound exposure study to describe the 
reactions of narwhals, Monodon monoceros, to airgun pulses and ship noise. 
Sixteen narwhals were live captured and instrumented with satellite tags and 
Acousonde acoustic-behavioral recorders, and 11 of them were exposed to airgun 
pulses and vessel sounds. The sound exposure levels (SELs) of pulses from a 
small airgun (3.4 L) used in 2017 and a larger one (17.0 L) used in 2018 were 
measured using drifting recorders. The experiment was divided into trials with 
airgun and ship-noise exposure, intertrials with only ship-noise, and pre- and 
postexposure periods. Both trials and intertrials lasted ∼4 h on average per 
individual. Depending on the location of the whales, the number of separate 
exposures ranged between one and eight trials or intertrials. Received pulse 
SELs dropped below 130 dB re 1 μPa2s by 2.5 km for the small airgun and 4–9 km 
for the larger airgun, and background noise levels were reached at distances of 
∼3 and 8–10.5 km, respectively, for the small and big airguns. Avoidance 
reactions of the whales could be detected at distances >5 km in 2017 and >11 km 
in 2018 when in line of sight of the seismic vessel. Meanwhile, a ∼30% increase 
in horizontal travel speed could be detected up to 2 h before the seismic 
vessel was in line of sight. Applying line of sight as the criterion for 
exposure thus excludes some potential pre-response effects, and our estimates 
of effects must therefore be considered conservative. The whales reacted by 
changing their swimming speed and direction at distances between 5 and 24 km 
depending on topographical surroundings where the exposure occurred. The 
propensity of the whales to move towards the shore increased with increasing 
exposure (i.e., shorter distance to vessels) and was highest with the large 
airgun used in 2018, where the whales moved towards the shore at distances of 
10–15 km. No long-term effects of the response study could be detected.



Mads Peter Heide-Jørgensen

Professor, Dr. Scient.

________________________________

Pinngortitaleriffik

Greenland Institute of Natural Resources
Strandgade 91, 2.sal
DK-1401 København K, Danmark
Phone: +45 3283 3827  •  Cell phone: +45 4025 7943
Email: m...@ghsdk.dk<mailto:m...@ghsdk.dk>

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