NSIP

Resources

Title
Assessing vessel slowdown for reducing auditory masking for marine mammals and fish of the western Canadian Arctic
Author(s)
Pine, Matthew K.;Hannay, David E.;Insley, Stephen J.;Halliday, William D.;Juanes, Francis
Published
2018
Publisher
Marine Pollution Bulletin
DOI for Open Access preprint or postprint version of article


10.31230/osf.io/xvge9
Abstract
Vessel slowdown may be an alternative mitigation option in regions where re-routing shipping corridors to avoid important marine mammal habitat is not possible. We investigated the potential relief in masking in marine mammals and fish from a 10 knot speed reduction of container and cruise ships. The mitigation effect from slower vessels was not equal between ambient sound conditions, species or vessel-type. Under quiet ambient conditions, a speed reduction from 25 to 15 knots resulted in smaller listening space reductions by 16–23%, 10–18%, 1–2%, 5–8% and 8% respectively for belugas, bowheads, bearded seals, ringed seals, and fish, depending on vessel-type. However, under noisy conditions, those savings were between 9 and 19% more, depending on the species. This was due to the differences in species' hearing sensitivities and the low ambient sound levels measured in the study region. Vessel slowdown could be an effective mitigation strategy for reducing masking.
Keywords
Underwater sound;Noise;Shipping;Marine mammal;Fish;Listening space;Masking

Access Full Text

A full-text copy of this article may be available. Please email the WCS Library to request.




Back

PUB23113