Vessel noise levels drive behavioural responses of humpback whales with implications for whale-watching.

ELife
Kate R SprogisP T Madsen

Abstract

Disturbance from whale-watching can cause significant behavioural changes with fitness consequences for targeted whale populations. However, the sensory stimuli triggering these responses are unknown, preventing effective mitigation. Here, we test the hypothesis that vessel noise level is a driver of disturbance, using humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) as a model species. We conducted controlled exposure experiments (n = 42) on resting mother-calf pairs on a resting ground off Australia, by simulating whale-watch scenarios with a research vessel (range 100 m, speed 1.5 knts) playing back vessel noise at control/low (124/148 dB), medium (160 dB) or high (172 dB) low frequency-weighted source levels (re 1 μPa RMS@1 m). Compared to control/low treatments, during high noise playbacks the mother's proportion of time resting decreased by 30%, respiration rate doubled and swim speed increased by 37%. We therefore conclude that vessel noise is an adequate driver of behavioural disturbance in whales and that regulations to mitigate the impact of whale-watching should include noise emission standards.

References

Jan 1, 1974·Behaviour·J Altmann
May 1, 1997·The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America·W W AuJ L Pawloski
Apr 5, 2001·Marine Environmental Research·W W Au, M Green
Dec 22, 2006·Conservation Biology : the Journal of the Society for Conservation Biology·Lars BejderMichael Krützen
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Jan 1, 2015·Conservation Physiology·Janelle E BraithwaiteMatthew R Hipsey
Aug 4, 2018·IEEE Transactions on Bio-medical Engineering·Yakuan ChenR Todd Ogden

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Citations

May 5, 2021·The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America·Samantha CopeVirgil Zetterlind

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