Dear All,

For those of you interested in the issue of marine mammals and noise, we have a 
paper out in Scientific Reports showing that harbor porpoises respond to low 
levels of high frequency vessel noise. The abstract can be found here:
 
Cetaceans rely critically on sound for navigation, foraging and communication 
and are therefore potentially affected by increasing noise levels from human 
activities at sea. Shipping is the main
contributor of anthropogenic noise underwater, but studies of shipping noise 
effects have primarily considered baleen whales due to their good hearing at 
low frequencies, where ships produce most
noise power. Conversely, the possible effects of vessel noise on small toothed 
whales have been largely ignored due to their poor low-frequency hearing. 
Prompted by recent findings of energy at
medium- to high-frequencies in vessel noise, we conducted an exposure study 
where the behaviour of four porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) in a net-pen was 
logged while they were exposed to 133 vessel passages. Using a multivariate 
generalised linear mixed-effects model, we show that low levels of high 
frequency components in vessel noise elicit strong, stereotyped behavioural 
responses in porpoises. Such low levels will routinely be experienced by 
porpoises in the wild at ranges of more than 1000 meters from vessels, 
suggesting that vessel noise is a, so far, largely overlooked, but substantial 
source of disturbance in shallow water areas with high density of both 
porpoises and vessels.
 
The paper is freely available online at 
http://www.nature.com/srep/2015/150622/srep11083/full/srep11083.html.
 
 
All the best,
Monika Dyndo
 
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