Dear MARMAM-Users,

We are pleased to announce that the following new paper has been published
online: "Potential benefits of vessel slowdowns on endangered southern
resident killer whales":
Joy, R., Tollit, D.J., Wood, J., MacGillivray, A., Li, Z.L., Trounce, K.
and Robinson, O., 2019. Potential benefits of vessel slowdowns on
endangered southern resident killer whales. Frontiers in Marine Science, 6,
p.344. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00344

ABSTRACT
A voluntary commercial vessel slowdown trial was conducted through 16 nm of
shipping lanes overlapping critical habitat of at-risk southern resident
killer whales (SRKW) in the Salish Sea. From August 7 to October 6, 2017,
the trial requested piloted vessels to slow to 11 knots
speed-through-water. Analysis of AIS vessel tracking data showed that 350
of 951 (37%) piloted transits achieved this target speed, 421 of 951 (44%)
transits achieved speeds within one knot of this target (i.e., ≤12 knots),
and 55% achieved speeds ≤ 13 knots. Slowdown results were compared to
‘Baseline’ noise of the same region, matched across lunar months. A local
hydrophone listening station in Lime Kiln State Park, 2.3 km from the
shipping lane, recorded 1.2 dB reductions in median broadband noise
(10–100,000 Hz, rms) compared to the Baseline period, despite longer
transit. The median reduction was 2.5 dB when filtering only for periods
when commercial vessels were within 6 km radius of Lime Kiln. The
reductions were highest in the 1st decade band (-3.1 dB, 10–100 Hz) and
lowest in the 4th decade band (-0.3 dB reduction, 10–100 kHz). A regional
vessel noise model predicted noise for a range of traffic volume and vessel
speed scenarios for a 1133 km2 ‘Slowdown region’ containing the 16 nm of
shipping lanes. A temporally and spatially explicit simulation model
evaluated the changes in traffic volume and speed on SRKW in their foraging
habitat within this Slowdown region. The model tracked the number and
magnitude of noise-exposure events that impacted each of 78 (simulated)
SRKW across different traffic scenarios. These disturbance metrics were
simplified to a cumulative effect termed ‘potential lost foraging time’
that corresponded to the sum of disturbance events described by assumptions
of time that whales could not forage due to noise disturbance. The model
predicted that the voluntary Slowdown trial achieved 22% reduction in
‘potential lost foraging time’ for SRKW, with 40% reductions under 100%
11-knot participation. Slower vessel speeds reduced underwater noise in the
Slowdown area despite longer passage times and therefore suggest this is an
effective way to benefit SRKW habitat function in the vicinity of shipping
lanes.



For any questions do not hesitate to contact me.

Best regards,
Ruth Joy.

r...@sfu.ca
http://www.sfu.ca/~rjoy/
http://www.smruconsulting.com/


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