Anthropogenic sound exposure of marine mammals from seaways: Estimates for Lower St. Lawrence Seaway, eastern Canada - ENSTA Bretagne - École nationale supérieure de techniques avancées Bretagne Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Applied Acoustics Année : 2010

Anthropogenic sound exposure of marine mammals from seaways: Estimates for Lower St. Lawrence Seaway, eastern Canada

Y. Simard
  • Fonction : Auteur
R. Lepage
  • Fonction : Auteur

Résumé

The impact of shipping noise on marine life and quality of marine mammal habitats in oceans and coastal environments has become a major concern worldwide. Background noise can also limits detection of marine mammal sounds in passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) systems. Characterisation of this noise over long time periods and estimates of the exposure of the different marine mammal groups are still very fragmentary and limited to only a few locations. This paper presents such observations for a part of a busy seaway of North America, the St. Lawrence Seaway, which cuts through the Gulf of St. Lawrence and crosses several cetaceans and pinnipeds feeding areas. Noise was continuously recorded for a 5-month period in summer 2005 by an AURAL autonomous hydrophone deployed close to the bottom in the 300-m deep seaway. The maximum received noise level in the 20 Hz–0.9 kHz band reached 136 dB re 1 μParms. The median level of 112 dB re 1 μParms was exceeded 50% of the time due to transiting merchant ships. Median spectral level tracks the reference curve for heavy traffic in oceans and 50% of the noise is within a ±6 dB envelope around it. Strong spectral lines were common at low frequencies and in the 400–800 Hz band. M-weighting functions applied for the three groups of cetaceans and pinnipeds indicate wideband median levels varying from 106 to 112 dB-M re 1 μParms surrounded by a ±5 dB two-quartile interval. Higher values are expected for animals frequenting the sound channel at intermediate depths. As expected, the highest M-weighting levels correspond to low-frequency specialists and pinnipeds. Criteria for assessing the behavioural and physiological impacts of long term exposure of marine mammals to such shipping noise levels need to be worked out.

Dates et versions

hal-00522357 , version 1 (30-09-2010)

Identifiants

Citer

Y. Simard, R. Lepage, Cedric Gervaise. Anthropogenic sound exposure of marine mammals from seaways: Estimates for Lower St. Lawrence Seaway, eastern Canada. Applied Acoustics, 2010, 71 (11), pp.1093-1098. ⟨10.1016/j.apacoust.2010.05.012⟩. ⟨hal-00522357⟩
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