Transmission loss patterns from acoustic harassment and deterrent devices do not always follow geometrical spreading predictions
Transmission loss patterns from acoustic harassment and deterrent devices do not always follow geometrical spreading predictions
Date
2008-07
Authors
Shapiro, Ari D.
Tougaard, Jakob
Jorgensen, Poul Boel
Kyhn, Line A.
Balle, Jeppe Dalgaard
Bernardez, Cristina
Fjalling, Arne
Karlsen, Junita
Wahlberg, Magnus
Tougaard, Jakob
Jorgensen, Poul Boel
Kyhn, Line A.
Balle, Jeppe Dalgaard
Bernardez, Cristina
Fjalling, Arne
Karlsen, Junita
Wahlberg, Magnus
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Keywords
Acoustic harassment device (AHD)
Acoustic deterrent device (ADD)
Non-geometrical acoustic spreading
Sound exposure level
Multi-path interference
Marine mammal-fisheries interactions
By-catch
Acoustic deterrent device (ADD)
Non-geometrical acoustic spreading
Sound exposure level
Multi-path interference
Marine mammal-fisheries interactions
By-catch
Abstract
Acoustic harassment and deterrent devices have become increasingly popular mitigation
tools for negotiating the impacts of marine mammals on fisheries. The rationale for their
variable effectiveness remains unexplained but high variability in the surrounding acoustic field
may be relevant. In the present study, the sound fields of one acoustic harassment device and
three acoustic deterrent devices were measured at three study sites along the Scandinavian coast.
Superimposed onto an overall trend of decreasing sound exposure levels with increasing range
were large local variations in sound level for all sources in each of the environments. This
variability was likely caused by source directionality, inter-ping source level variation and multi-path interference. Rapid and unpredictable variations in the sound level as a function of range
deviated from expectations derived from spherical and cylindrical spreading models and
conflicted with the classic concept of concentric zones of increasing disturbance with decreasing
range. Under such conditions, animals may encounter difficulties when trying to determine the
direction to and location of a sound source, which may complicate or jeopardize avoidance
responses.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of John Wiley & Sons for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Marine Mammal Science 25 (2009): 53-67, doi:10.1111/j.1748-7692.2008.00243.x.