Seismic surveys negatively affect humpback whale singing activity off northern Angola.

Passive acoustic monitoring was used to document the presence of singing humpback whales off the coast of Northern Angola, and opportunistically test for the effect of seismic survey activity in the vicinity on the number of singing whales. Two Marine Autonomous Recording Units (MARUs) were deployed...

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Main Authors: Salvatore Cerchio, Samantha Strindberg, Tim Collins, Chanda Bennett, Howard Rosenbaum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24618836/?tool=EBI
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author Salvatore Cerchio
Samantha Strindberg
Tim Collins
Chanda Bennett
Howard Rosenbaum
author_facet Salvatore Cerchio
Samantha Strindberg
Tim Collins
Chanda Bennett
Howard Rosenbaum
author_sort Salvatore Cerchio
collection DOAJ
description Passive acoustic monitoring was used to document the presence of singing humpback whales off the coast of Northern Angola, and opportunistically test for the effect of seismic survey activity in the vicinity on the number of singing whales. Two Marine Autonomous Recording Units (MARUs) were deployed between March and December 2008 in the offshore environment. Song was first heard in mid June and continued through the remaining duration of the study. Seismic survey activity was heard regularly during two separate periods, consistently throughout July and intermittently in mid-October/November. Numbers of singers were counted during the first ten minutes of every hour for the period from 24 May to 1 December, and Generalized Additive Mixed Models (GAMMs) were used to assess the effect of survey day (seasonality), hour (diel variation), moon phase and received levels of seismic survey pulses (measured from a single pulse during each ten-minute sampled period) on singer number. Application of GAMMs indicated significant seasonal variation, which was the most pronounced effect when assessing the full dataset across the entire season (p<0.001); however seasonality almost entirely dropped out of top-ranked models when applied to a reduced dataset during the July period of seismic survey activity. Diel variation was significant in both the full and reduced datasets (from p<0.01 to p<0.05) and often included in the top-ranked models. The number of singers significantly decreased with increasing received level of seismic survey pulses (from p<0.01 to p<0.05); this explanatory variable was included among the top ranked models for one MARU in the full dataset and both MARUs in the reduced dataset. This suggests that the breeding display of humpback whales is disrupted by seismic survey activity, and thus merits further attention and study, and potentially conservation action in the case of sensitive breeding populations.
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spelling doaj.art-a37a414e51b94d6d800bebb909b44b212022-12-21T23:17:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0193e8646410.1371/journal.pone.0086464Seismic surveys negatively affect humpback whale singing activity off northern Angola.Salvatore CerchioSamantha StrindbergTim CollinsChanda BennettHoward RosenbaumPassive acoustic monitoring was used to document the presence of singing humpback whales off the coast of Northern Angola, and opportunistically test for the effect of seismic survey activity in the vicinity on the number of singing whales. Two Marine Autonomous Recording Units (MARUs) were deployed between March and December 2008 in the offshore environment. Song was first heard in mid June and continued through the remaining duration of the study. Seismic survey activity was heard regularly during two separate periods, consistently throughout July and intermittently in mid-October/November. Numbers of singers were counted during the first ten minutes of every hour for the period from 24 May to 1 December, and Generalized Additive Mixed Models (GAMMs) were used to assess the effect of survey day (seasonality), hour (diel variation), moon phase and received levels of seismic survey pulses (measured from a single pulse during each ten-minute sampled period) on singer number. Application of GAMMs indicated significant seasonal variation, which was the most pronounced effect when assessing the full dataset across the entire season (p<0.001); however seasonality almost entirely dropped out of top-ranked models when applied to a reduced dataset during the July period of seismic survey activity. Diel variation was significant in both the full and reduced datasets (from p<0.01 to p<0.05) and often included in the top-ranked models. The number of singers significantly decreased with increasing received level of seismic survey pulses (from p<0.01 to p<0.05); this explanatory variable was included among the top ranked models for one MARU in the full dataset and both MARUs in the reduced dataset. This suggests that the breeding display of humpback whales is disrupted by seismic survey activity, and thus merits further attention and study, and potentially conservation action in the case of sensitive breeding populations.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24618836/?tool=EBI
spellingShingle Salvatore Cerchio
Samantha Strindberg
Tim Collins
Chanda Bennett
Howard Rosenbaum
Seismic surveys negatively affect humpback whale singing activity off northern Angola.
PLoS ONE
title Seismic surveys negatively affect humpback whale singing activity off northern Angola.
title_full Seismic surveys negatively affect humpback whale singing activity off northern Angola.
title_fullStr Seismic surveys negatively affect humpback whale singing activity off northern Angola.
title_full_unstemmed Seismic surveys negatively affect humpback whale singing activity off northern Angola.
title_short Seismic surveys negatively affect humpback whale singing activity off northern Angola.
title_sort seismic surveys negatively affect humpback whale singing activity off northern angola
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24618836/?tool=EBI
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