Abstract

In 2011 a pilot study was begun to evaluate the potential of animal-borne active acoustic tags for conducting minimally-invasive behavioral response studies on pinnipeds. A basic prototype tag was developed and tested on juvenile northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris) during translocation experiments at Año Nuevo State Park, CA, USA in spring 2012. The principal scientific questions of this pilot study were these: (1) do sounds emitted from an animal-borne low acoustic intensity tag elicit behavioral responses, and (2) are potential animal responses related to signal content (e.g., threatening vs. non-threatening). Although the sample size was small, preliminary results indicate that (1) low-intensity sounds emitted by animal-borne tags elicit distinct behavioral responses, (2) these responses appear related to signal content, and (3) the responses may differ based on depth, bathymetry, and location. The results of the conducted study show the promise of this approach as a minimally-invasive and cost-effective method to investigate animal responses to underwater sounds, as well as a method to develop mitigation strategies. Future efforts would increase the sample size, range of acoustic stimuli, and age/sex classes of tagged seals. [Funding from NOAA/NMFS Ocean Acoustics Program.]

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