Abstract

A software package is presented which estimates zones of interference around underwater noise sources affecting marine mammals. An ocean sound propagation model based on ray theory computes the spreading of complex underwater sound such as broadband animal vocalizations and man-made noise. On a grid of receiver locations (representing the affected marine mammal), the received signal and noise sound spectra are compared. Given a species-specific audiogram, the software package plots zones of audibility around the noise source. Given species-specific vocalizations, zones of masking are plotted based on results obtained during an earlier study which measured masked hearing thresholds of a beluga vocalization in icebreaker noise with a trained beluga whale. Tools developed during this study (such as an artificial neural network and critical band methods) are incorporated in the software package and can be used to predict zones of masking for industrial noise other than the types directly measured with the beluga. Zones of discomfort, injury, and hearing loss could be plotted if thresholds were known or using current estimates. The software package is applicable to a variety of ocean environments requiring location-specific physical oceanography input data.

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