Abstract

Most marine mammal­ strandings coincident with naval sonar exercises have involved Cuvier's beaked whales (Ziphius cavirostris). We recorded animal movement and acoustic data on two tagged Ziphius and obtained the first direct measurements of behavioural responses of this species to mid-frequency active (MFA) sonar signals. Each recording included a 30-min playback (one 1.6-s simulated MFA sonar signal repeated every 25 s); one whale was also incidentally exposed to MFA sonar from distant naval exercises. Whales responded strongly to playbacks at low received levels (RLs; 89–127 dB re 1 µPa): after ceasing normal fluking and echolocation, they swam rapidly, silently away, extending both dive duration and subsequent non-foraging interval. Distant sonar exercises (78–106 dB re 1 µPa) did not elicit such responses, suggesting that context may moderate reactions. The observed responses to playback occurred at RLs well below current regulatory thresholds; equivalent responses to operational sonars could elevate stranding risk and reduce foraging efficiency.

Highlights

  • Unusual mass strandings of cetaceans, especially beaked whales, have been associated with the operation of military mid-frequency active (MFA) sonars; these sometimes fatal events have raised serious concern about impacts of sonar and other anthropogenic sounds on whales [1 –3]

  • Behavioural responses to MFA sonar are thought to play an important role in the series of events that leads to such strandings [1]

  • We present results from two Cuvier’s beaked whales that were exposed to simulated MFA sonar during the Southern California Behavioural Response Study [7] in 2010–2011

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Summary

Introduction

Unusual mass strandings of cetaceans, especially beaked whales, have been associated with the operation of military mid-frequency active (MFA) sonars; these sometimes fatal events have raised serious concern about impacts of sonar and other anthropogenic sounds on whales [1 –3]. Behavioural responses to MFA sonar are thought to play an important role in the series of events that leads to such strandings [1]. An on-going series of controlled exposure experiments (CEEs) and opportunistic studies have begun to provide data on behavioural responses to MFA sonar by species including Blainville’s beaked whales (Mesoplodon densirostris; [4]). License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited. 17 Sep 2003 17.48.03 20 Sep 2003 15.24.28 8 June 2004 16.44.23 9 June 2004 12.58.05 9 June 2004 14.07.37 23 June 2004 16.28.52 23 June 2004 16.28.52 16 June 2005 16.12.27 19 June 2005 15.24.13 July 2006 12.21.27 July 2006 13.57.43 12 June 2008 18.13.48 29 Sep 2010 09.49.43 24 Sep 2011 08.49.56 17 June 2012 17.49.40 28 Nov 2004 13.02 30 Nov 2006 09.41 tagging location (8 N, 8 E).

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