Abstract

Nearly two decades of low-frequency (20–500 Hz) ambient noise measurements at seven open-ocean sites in the North Pacific Ocean basin have revealed a complex pattern of long-term trends. The trends in the Northeastern Pacific Ocean show a significant decrease of almost 2 dB/decade. Along the Aleutian archipelago, the levels are either slightly increasing or remaining flat. Levels in two north central Pacific Ocean sites are essentially flat. Comparisons with very sparse measurements made over the last 5 decades suggest that the mid-latitude noise levels may have peaked in the 1990s. These measurements also show, however, that the noise level is still rising elsewhere. The mechanisms driving these trends appear to be more subtle than simply the number of merchant ships or the local wind speed. Climatically-influenced basin-scale acoustic propagation conditions may have an important role.

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