Abstract
An increasingly warmer, less frozen Arctic is opening further to vessel traffic, transforming dominant ambient noise sources in the underwater soundscape. Chief sources may be shifting from wind to ship noise. Collecting data that help explain the changing composition of the soundscape may offer insights to guide regulation of noise in the ocean, furthering management and conservation efforts. Hydrophones connected to field recorders were used in this study to characterize the soundscape and to study marine mammal presence and ship noise. Hydrophones were deployed at 44 locations from a 13.8 m Ovni 445 sailing vessel between 9° E and 19° E and 69° N and 80° N in April 2023. Acoustic indices were utilized to assess soundscape composition. Vessel locations were confirmed using Automatic Identification System (AIS) marine traffic data. Wind, waves, and ice (geophony) dominated the soundscape’s acoustic signature in remote locations, while human-caused sounds (anthrophony) were significant near Arctic shipping routes, fishing areas, and in fjords. Marine mammal vocalizations were detected near the ice edge, at fjord mouths, and in fjords. This acoustic characterization study provides a glimpse into the sonic sources and balance of sounds in the soundscape at present, essential data as the region rapidly transforms.
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