Understanding the population consequences of acoustic disturbance for marine mammals

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Abstract

Loud anthropogenic underwater noise, such as that associated with sonar operations, pile driving, or seismic surveys, can cause behavioral and physiological disturbance to many animals that may affect their survival or ability to breed. However, no formal framework for assessing the population-level consequences of this disturbance is currently available. We describe an interim version of a framework developed by a working group on the population consequences of disturbance, funded by the US Office of Naval Research through the University of California, that can be used to assess the effects of offshore renewable energy developments on marine mammal populations.

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Harwood, J., King, S., Booth, C., Donovan, C., Schick, R. S., Thomas, L., & New, L. (2016). Understanding the population consequences of acoustic disturbance for marine mammals. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 875, pp. 417–423). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-2981-8_49

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