ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Categorizing Active Marine Acoustic Sources Based on Their Potential to Affect Marine Animals

Carolyn D. Ruppel    
Thomas C. Weber    
Erica R. Staaterman    
Stanley J. Labak and Patrick E. Hart    

Resumen

Marine acoustic sources are widely used for geophysical imaging, oceanographic sensing, and communicating with and tracking objects or robotic vehicles in the water column. Under the U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act and similar regulations in several other countries, the impact of controlled acoustic sources is assessed based on whether the sound levels received by marine mammals meet the criteria for harassment that causes certain behavioral responses. This study describes quantitative factors beyond received sound levels that could be used to assess how marine species are affected by many commonly deployed marine acoustic sources, including airguns, high-resolution geophysical sources (e.g., multibeam echosounders, sidescan sonars, subbottom profilers, boomers, and sparkers), oceanographic instrumentation (e.g., acoustic doppler current profilers, split-beam fisheries sonars), and communication/tracking sources (e.g., acoustic releases and locators, navigational transponders). Using physical criteria about the sources, such as source level, transmission frequency, directionality, beamwidth, and pulse repetition rate, we divide marine acoustic sources into four tiers that could inform regulatory evaluation. Tier 1 refers to high-energy airgun surveys with a total volume larger than 1500 in3 (24.5 L) or arrays with more than 12 airguns, while Tier 2 covers the remaining low/intermediate energy airgun surveys. Tier 4 includes most high-resolution geophysical, oceanographic, and communication/tracking sources, which are considered unlikely to result in incidental take of marine mammals and therefore termed de minimis. Tier 3 covers most non-airgun seismic sources, which either have characteristics that do not meet the de minimis category (e.g., some sparkers) or could not be fully evaluated here (e.g., bubble guns, some boomers). We also consider the simultaneous use of multiple acoustic sources, discuss marine mammal field observations that are consistent with the de minimis designation for some acoustic sources, and suggest how to evaluate acoustic sources that are not explicitly considered here.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Xiaoyun Zhang, Xiaoan Zhang, Jiangang Xu, Li Yang and Gao Song    
In the actual operation of urban rail transit (URT), the vibrations of steel-spring floating-slab tracks (SSFSTs) are amplified, and the track structure has strong low-frequency acoustic radiation; therefore, it is necessary to study the acoustic radiati... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Maria Cairoli and Lavinia Chiara Tagliabue    
Digital twins aim to virtually replicate the static and dynamic building characteristics through real-time connectivity between virtual and physical counterparts. Despite its potential, research into digital twins for facility management (FM) in multipur... ver más
Revista: Acoustics

 
Antti Hynninen, Ville Viitanen, Jukka Tanttari, Rhena Klose, Claudio Testa and Jussi Martio    
This work focuses on the main issues related to noise measurements in cavitation tunnels. The scope of the paper is to twofold: to obtain a better understanding on the main phenomena underlying experiments and to define consistent cavitation tunnel measu... ver más

 
Katsuya Nakamura, Yoshikazu Kobayashi, Kenichi Oda and Satoshi Shigemura    
Acoustic emission (AE) source localization has been used to visualize progress failures generated in a wide variety of materials. In the conventional approaches, AE source localization algorithms assume that the AE signal is propagated as a straight line... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Cai Lu and Chunlong Zhang    
Seismic velocity inversion is one of the most critical issues in the field of seismic exploration and has long been the focus of numerous experts and scholars. In recent years, the advancement of machine learning technologies has infused new vitality int... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences