In:
Marine Mammal Science, Wiley, Vol. 38, No. 2 ( 2022-04), p. 682-704
Abstract:
Auditory masking by anthropogenic noise may impact marine mammals relying on sound for important life functions, including echolocation. Animals have evolved antimasking strategies, but they may not be completely effective or cost‐free. We formulated seven a priori hypotheses on how odontocete echolocation behavior could indicate masking. We addressed six of them using data from 15 tagged sperm whales subject to experimental exposures of pulsed and continuous active sonar (PAS and CAS). Sea state, received single‐pulse sound exposure level (SEL sp ), whale depth and orientation towards surface, and sonar were considered as candidate covariates representing different masking conditions. Echolocation behavior, including buzz duration and search range, varied strongly with depth. After controlling for depth and angle to the surface, the likelihood of buzzing following a click train decreased with sea state ( t = −7.3, p 〈 .001). There was little evidence for changes in 10 tested variables with increasing sonar SEL sp , except reduced buzzing consistent with previously reported feeding cessation ( t = −2.26, p = .02). A potential Lombard effect was detected during echolocation with sea state and SEL sp , despite off‐axis measurement and right‐hand censoring due to acoustic clipping. The results are not conclusive on masking effects on sperm whale echolocation, highlighting challenges and opportunities for future anthropogenic masking studies.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0824-0469
,
1748-7692
Language:
English
Publisher:
Wiley
Publication Date:
2022
detail.hit.zdb_id:
12787-5
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2218018-7
SSG:
12
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