Increasing numbers and speeds of vessels in areas with populations of cetaceans may have the cumulative effect of reducing habitat quality by increasing the underwater noise level. Here, we first use digital acoustic tags to demonstrate that free-ranging delphinids in a coastal deep-water habitat are subjected to varying and occasionally intense levels of vessel noise. Vessel noise and sound propagation measurements from. a shallow-water habitat are then used to model the potential impact of high sound levels from small vessels on delphinid communication in both shallow and deep habitats, with bottlenose dolphins Tursiops sp. and short-finned pilot whales Globicephala macrorhynchus as model organisms. We find that small vessels travelling a...
Marine mammals in coastal areas are increasingly exposed to boats and noise as nature tourism grows....
Ocean soundscapes have been changing at an unprecedented rate due to the increase of human presence ...
Marine mammals, especially cetaceans, are highly vocal and dependent on sound for almost all aspects...
Increasing numbers and speeds of vessels in areas with populations of cetaceans may have the cumulat...
Anthropogenic noise across the world's oceans threatens the ability of vocalizing marine species to ...
Maritime traffic is an issue of major ecological concern, and vessel noise may be an important sour...
Shipping is the dominant marine anthropogenic noise source in the world’s oceans, yet we know little...
Animal acoustic behavior systems are complex and the lifestyle of marine mammals makes understanding...
The habitat of the resident bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) of the Cres-Losinj archipelago ...
Cetaceans rely critically on sound for navigation, foraging and communication and are therefore pote...
Ocean noise varies spatially and temporally and is driven by natural and anthropogenic processes. In...
Ocean noise varies spatially and temporally and is driven by natural and anthropogenic processes. In...
Some beaked whale species are susceptible to the detrimental effects of anthropogenic noise. Most st...
Some beaked whale species are susceptible to the detrimental effects of anthropogenic noise. Most st...
© 2017 The Author(s). Abstarct: The potential disturbance of dolphins from tourism boats has been wi...
Marine mammals in coastal areas are increasingly exposed to boats and noise as nature tourism grows....
Ocean soundscapes have been changing at an unprecedented rate due to the increase of human presence ...
Marine mammals, especially cetaceans, are highly vocal and dependent on sound for almost all aspects...
Increasing numbers and speeds of vessels in areas with populations of cetaceans may have the cumulat...
Anthropogenic noise across the world's oceans threatens the ability of vocalizing marine species to ...
Maritime traffic is an issue of major ecological concern, and vessel noise may be an important sour...
Shipping is the dominant marine anthropogenic noise source in the world’s oceans, yet we know little...
Animal acoustic behavior systems are complex and the lifestyle of marine mammals makes understanding...
The habitat of the resident bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) of the Cres-Losinj archipelago ...
Cetaceans rely critically on sound for navigation, foraging and communication and are therefore pote...
Ocean noise varies spatially and temporally and is driven by natural and anthropogenic processes. In...
Ocean noise varies spatially and temporally and is driven by natural and anthropogenic processes. In...
Some beaked whale species are susceptible to the detrimental effects of anthropogenic noise. Most st...
Some beaked whale species are susceptible to the detrimental effects of anthropogenic noise. Most st...
© 2017 The Author(s). Abstarct: The potential disturbance of dolphins from tourism boats has been wi...
Marine mammals in coastal areas are increasingly exposed to boats and noise as nature tourism grows....
Ocean soundscapes have been changing at an unprecedented rate due to the increase of human presence ...
Marine mammals, especially cetaceans, are highly vocal and dependent on sound for almost all aspects...