Understanding the impacts of anthropogenic sound on marine mammals is important for effective mitigation and management. Sound impacts can cause behavioral changes that lead to displacement from preferred habitat and can have negative influence on vital rates. Here, we develop a movement model to better understand and simulate how whales respond to anthropogenic sound over ecologically meaningful space and time scales. The stochastic model is based on a sequential Monte Carlo sampler (a particle filter). The movement model takes account of vertical dive information and is influenced by the underwater soundscape and the historical whale distribution in the region. In the absence of noise disturbance, the simulator is shown to recover the his...
Intense underwater sounds caused by military sonar, seismic surveys, and pile driving can harm acous...
Sound travels with greater efficiency in water than does light, which is quickly absorbed and scatte...
This study was supported by Office of Naval Research (ONR) grant N00014- 16-1-2858: “PCoD+: Developing...
Funding: This work was funded by the US Office of Naval Research, grant number N00014-16-1-2858: ‘PC...
Potential responses of marine mammals to anthropogenic underwater sound are usually assessed by rese...
© The authors 2016.Potential responses of marine mammals to anthropogenic underwater sound are usual...
In the marine environment, underwater noise is introduced through a diverse set of industrial activi...
There is increasing concern about the potential effects of noise pollution on marine life in the wor...
There is increasing concern about the potential effects of noise pollution on marine life in the wor...
There is increasing concern about the potential effects of noise pollution on marine life in the wor...
Anthropogenic activities can lead to changes in animal behavior. Predicting population consequences ...
There is increasing concern about the potential effects of noise pollution on marine life in the wor...
Intense underwater sounds caused by military sonar, seismic surveys, and pile driving can harm acous...
Assessing the patterns of wildlife attendance to specific areas is relevant across many fundamental ...
There is great interest in ecology to understand how wild animals are affected by anthropogenic dist...
Intense underwater sounds caused by military sonar, seismic surveys, and pile driving can harm acous...
Sound travels with greater efficiency in water than does light, which is quickly absorbed and scatte...
This study was supported by Office of Naval Research (ONR) grant N00014- 16-1-2858: “PCoD+: Developing...
Funding: This work was funded by the US Office of Naval Research, grant number N00014-16-1-2858: ‘PC...
Potential responses of marine mammals to anthropogenic underwater sound are usually assessed by rese...
© The authors 2016.Potential responses of marine mammals to anthropogenic underwater sound are usual...
In the marine environment, underwater noise is introduced through a diverse set of industrial activi...
There is increasing concern about the potential effects of noise pollution on marine life in the wor...
There is increasing concern about the potential effects of noise pollution on marine life in the wor...
There is increasing concern about the potential effects of noise pollution on marine life in the wor...
Anthropogenic activities can lead to changes in animal behavior. Predicting population consequences ...
There is increasing concern about the potential effects of noise pollution on marine life in the wor...
Intense underwater sounds caused by military sonar, seismic surveys, and pile driving can harm acous...
Assessing the patterns of wildlife attendance to specific areas is relevant across many fundamental ...
There is great interest in ecology to understand how wild animals are affected by anthropogenic dist...
Intense underwater sounds caused by military sonar, seismic surveys, and pile driving can harm acous...
Sound travels with greater efficiency in water than does light, which is quickly absorbed and scatte...
This study was supported by Office of Naval Research (ONR) grant N00014- 16-1-2858: “PCoD+: Developing...