| Literature DB >> 34764300 |
P Arranz1, M Glarou2,3, K R Sprogis4,2.
Abstract
Vessel noise is a primary driver of behavioural disturbance in cetaceans, which are targeted during whale-watch activities. Despite the growing, global effort for implementing best-practice principles, to date, there are no regulations on whale-watch vessel noise levels. Here, we test the hypothesis that a whale-watch vessel with a low noise emission will not elicit short-term behavioural responses in toothed whales compared to a vessel with a louder engine. We measured behavioural responses (n = 36) of short-finned pilot whales (Globicephala macrorhynchus) to whale-watch vessel approaches (range 60 m, speed 1.5 kn). Treatment approaches with a quieter electric engine (136-140 dB) compared to the same vessel with a louder petrol engine (151-139 dB) (low-frequency-mid-frequency weighted source levels, re 1 µPa RMS @ 1 m) were examined. Focal whales were resting mother and calves in small group sizes. During petrol engine treatments, the mother's mean resting time decreased by 29% compared to the control (GLM, p = 0.009). The mean proportion of time nursing for the calf was significantly influenced by petrol engine vessel passes, with a 81% decrease compared to the control (GLM, p = 0.01). There were no significant effects on behaviour from the quieter electric engine. Thus, to minimise disturbance on the activity budget of pilot whales, whale-watch vessels would ideally have source levels as low as possible, below 150 dB re 1 µPa RMS @ 1 m and perceived above ambient noise.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34764300 PMCID: PMC8585943 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-00487-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Study area off Tenerife, Canary Islands. Symbols represent control, electric engine and petrol engine treatments. The vessel departed from the Puerto de Los Gigantes marina. Grey lines represent the depth contours of these deep offshore waters (in metres).
Figure 2Methodological approach used during the experiments. (a) Vessel path recorded during a treatment scenario (example focal follow with electric engine), (b,c) aerial vantage point of a nursing and resting pilot whale mother-calf pair, (d) schematic diagram of treatment (electric and petrol engine) scenarios with 15 min duration approaches beginning > 200 m distance away and transiting in parallel/tangential to the whales; note that during the control scenario the vessel was stationary > 200 m with the engine in neutral, and (e) the hybrid whale-watch vessel with electric and petrol engines. Photographs were taken by Patricia Arranz.
Figure 3Whale-watch vessel third-octave band levels (TOLs) in dB re 1 µPa (RMS) for single and twin petrol and electric engines in shallow and deep-water habitats off Tenerife. Underwater ambient noise TOLs in a deep-water habitat off Tenerife (~ 1000 m water depth) were measured from SoundTraps at 4 and 400 m depth. The shaded regions represent the 95% confidence intervals. The audiogram of the short-finned pilot whale (Globicephala macrorhynchus) for tested frequencies ranging 10–120 kHz[41] is represented as a dotted black line. The expected hearing sensitivity of the short-finned pilot whale at 1–10 kHz proposed by the authors is shown as a grey dotted line. The expected hearing sensitivity is based on the low frequency vocalisations described for this species[43] and the described hearing sensitivity of a species within the same genus, the long-finned pilot whale (Globicephala melas)[44].
Behavioural events of pilot whales for Tenerife, based on[49].
| Behavioural event | Definition |
|---|---|
| Apparent nursing | An infant touched its rostrum to the mammary slit area of an adult female pilot whale (out of view of the UAV). The infant may be lying near-motionless whilst its mother was resting, or may be slowly swimming if the mother was swimming. The infant was parallel and almost under the mother (with both tails facing backwards) |
| Belly aside | Pilot whale swam on its left or right side, with one pectoral fin vertically directed towards the water surface. In some cases, half of the body was exposed out of the water |
| Belly to belly | Two pilot whales swam belly-to-belly without touching each other |
| Belly up | Rolled so that its ventral side was facing the surface of the water. Often the belly was fully exposed out of the water |
| Body contact | Physical contact between two or more pilot whales by several means, e.g., pectoral fin touches or rubbing body parts |
| Bubble display | Emitted bubbles from the blowhole underwater. These can be a single bubble, a whole cloud or bubble trains |
| Diving | Swam straight down vertically to a depth when the edges of the body may be difficult to discern. They may even disappear from the image |
| Encircling | One pilot whale swum circles around another in a small radius and at relatively high speed |
| Horizontal roll | A complete roll (360°) along the longitudinal axis and parallel to the water surface |
| Logging | Remained at the surface motionless (> 5 s) |
| Milling | Moved slowly at the surface without a fixed bearing |
| Mouth to mouth | Two or more pilot whales positioned their rostrums towards each other. Sometimes the rostrums were touching |
| Moving slowly | Swam slowly at the surface or underwater (< 2 knots) |
| Resting underwater | Remained underwater close to surface near-motionless |
| Rough housing | An adult pilot whale striked the side of the calf with its head or body |
| Spyhop | Vertically lifted its head out of the water so that the eyes were completely in the air, with a vertical re-entry |
| Tail slap | A slap with the ventral side of the tail or tailstock on the water surface. This behaviour can be repetitive with short intervals between slaps |
| Vertical roll | A complete roll (360°) along the ventral axis and perpendicular to the water surface |
Models used in analyses to test for behavioural effects of underwater electric and petrol engine vessel noise on pilot whales. Models used were linear models (LM) and generalised liner models (GLM). aFitted for both mother and calf. The scenario was control, electric engine, and petrol engine vessel passes. Presence and absence (pres/abs) of behavioural events outlined in Table 1.
| Response variable | Explanatory variables explored | Type | Error distribution | Link function |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proportion of time restinga | Scenario, group size | GLM | Quasibinomial | Logit |
| Proportion of time nursing for calf | Scenario, group size | GLM | Quasibinomial | Logit |
| Proportion of time diving for mother | Scenario, group size | GLM | Quasibinomial | Logit |
| Pres/abs behavioural events | Scenario, group size | GLM | Binomial | Logit |
| Respiration ratea | Scenario, group size, pres/abs behavioural events | LM | Gaussian | Identity |
Summary of controlled exposure experimental focal follows with an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) with mean flight times and standard deviations (in brackets). The closest point of approach (CPA) of the whale-watch vessel is listed, and the minimum and maximum range to the animals, along with the mean group size of pilot whales.
| Type | n | Total UAV flight time (h) | Mean flight duration (min) | Average CPA (m) | Range (m) | Mean group size (n) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 13 | 2.6 | 12.5 (0.002) | NA | 200 | 5 (2.2) |
| Electric | 13 | 2.5 | 11.6 (0.002) | 64 (15.6) | 54–115 | 6 (3.0) |
| Petrol | 10 | 1.9 | 11.5 (0.001) | 55 (14.5) | 35–71 | 7 (3.9) |
Figure 4Proportion of time resting for pilot whale lactating mothers as a function of different whale-watching scenarios: control (without a vessel pass), electric engine passes and petrol engine passes (black dots). The solid line represents the fitted values of the linear model, and the shaded area represents the 95% confidence interval.
Figure 5Proportion of time nursing for pilot whale calves as a function of different whale-watching scenarios: control (without a vessel pass), electric engine passes and petrol engine passes (black dots). The solid line represents the fitted values of the linear model, and the shaded area represents the 95% confidence interval.