Development of the PCAD Model to Assess Biological Significance of Acoustic Disturbance

Assessing the impact of disturbance events on cryptic or far-ranging marine mammal species is critically important to stakeholders who must balance project objectives with the environmental impacts of proposed activities. In recent years, considerable scientific interest in this topic has led to key...

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Main Author: Costa, Daniel P
Other Authors: CALIFORNIA UNIV SANTA CRUZ DEPT OF BIOLOGY
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA602516
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spelling ftdtic:ADA602516 2023-05-15T16:05:45+02:00 Development of the PCAD Model to Assess Biological Significance of Acoustic Disturbance Costa, Daniel P CALIFORNIA UNIV SANTA CRUZ DEPT OF BIOLOGY 2013-09-30 text/html http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA602516 http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA602516 en eng http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA602516 Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. DTIC Ecology Biological Oceanography Acoustics *ACOUSTICS *CETACEA *SEALS(MAMMALS) BEHAVIOR IMPACT MODELS PATTERNS RESPONSE(BIOLOGY) SIMULATION TRANSFER FUNCTIONS PCAD(POPULATION CONSEQUENCES OF ACOUSTIC DISTURBANCE) BODY COMPOSITION BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS DISTURBANCE SIMULATIONS Text 2013 ftdtic 2016-02-24T15:16:08Z Assessing the impact of disturbance events on cryptic or far-ranging marine mammal species is critically important to stakeholders who must balance project objectives with the environmental impacts of proposed activities. In recent years, considerable scientific interest in this topic has led to key discoveries relating to species-specific sensitivities, behavioral responses, and the physics of disturbance; however, we still lack the ability to predict the effect of potential disturbance events on a population. To better inform stakeholders about the likely consequences of a specific proposed activity, the PCAD (Population Consequences of Acoustic Disturbance) working group established a conceptual framework detailing the impact of disturbance events and how the effects cascade from individuals altering their behavior all the way to population-level demographic effects. The PCAD working group then developed a more rigorous analytical approach (New et al. Accepted) . These methods require substantial pre-existing knowledge of foraging patterns, life-history schedules, and demographics. Therefore, it is essential to use well-studied species to validate the approach. This is best accomplished by selecting species that are as similar as possible to target species and are also extremely well-studied. We identified northern elephant seals and Atlantic bottlenose dolphins as the best species to parameterize the PCAD model. These species represent two life-history extremes (capital and income breeders), have clear taxonimic separation (pinnipeds and cetaceans), and both species have been studied intensively for several decades, providing unprecedented demographic data. These factors imply that they likely respond to disturbance in unique ways and by developing models for each system, we can effectively bound the input parameters (and expected outputs) for other species of interest. Text Elephant Seals Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
institution Open Polar
collection Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
op_collection_id ftdtic
language English
topic Ecology
Biological Oceanography
Acoustics
*ACOUSTICS
*CETACEA
*SEALS(MAMMALS)
BEHAVIOR
IMPACT
MODELS
PATTERNS
RESPONSE(BIOLOGY)
SIMULATION
TRANSFER FUNCTIONS
PCAD(POPULATION CONSEQUENCES OF ACOUSTIC DISTURBANCE)
BODY COMPOSITION
BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS
DISTURBANCE SIMULATIONS
spellingShingle Ecology
Biological Oceanography
Acoustics
*ACOUSTICS
*CETACEA
*SEALS(MAMMALS)
BEHAVIOR
IMPACT
MODELS
PATTERNS
RESPONSE(BIOLOGY)
SIMULATION
TRANSFER FUNCTIONS
PCAD(POPULATION CONSEQUENCES OF ACOUSTIC DISTURBANCE)
BODY COMPOSITION
BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS
DISTURBANCE SIMULATIONS
Costa, Daniel P
Development of the PCAD Model to Assess Biological Significance of Acoustic Disturbance
topic_facet Ecology
Biological Oceanography
Acoustics
*ACOUSTICS
*CETACEA
*SEALS(MAMMALS)
BEHAVIOR
IMPACT
MODELS
PATTERNS
RESPONSE(BIOLOGY)
SIMULATION
TRANSFER FUNCTIONS
PCAD(POPULATION CONSEQUENCES OF ACOUSTIC DISTURBANCE)
BODY COMPOSITION
BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS
DISTURBANCE SIMULATIONS
description Assessing the impact of disturbance events on cryptic or far-ranging marine mammal species is critically important to stakeholders who must balance project objectives with the environmental impacts of proposed activities. In recent years, considerable scientific interest in this topic has led to key discoveries relating to species-specific sensitivities, behavioral responses, and the physics of disturbance; however, we still lack the ability to predict the effect of potential disturbance events on a population. To better inform stakeholders about the likely consequences of a specific proposed activity, the PCAD (Population Consequences of Acoustic Disturbance) working group established a conceptual framework detailing the impact of disturbance events and how the effects cascade from individuals altering their behavior all the way to population-level demographic effects. The PCAD working group then developed a more rigorous analytical approach (New et al. Accepted) . These methods require substantial pre-existing knowledge of foraging patterns, life-history schedules, and demographics. Therefore, it is essential to use well-studied species to validate the approach. This is best accomplished by selecting species that are as similar as possible to target species and are also extremely well-studied. We identified northern elephant seals and Atlantic bottlenose dolphins as the best species to parameterize the PCAD model. These species represent two life-history extremes (capital and income breeders), have clear taxonimic separation (pinnipeds and cetaceans), and both species have been studied intensively for several decades, providing unprecedented demographic data. These factors imply that they likely respond to disturbance in unique ways and by developing models for each system, we can effectively bound the input parameters (and expected outputs) for other species of interest.
author2 CALIFORNIA UNIV SANTA CRUZ DEPT OF BIOLOGY
format Text
author Costa, Daniel P
author_facet Costa, Daniel P
author_sort Costa, Daniel P
title Development of the PCAD Model to Assess Biological Significance of Acoustic Disturbance
title_short Development of the PCAD Model to Assess Biological Significance of Acoustic Disturbance
title_full Development of the PCAD Model to Assess Biological Significance of Acoustic Disturbance
title_fullStr Development of the PCAD Model to Assess Biological Significance of Acoustic Disturbance
title_full_unstemmed Development of the PCAD Model to Assess Biological Significance of Acoustic Disturbance
title_sort development of the pcad model to assess biological significance of acoustic disturbance
publishDate 2013
url http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA602516
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA602516
genre Elephant Seals
genre_facet Elephant Seals
op_source DTIC
op_relation http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA602516
op_rights Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
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