Wild harbour porpoises startle and flee at low received levels from acoustic harassment device

Acoustic Harassment Devices (AHD) are widely used to deter marine mammals from aquaculture depredation, and from pile driving operations that may otherwise cause hearing damage. However, little is known about the behavioural and physiological effects of these devices. Here, we investigate the physio...

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Published in:Scientific Reports
Main Authors: Elmegaard, Siri L., Teilmann, Jonas, Rojano-Doñate, Laia, Brennecke, Dennis, Mikkelsen, Lonnie, Balle, Jeppe D., Gosewinkel, Ulrich, Kyhn, Line A., Tønnesen, Pernille, Wahlberg, Magnus, Ruser, Andreas, Siebert, Ursula, Madsen, Peter Teglberg
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-43453-8
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author Elmegaard, Siri L.
Teilmann, Jonas
Rojano-Doñate, Laia
Brennecke, Dennis
Mikkelsen, Lonnie
Balle, Jeppe D.
Gosewinkel, Ulrich
Kyhn, Line A.
Tønnesen, Pernille
Wahlberg, Magnus
Ruser, Andreas
Siebert, Ursula
Madsen, Peter Teglberg
author_facet Elmegaard, Siri L.
Teilmann, Jonas
Rojano-Doñate, Laia
Brennecke, Dennis
Mikkelsen, Lonnie
Balle, Jeppe D.
Gosewinkel, Ulrich
Kyhn, Line A.
Tønnesen, Pernille
Wahlberg, Magnus
Ruser, Andreas
Siebert, Ursula
Madsen, Peter Teglberg
author_sort Elmegaard, Siri L.
collection TiHo eLib (University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover)
container_issue 1
container_title Scientific Reports
container_volume 13
description Acoustic Harassment Devices (AHD) are widely used to deter marine mammals from aquaculture depredation, and from pile driving operations that may otherwise cause hearing damage. However, little is known about the behavioural and physiological effects of these devices. Here, we investigate the physiological and behavioural responses of harbour porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) to a commercial AHD in Danish waters. Six porpoises were tagged with suction-cup-attached DTAGs recording sound, 3D-movement, and GPS (n = 3) or electrocardiogram (n = 2). They were then exposed to AHDs for 15 min, with initial received levels (RL) ranging from 98 to 132 dB re 1 µPa (rms-fast, 125 ms) and initial exposure ranges of 0.9-7 km. All animals reacted by displaying a mixture of acoustic startle responses, fleeing, altered echolocation behaviour, and by demonstrating unusual tachycardia while diving. Moreover, during the 15-min exposures, half of the animals received cumulative sound doses close to published thresholds for temporary auditory threshold shifts. We conclude that AHD exposure at many km can evoke both startle, flight and cardiac responses which may impact blood-gas management, breath-hold capability, energy balance, stress level and risk of by-catch. We posit that current AHDs are too powerful for mitigation use to prevent hearing damage of porpoises from offshore construction.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Phocoena phocoena
genre_facet Phocoena phocoena
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-43453-8
op_relation Scientific reports -- Sci Rep -- https://www.nature.com/srep/ -- http://www.bibliothek.uni-regensburg.de/ezeit/?2615211 -- 2615211-3 -- 2045-2322
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spelling fttihohannover:oai:elib.tiho-hannover.de:tiho_mods_00009962 2025-01-17T00:18:45+00:00 Wild harbour porpoises startle and flee at low received levels from acoustic harassment device Elmegaard, Siri L. Teilmann, Jonas Rojano-Doñate, Laia Brennecke, Dennis Mikkelsen, Lonnie Balle, Jeppe D. Gosewinkel, Ulrich Kyhn, Line A. Tønnesen, Pernille Wahlberg, Magnus Ruser, Andreas Siebert, Ursula Madsen, Peter Teglberg 2023 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-43453-8 https://elib.tiho-hannover.de/receive/tiho_mods_00009962 https://elib.tiho-hannover.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/tiho_derivate_00002398/s41598-023-43453-8.pdf https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-43453-8#Sec1 eng eng Scientific reports -- Sci Rep -- https://www.nature.com/srep/ -- http://www.bibliothek.uni-regensburg.de/ezeit/?2615211 -- 2615211-3 -- 2045-2322 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-43453-8 https://elib.tiho-hannover.de/receive/tiho_mods_00009962 https://elib.tiho-hannover.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/tiho_derivate_00002398/s41598-023-43453-8.pdf https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-43453-8#Sec1 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess article ddc:570 ddc:630 Hochschulbibliographie allgemein Verzeichnis wissenschaftlicher Veröffentlichungen 2023 article Text doc-type:article 2023 fttihohannover https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-43453-8 2023-10-15T22:46:56Z Acoustic Harassment Devices (AHD) are widely used to deter marine mammals from aquaculture depredation, and from pile driving operations that may otherwise cause hearing damage. However, little is known about the behavioural and physiological effects of these devices. Here, we investigate the physiological and behavioural responses of harbour porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) to a commercial AHD in Danish waters. Six porpoises were tagged with suction-cup-attached DTAGs recording sound, 3D-movement, and GPS (n = 3) or electrocardiogram (n = 2). They were then exposed to AHDs for 15 min, with initial received levels (RL) ranging from 98 to 132 dB re 1 µPa (rms-fast, 125 ms) and initial exposure ranges of 0.9-7 km. All animals reacted by displaying a mixture of acoustic startle responses, fleeing, altered echolocation behaviour, and by demonstrating unusual tachycardia while diving. Moreover, during the 15-min exposures, half of the animals received cumulative sound doses close to published thresholds for temporary auditory threshold shifts. We conclude that AHD exposure at many km can evoke both startle, flight and cardiac responses which may impact blood-gas management, breath-hold capability, energy balance, stress level and risk of by-catch. We posit that current AHDs are too powerful for mitigation use to prevent hearing damage of porpoises from offshore construction. Article in Journal/Newspaper Phocoena phocoena TiHo eLib (University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover) Scientific Reports 13 1
spellingShingle article
ddc:570
ddc:630
Hochschulbibliographie allgemein
Verzeichnis wissenschaftlicher Veröffentlichungen
2023
Elmegaard, Siri L.
Teilmann, Jonas
Rojano-Doñate, Laia
Brennecke, Dennis
Mikkelsen, Lonnie
Balle, Jeppe D.
Gosewinkel, Ulrich
Kyhn, Line A.
Tønnesen, Pernille
Wahlberg, Magnus
Ruser, Andreas
Siebert, Ursula
Madsen, Peter Teglberg
Wild harbour porpoises startle and flee at low received levels from acoustic harassment device
title Wild harbour porpoises startle and flee at low received levels from acoustic harassment device
title_full Wild harbour porpoises startle and flee at low received levels from acoustic harassment device
title_fullStr Wild harbour porpoises startle and flee at low received levels from acoustic harassment device
title_full_unstemmed Wild harbour porpoises startle and flee at low received levels from acoustic harassment device
title_short Wild harbour porpoises startle and flee at low received levels from acoustic harassment device
title_sort wild harbour porpoises startle and flee at low received levels from acoustic harassment device
topic article
ddc:570
ddc:630
Hochschulbibliographie allgemein
Verzeichnis wissenschaftlicher Veröffentlichungen
2023
topic_facet article
ddc:570
ddc:630
Hochschulbibliographie allgemein
Verzeichnis wissenschaftlicher Veröffentlichungen
2023
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-43453-8
https://elib.tiho-hannover.de/receive/tiho_mods_00009962
https://elib.tiho-hannover.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/tiho_derivate_00002398/s41598-023-43453-8.pdf
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-43453-8#Sec1