ScienceDaily (Oct. 23,
2012) — Concern is growing that human-generated noise in the ocean
disrupts marine animals that rely on sound for communication and navigation. In
the modern ocean, the background noise can be ten times louder than it was just
50 years ago. But new modeling based on recently published data suggests that
200 years ago -- prior to the industrial whaling era -- the ocean was even
louder than today due to the various sounds whales make.
California researchers Michael
Stocker and Tom Reuterdahl of Ocean Conservation Research in Lagunitas, Calif.,
present their findings at the 164th meeting of the Acoustical Society of
America (ASA), held Oct. 22 -- 26 in Kansas City, Missouri. Using historic
population estimates, the researchers assigned "sound generation
values" to the species for which they had good vocalization data. "In
one example, 350,000 fin whales in the North Atlantic may have contributed 126
decibels -- about as loud as a rock concert -- to the ocean ambient sound level
in the early 19th century," Stocker notes. This noise would have been
emitted at a frequency from 18 -- 22 hertz.
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