By Virginia MorellOct. 11, 2016 , 3:30 PM
Human-produced
noise in the ocean is likely harming marine mammals in numerous unknown ways,
according to a comprehensive new report from the National Academies of
Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. That’s because there are insufficient
data to determine how the ill effects of noise created by ships, sonar signals,
and other activities interact with other threats, including pollution, climate
change, and the loss of prey due to fishing. The report, which was sponsored by
several government agencies and released on 7 October, provides a new framework
for researchers to begin exploring these cumulative impacts.
“There’s
a growing recognition that interactions between stressors on marine mammals
can’t right now be accurately assessed," said Peter Tyack, a marine mammal
biologist at the University of St Andrews in the United Kingdom, in a webinar
on the report. Tyack also chaired the committee that prepared the
study, "Approaches to Understanding the Cumulative Effects of
Stressors on Marine Mammals."
Killer
whales, for instance, are known to swim away from areas where they have
encountered sonar signals of about 142 decibels, a sound level lower than
currently allowed by the U.S. Navy for its ships, Tyack said, referring to a 2014 study in The
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America that determined the mammals’ likely
response. But scientists don’t yet know how other marine mammals might respond.
They also don’t know whether or how other factors, such as encountering an
oil spill or colliding with a ship, would—or would not—compound the cetaceans’
response to these sounds; or how or whether such combined stressors matter
to the animals’ long-term health and overall population.
Perhaps
most surprising, Tyack said, scientists’ knowledge about the population size of
most marine mammals “is very poor, and too weak to detect declines in time for
effective action.”
To
begin filling in these many gaps, the scientists are calling on researchers to
assess and report the health of individual marine mammals through observation,
photography, tissue samples, analysis of waxy ear plugs, and tags that record
data as the animals dive. Any changes, such as spotting skinny whales, might
provide “early warning indicators” about possible population declines, Tyack
said. Such data might have helped scientists figure out why an isolated
population of Alaskan belugas, protected from hunting since 1999, has yet to
recover.
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