ACS logo
acsonline.org

American Cetacean Society - They're Not Saved Yet!
Education Issues Research Whale Watching About ACS How to Help  ACTION ALERT! 
* Conservation Reports
* Research Reports
* Gray Whales
* IWC / Whaling
* Killer Whales / Orcas
* Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA)
* Right Whales
* Sound / Sonar
+ What is Sound?
- What's the Problem?
+ Military Sonars
- LFA
- LFA-EIS
- EU Petition
- Strandings
+ Seismic Exploration
- Gulf of Mexico
* Tuna / Dolphin & Bycatch
* Wild Captivity
* Whalewatcher Journal
- Index to Reprints
- Members Archives
* ACS Membership
* + Join or Renew Online
* + Printer-friendly
Membership Application
+ Volunteer
+ Donate
+ shop iGive.com mall and benefit ACSSignup for iGive Shop iGive Mall

 

Sound and Sonar Issues

sound pollution ---

While there are many manmade sounds being generated in the oceans, we are most urgently concerned with the loudest: Military sonars and industrial exploration (for oil and gas, ocean mapping, etc.).

These are among the most intense sounds produced by man, and they're being used in an environment that is particularly vulnerable to acoustic insult... The extent of that vulnerability is just beginning to be understood.

MILITARY SONARS

Since 1996, when an article appeared in Nature -- one of the world's most prestigious scientific journals -- on the stranding of 12 Cuvier's beaked whales across a 40-mile stretch of Greek beach, military sonars have come under increased scrutiny. In this incident, low-frequency sonar was used during NATO military exercises in the Mediterranean Sea.

In other parts of the world, when whales and dolphins started washing ashore dead with no visible injuries (Canary Islands, Puget Sound) or stranded live in shallow water (Bahamas), mid-frequency sonars were also implicated...  More read more on this topic 

SEISMIC EXPLORATION

The term "seismic exploration" can be a little misleading. It doesn't necessarily mean looking for literal earthquake faults, although it is used for that purpose. For the oil and gas industry it means looking for the types of strata that hold fossil fuels. Seismic exploration is also used for mapping the ocean floor's topography.

It is a problem because most seismic surveying work is conducted round the clock for weeks and sometimes months at a time. The airguns are blasted every few seconds, 24 hours a day...  More read more on this topic 

  STRANDINGS

2004 - HAWAII
2003 - PUGET SOUND
2002 - CANARY ISLANDS
2000 - BAHAMAS
1996 - GREECE - NATURE ARTICLE

  WHAT IS SOUND?

Most of us take it for granted... If we can't do anything about it, such as turn it down or get away from it, we become stressed and can even be physically injured....

Something similar is happening in the world's oceans...  More read more on this topic 

  WHY LOUD SOUND IS A PROBLEM IN THE OCEAN

Sound in the marine environment behaves differently from the way it behaves in air. Generally speaking, underwater, a sound will travel 5 times faster and 60 times farther...  More read more on this topic 

photo-strandings in the Bahamas



ACS logo American Cetacean Society
protecting whales, dolphins, porpoises, & their habitats through education, conservation, & research since 1967
top of page
TOP

Home | Contact ACS | Education | Issues | Trips | Members-Only | Join ACS

ACS National H.Q.:   P.O. Box 1391,   San Pedro,   CA 90733 USA


Section developed by Katy Penland. Katy Penland has been an advocate for the whales since 1992 when she joined ACS. After serving on the Los Angeles chapter board both as programs chair and as the chapter's delegate to the national organization, she went on to serve as ACS's national president for 1 1/2 terms and on its National Conservation Committee for three years. Her specialty is issues, and particular interests are sound pollution in the marine environment, domestic marine mammal policies, and international treaty law regarding whaling. Katy Penland represented ACS at the IWC in 2000, 2001, 2003 and 2004.

  Site Map
to report bugs or technical concerns about site: www.ArtemisComputing.com
Photo courtesy Ken Balcomb, copyright © 2000, all rights reserved
American Cetacean Society privacy policy
site © 1972-2010 ACS. All Rights Reserved.