The oceans are loud and getting louder all the time. And marine mammals must live in the din. These animals take different approaches to the noise: Dolphins perform the equivalent of shouting. Humpback whales, when competing with a nearby boat, go silent.
โA lot of people imagine that underwater is this really quiet place, but it isnโt,โ said biologist Helen Bailey, who studies marine mammals and sea turtles at the University of Maryland. Ocean sounds are more than just crashing waves. Sharp noises, like sonar used in oil exploration or explosive Navy war games, can damage whale ears. Busy cargo lanes thrum with ship traffic. And as the Arctic warms, allowing more ships and industrial developments in previously ice-locked regions, northern marine mammal populations are exposed to more noise.
Increasing ocean noise was identified as a potential problem more than 20 years ago. Near California, the loudness of ship traffic has roughly doubled each decade since the 1960s. But the specific effects of this human-made cacophony still are being pieced together.
Bailey and her colleagues, in a new report published on Tuesday in the journal Biology Letters, used underwater microphones to listen to bottlenose dolphins about 20 miles offshore from Ocean City, Md. The scientists recorded 77 different animals, who distinguished themselves by their โsignature whistles,โ Bailey said. (The ability to identify wild dolphins by their whistles, rather than relying on visual markings, is a new and powerful development in dolphin research, Bailey said.)
Sound is a cornerstone of dolphin society. Their calls convey important identity information, and they might even use whistles while foraging to alert others to the presence of fish. Dolphins form what Bailey described as โfission-fusionโ societies, weaving in and out of social bands. As this happens, itโs โsort of like a family gathering, talking all over each other,โ Bailey said. โTheyโre very vocal and they like to chat.โ
When the background sea noise โ the ambient sounds of the offshore shipping lanes, which sounds something like loud radio static โ began to crescendo, the dolphins used information-poor whistles, Bailey and her co-authors found. The contours of their calls became flat, rather than the richer, curvier whistles.
Bailey used an example of missing house keys. Imagine your friend has lost her keys: At home, you might say, โHey, your keys are between these couch pillows.โ But in a noisy bar youโd simply shout, โKeys!โ A similar loss of information happens with these flatter whistles, she said.
Itโs been known that human-made noise can mask animal calls, as long as the frequencies overlap. But in the new study โthis adjustment wasnโt just to noise in the same frequency as their calls,โ Bailey said. That surprised her and her co-authors. โWe were making assumptions that just werenโt true,โ she said. โWe have to think a little bit differently about how noise is impacting these animals.โ
Janet Mann, an expert in bottlenose dolphins at Georgetown University who was not involved with this research, said that she suspects that calves would stay near their mothers while ambient sounds are loud. Otherwise, they might risk permanent separation. โThis means the calf has fewer opportunities to explore the environment or develop bonds on its own,โ Mann said.
Only a few studies have examined the effects of ambient sounds like this one. โNavy research on the impact of sound on marine mammals involves controlled studies with loud sounds where the animals are being observed and recorded,โ Mann said. โAmbient noise from shipping is ever-present, and it is hard to do controlled research.โ
Another study, published in 2012, examined a relative period of ambient quiet, when ship traffic ceased after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Along with a 6 dB decrease in noise, stress hormones dropped in the feces of North Atlantic right whales. This suggests that โwhen ambient noise dropped precipitously, the whales were far less stressed,โ Mann said.
Halfway across the globe from Maryland, in Japan, researchers recently monitored humpback whales near a remote shipping lane โ a single passenger-cargo liner traveled through the area once each day. Two recorders captured the sounds of the cargo liner and nearby whales. When the ship passed by, โhumpback whales seemed to stop singing temporarily,โ the study authors reported in their study published on Wednesday in PLOS One.
This paper was unusual because โthere are not so many studies based on a direct and quantitative approach,โ said Sadaharu Koga, a chief scientist at the Japan Ship Technology Research Association. (Koga was not directly involved with this research but members of his organization were.) It is unclear how damaging the cetaceansโ cessations are, but previous studies show that โsinging behavior is related to the breeding strategies of male whales,โ Koga said. Songs are a way for males to advertise their presence and attract female whales.
โThe water is a perfect medium for conducting sound, which is great if you are a fin whale that needs to find a mate 100 miles away,โ Mann said, โbut not so great if there are loud human-made sounds that interfere with your attempts to find a date.โ
But there are no rules for marine sounds comparable to those that limit noise pollution on land, Bailey said. Specific noisy activities, like an oil companyโs seismic survey, might require a permit. For general boat noise, though, โthere are no regulations,โ she said. โIf we can make everythingโ โ like ship engines, she said โ โjust a little bit quieter then we can reduce this problem.โ
