Antarctic marine mammals and ocean acoustics


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oboebel [ at ] awi-bremerhaven.de

Abstract

Marine mammals rely on sound and hearing as their primary means of communication and sensing their world. Concerns that anthropogenic sound in the ocean could infer their sensing, cause stress or even damage their hearing physically rose a controversial discussion and triggered a worldwide boost in marine bioacoustic research. Innovative acoustic technologies and field methods are required to provide a basis for carefully designed and technically challenging research projects on free-ranging marine mammals, especially under the harsh environmental conditions of polar regions. The Ocean Acoustics group within the Marine Observing Systems section endeavors multidisciplinary research of environmental scientists, geophysicists, oceanographers, physicists, physiologists, and biologists to investigate the need and scope of mitigation measures for the effects of man-generated sound in the ocean, develop acoustic census techniques, explore marine mammal responses to various anthropogenic sounds, and study the vocal behaviour and hearing physiology of Antarctic marine mammals.



Item Type
Conference (Poster)
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Published
Event Details
MARCOPOLI Midterm Review: Evaluation of the AWI by the Scientific Advisory Board of the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, 2223 May 2006, Bremerhaven, Germany..
Eprint ID
15516
Cite as
Boebel, O. , Bornemann, H. , Burkhardt, E. , Kindermann, L. , Klinck, H. and Plötz, J. (2006): Antarctic marine mammals and ocean acoustics , MARCOPOLI Midterm Review: Evaluation of the AWI by the Scientific Advisory Board of the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, 2223 May 2006, Bremerhaven, Germany. .


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