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Stuck in a corner: Anthropogenic noise threatens narwhals in their once pristine Arctic habitat

Outi M. Tervo, Susanna B. Blackwell, Susanne Ditlevsen, Eva Garde, Rikke G. Hansen, Adeline Samson, Alexander Conrad, Mads Peter Heide‐Jørgensen

2023Science Advances19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Niche-conservative species are especially susceptible to changes in their environment, and detecting the negative effects of new stressors in their habitats is vital for safeguarding of these species. In the Arctic, human disturbance including marine traffic and exploration of resources is increasing rapidly due to climate change–induced reduction of sea ice. Here, we show that the narwhal, Monodon monoceros , is extremely sensitive to human-made noise. Narwhals avoided deep diving (> 350 m) with simultaneous reduction of foraging and increased shallow diving activity as a response to either ship sound alone or ship sound with concurrent seismic airgun pulses. Normal behavior decreased by 50 to 75% at distances where received sound levels were below background noise. Narwhals were equally responsive to both disturbance types, hence demonstrating their acute sensitivity to ship sound. This sensitivity coupled with their special behavioral-ecological strategy including a narrow ecological niche and high site fidelity makes them thus especially vulnerable to human impacts in the Arctic.

Topics & Concepts

ArcticHabitatThe arcticNoise (video)Environmental scienceGeographyEcologyOceanographyBiologyComputer scienceGeologyImage (mathematics)Artificial intelligenceMarine animal studies overviewAnimal Vocal Communication and BehaviorNoise Effects and Management
Stuck in a corner: Anthropogenic noise threatens narwhals in their once pristine Arctic habitat | Litcius