Publication | Open Access
Silent research vessels are not quiet
108
Citations
9
References
2007
Year
AeroacousticsEngineeringOcean EngineeringSilent Research VesselsUnderwater Noise MitigationAcoustical OceanographyUnderwater AcousticNoiseSilent VesselPrairie-maskerNoise ReductionMarine EngineeringUltrasoundMarine BiologyVessel AvoidanceSpeech Communication
Behavior of herring (Clupea harengus) is stimulated by two ocean-going research vessels; respectively designed with and without regard to radiated-noise-standards. Both vessels generate a reaction pattern, but, contrary to expectations, the reaction initiated by the silent vessel is stronger and more prolonged than the one initiated by the conventional vessel. The recommendations from the scientific community on noise-reduced designs were motivated by the expectation of minimizing bias on survey results caused by vessel-induced fish behavior. In conclusion, the candidate stimuli for vessel avoidance remain obscure. Noise reduction might be necessary but is insufficient to obtain stealth vessel assets during surveys.
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