ANSI/ASA S3/SC1.4:2014 (R2019)

ANSI/ASA S3/SC1.4:2014 (R2019)

Sound Exposure Guidelines for Fishes and Sea Turtles: A Technical Report prepared by ANSI-Accredited Standards Committee S3/SC 1 and registered with ANSI

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In many countries, legislation requires the assessment of sound-producing activities
that may have an impact on animals in the aquatic environment (TNO 2011 , Johnson
2012 , Lewandowski et al. 2012 , Tasker 2012 , 2015 , Dekeling et al. 2015 , Gedamke
et al. 2015 ). There is also often a requirement to prepare environmental assessments
or statements that can lead to mitigation measures and/or restrictions for proposed
activities. Because few scientifi c data are available regarding the effects of sound,
particularly for fi shes and sea turtles, assessment procedures and subsequent regulatory
and mitigation measures are often severely limited in their relevance and effi cacy.
This creates uncertainty among all stakeholders as to how sound-producing exploration
and operations should proceed.

In 1998 the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
convened an international panel of experts to prepare noise exposure guidelines
for marine mammals. NOAA?s intent was to provide its regulatory staff with the
means of issuing permits on underwater noise production based on a set of organized
principles and facts instead of on a case-by-case basis. The aim was to
reduce regulatory uncertainty for all stakeholders by replacing precaution with
scientifi c facts. The panel?s initial guidelines appeared in a seminal paper (Southall
et al. 2007 ).

In 2004, NOAA convened a similar panel to develop noise exposure criteria for
fi shes and turtles with the same goals in mind. It included three members of the
marine mammal panel (WTE, RLG, and BLS) for continuity. When NOAA?s
support for this effort ended in 2006, the panel was organized as a Working
Group (WG) under the ANSI-Accredited Standards Committee S3/SC 1, Animal
Bioacoustics, which is sponsored by the Acoustical Society of America.

In addition, this Working Group, through its own efforts, obtained external funding
for the project (see Acknowledgements). The Working Group met eight times
between 2004 and 2010. It gathered and reviewed papers from both the peer-review
and grey literature that presented data on the exposure of fi sh and sea turtles to
various sound sources. Subsequent smaller meetings were held from 2011 to 2013
to review and fi nalize this manuscript. During that time, fi ndings were updated and
the revised document was continuously reviewed by the whole Working Group. The
guidelines presented here are primarily based on data in the peer-reviewed literature
up until mid-2013.

These Guidelines represents the Working Group?s consensus efforts to establish
broadly applicable sound exposure guidelines for fi shes and sea turtles across the
complete range of taxa and sound types, and to consider many impacts, rather than
just injury. The Working Group adopts some of the general approaches used to set
sound exposure guidelines for marine mammals (Southall et al. 2007 ). However,
several factors make the present Guidelines differ in format and conclusions from
Southall et al. ( 2007 ). These factors include:

1) There are more than 32,000 species of fi sh compared to about 130 species of
marine mammals,
2) Fishes are much more diverse anatomically, physiologically, ecologically, and
behaviorally than are marine mammals,
3) Most fi shes respond to the particle motion component of sound waves whereas
marine mammals do not,
4) Relatively few papers link exposure to effects in fi shes, and
5) While there are few species of sea turtles, so little is known about their hearing
and the role of sound in their lives that it is very diffi cult to establish guidelines
for these species.

These guidelines are not intended to be a complete review of the literature. Rather,
the material cited is limited to those publications that provide background to help
explain how and why the guidelines were selected. Readers interested in more complete
reviews are directed to references mentioned in Chap. 1.2 . As in Southall et al.
( 2007 ), this report does not consider the commercial, societal, and practical considerations
of the conclusions reached. Instead, these Guidelines serve as the fi rst step
in setting guidelines that may lead to the establishment of exposure standards for
fi shes and sea turtles.

Zusätzliche Information

Autor American National Standards of the Acoustical Society of America
Veröffentlicht von ASA
Document type Normen
Thema /subgroups/2398
Datum der Bestätigung 2019-01-01
Seitenzahl 87
Schlagwort ASA S3/SC1.4-2014 (R2019)
ANSI Approved