Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Low-Energy Marine Seismic Survey in the Eastern Tropical Pacific Ocean Off Central and South America, October-November 2010, 54095-54114 [2010-22080]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 171 / Friday, September 3, 2010 / Notices
54095
LIST OF PETITIONS RECEIVED BY EDA FOR CERTIFICATION OF ELIGIBILITY TO APPLY FOR TRADE ADJUSTMENT 8/17/2010
THROUGH 8/27/2010
Firm name
Date accepted
for filing
Address
American Standard Circuits,
Inc.
475 Industrial Drive, West Chicago, IL 60185.
08/18/10
Diamond Roltran, LLC .............
59 Porter Road, Littleton, MA
01460.
08/27/10
Manchester Wood, Inc ............
180 North Street, Granville,
NY 12832–9438.
08/18/10
McVan, Inc ..............................
35 Frank Mossberg Drive, Attleboro, MA 02703.
08/23/10
Any party having a substantial
interest in these proceedings may
request a public hearing on the matter.
A written request for a hearing must be
submitted to the Trade Adjustment
Assistance for Firms Division, Room
7106, Economic Development
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, Washington, DC 20230, no
later than ten (10) calendar days
following publication of this notice.
Please follow the procedures set forth
in Section 315.9 of EDA’s final rule (71
FR 56704) for procedures for requesting
a public hearing. The Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance official program
number and title of the program under
which these petitions are submitted is
11.313, Trade Adjustment Assistance.
Dated: August 27, 2010.
Miriam J. Kearse,
Program Team Lead.
[FR Doc. 2010–22123 Filed 9–2–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–24–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XY12
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to
Specified Activities; Low-Energy
Marine Seismic Survey in the Eastern
Tropical Pacific Ocean Off Central and
South America, October–November
2010
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed Incidental
Harassment Authorization; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
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Products
The company is a manufacturer of printed circuit boards for
the military, aerospace, industrial, commercial, medical,
telecommunications, computer, radar and transportation industries.
The company manufactures roll rings. Roll rings transfer
power, data and signals over rotary interfaces. They are
custom designed, although there are four basic types:
Flexures, couplers, roll blocks and flex wheels.
The company produces wooded furniture for the retailing industry including TV tray tables, kitchen gourmet carts and
Adirondack style furniture.
The company manufactures gold, silver and pewter jewelry
and religious products. Their manufacturing process consists of stamping and casting.
NMFS has received an
application from the Scripps Institution
of Oceanography (SIO) of the University
of California for an Incidental
Harassment Authorization (IHA) to take
marine mammals, by harassment,
incidental to conducting a low-energy
marine seismic survey. Pursuant to the
Marine Mammal Protection Act
(MMPA), NMFS is requesting comments
on its proposal to issue an IHA to SIO
to take, by Level B Harassment only, 21
species of marine mammals during the
specified activity.
DATES: Comments and information must
be received no later than October 4,
2010.
SUMMARY:
Comments on the
application should be addressed to
Michael Payne, Chief, Permits,
Conservation and Education Division,
Office of Protected Resources, National
Marine Fisheries Service, 1315 EastWest Highway, Silver Spring, MD
20910. The mailbox address for
providing e-mail comments is
PR1.0648–XY12@noaa.gov. NMFS is not
responsible for e-mail comments sent to
addresses other than the one provided
here. Comments sent via e-mail,
including all attachments, must not
exceed a 10-megabyte file size.
Instructions: All comments received
are a part of the public record and will
generally be posted to https://
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/
incidental.htm without change. All
Personal Identifying Information (for
example, name, address, etc.)
voluntarily submitted by the commenter
may be publicly accessible. Do not
submit Confidential Business
Information or otherwise sensitive or
protected information.
A copy of the application containing
a list of the references used in this
document may be obtained by writing to
ADDRESSES:
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the address specified above, telephoning
the contact listed below (see FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT), or
visiting the Internet at: https://
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/
incidental.htm. The National Science
Foundation (NSF), which is providing
funding for the proposed action, has
prepared a draft Environmental
Assessment (EA) titled ‘‘Marine
Geophysical Survey by the R/V Melville
in the Pacific Ocean off Central and
South America, October–November
2010’’. The NSF draft EA incorporates
an ‘‘Environmental Assessment of a
Marine Geophysical Survey by the R/V
Melville in the Pacific Ocean off Central
and South America, October–November
2010’’, prepared by LGL Limited,
Environmental Research Associates, on
behalf of NSF. These associated
documents, prepared in compliance
with the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA), are also available at the
same Internet address. Documents cited
in this notice may also be viewed, by
appointment, during regular business
hours, at the aforementioned address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ben
Laws or Candace Nachman, Office of
Protected Resources, NMFS, (301) 713–
2289.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the
MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.) direct
the Secretary of Commerce to allow,
upon request, the incidental, but not
intentional, taking of small numbers of
marine mammals by U.S. citizens who
engage in a specified activity (other than
commercial fishing) within a specified
geographical region if certain findings
are made and either regulations are
issued or, if the taking is limited to
harassment, a notice of a proposed
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authorization is provided to the public
for review.
Authorization for incidental takings
shall be granted if NMFS finds that the
taking will have a negligible impact on
the species or stock(s), will not have an
unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for
subsistence uses (where relevant), and if
the permissible methods of taking and
requirements pertaining to the
mitigation, monitoring and reporting of
such takings are set forth. NMFS has
defined ‘‘negligible impact’’ in 50 CFR
216.103 as ‘‘* * * an impact resulting
from the specified activity that cannot
be reasonably expected to, and is not
reasonably likely to, adversely affect the
species or stock through effects on
annual rates of recruitment or survival.’’
Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA
established an expedited process by
which citizens of the U.S. can apply for
an authorization to incidentally take
small numbers of marine mammals by
harassment. Section 101(a)(5)(D)
establishes a 45-day time limit for
NMFS review of an application
followed by a 30-day public notice and
comment period on any proposed
authorizations for the incidental
harassment of marine mammals. Within
45 days of the close of the comment
period, NMFS must either issue or deny
the authorization. Except with respect to
certain activities not pertinent here, the
MMPA defines ‘‘harassment’’ as:
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
any act of pursuit, torment, or annoyance
which (i) has the potential to injure a marine
mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild
[Level A harassment]; or (ii) has the potential
to disturb a marine mammal or marine
mammal stock in the wild by causing
disruption of behavioral patterns, including,
but not limited to, migration, breathing,
nursing, breeding, feeding, or sheltering
[Level B harassment].
Summary of Request
NMFS received an application on
May 28, 2010 from SIO for the taking,
by harassment, of marine mammals
incidental to conducting, in
collaboration with Texas A&M
University and with research funding
provided by the National Science
Foundation, a low-energy marine
seismic survey. NMFS reviewed SIO’s
application and identified a number of
issues requiring further clarification.
After addressing comments from NMFS,
SIO modified its application and
submitted a revised application on July
14, 2010. NMFS carefully evaluated
SIO’s application, including their
analyses, and determined that the
application is complete and provides
sufficient data for NMFS to make the
necessary preliminary determinations
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pursuant to the MMPA. The July 14,
2010 application is the one available for
public comment (see ADDRESSES) and
considered by NMFS for this proposed
IHA.
The proposed survey will occur in the
Eastern Tropical Pacific Ocean (ETP),
encompassing the area from
approximately 8° N–12° S and 80–91°
W, off the coasts of Costa Rica, Panama,
Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, in
International Waters and within the
Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) of
Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, and
Ecuador, and is scheduled to occur from
October 19–November 14, 2010. Some
minor deviation from these dates is
possible, depending on logistics and
weather. The survey will use a pair of
Generator Injector (GI) airguns, each
with a discharge volume of 45 in3.
Seismic airgun operations are expected
to result in the incidental take, by Level
B harassment only, of up to 21 species
of marine mammals. These species
include: Bryde’s whale; blue whale;
sperm whale; humpback whale; Cuvier’s
beaked whale; Blainville’s beaked
whale; pygmy beaked whale; gingkotoothed beaked whale; rough-toothed
dolphin; bottlenose dolphin;
pantropical spotted dolphin; spinner
dolphin; striped dolphin; Fraser’s
dolphin; short-beaked common dolphin;
Risso’s dolphin; melon-headed whale;
pygmy killer whale; false killer whale;
killer whale; and short-finned pilot
whale.
Description of the Specified Activity
SIO plans to conduct a seismic survey
as part of an integrated geophysical and
geochemical study. In addition to the GI
airguns, a multibeam echosounder
(MBES) and a sub-bottom profiler (SBP)
will be utilized for research purposes.
The planned survey will involve one
source vessel, the R/V Melville
(Melville).
The purpose of this project is to better
understand how marine sediments
record paleo-oceanographic
information. The deposition of
sediments in the upper 500 m (1640.4
ft) of the sediment column will be
studied using known seismic horizons
in the sediment column to estimate rates
of deposition downstream from
potential sediment sources on the
topographic highs and to estimate loss
from the ridges. The seismic survey and
associated coring and water sampling
will allow comparisons of geophysical
estimates of the level of erosion from
marine ridges and highs with
geochemical estimates of sediment
focusing based upon the distribution of
Th-230, a particle-reactive isotope
produced by the decay of dissolved
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uranium in the water column. In
addition, the study will examine
whether there are sediment sources for
Th-230 in slowly-accumulating
sediments.
The Melville is expected to depart
Puntarenas, Costa Rica, on October 19,
2010, and spend approximately 15 days
conducting seismic surveys, 10 days
collecting water and core samples, and
approximately 2 days in transit, arriving
at Arica, Chile, on November 14, 2010.
At each of four sites (see Figure 1 of
SIO’s application), seismic operations
will be conducted for approximately 2
days, and each water sampling and
coring station will be occupied for 1–2
days. Some minor deviation from these
dates is possible, depending on logistics
and weather.
The source vessel, the Melville, will
deploy a pair of low-energy GI airguns
as an energy source at a depth of 2 m
(each with a discharge volume of 45
in3), plus either of two towed
hydrophone streamers, one 725 m
(2378.6 ft) long with 40 channels, and
the other 350 m (1148.3 ft) long with 16
channels. Hydrophone streamers are
towed at adjustable depth to afford best
reception of returning seismic signals,
depending upon surface conditions, but
are typically towed in at approximately
10 m. The energy to the GI airgun is
compressed air supplied by compressors
onboard the source vessel. As the GI
airgun is towed along the survey lines,
the receiving systems will receive the
returning acoustic signals.
In addition to the GI airguns, an
MBES and an SBP will be used
throughout the cruise, except while at
water/core stations, to help verify
seafloor conditions at possible coring
sites and to collect additional seafloor
bathymetric data. Passive geophysical
sensors (a gravimeter and a
magnetometer) will also be operated
continuously throughout the entire
cruise.
All potential incidental take, by
harassment only, is expected to result
from the operation of the GI airguns.
Take is not expected to result from the
use of the MBES or SBP, for reasons
discussed below, or from collision with
the vessel because it is a single vessel,
moving at a relatively slow speed
(operational speeds of approximately 11
km/hr [6 knots] during seismic
acquisition within the survey areas and
15–18.5 km/hr [8–10 knots] between
survey areas and stations), for a
relatively short period of time
(approximately 30 days). It is likely that
any marine mammal would be able to
avoid the vessel.
The seismic program will consist of
approximately 5475 km (3402 mi) of
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survey lines, including turns (see Figure
1 of SIO’s application). Water depths at
the seismic survey locations are
approximately 1000–4800 m (3280.8–
15,748 ft). The GI airguns will be
operated on a small grid for
approximately 45 hours at each of four
sites (see Figure 1 of SIO’s application)
where the 40-channel streamer will be
used, and for most of the time during
transits between the sites, to the first
site, and after the last site, where the 12channel streamer will be used. There
will be additional seismic operations
associated with equipment testing,
startup, and possible line changes or
repeat coverage of any areas where
initial data quality is sub-standard.
Those additional operations are allowed
for in the estimated total line-kilometers
given above. The Melville is expected to
depart Puntarenas, Costa Rica, on
October 19, 2010 and spend
approximately 15 days conducting
seismic surveys, 10 days collecting
water and core samples, and
approximately 2 days in transit, arriving
at Arica, Chile, on November 14, 2010.
All planned geophysical data
acquisition activities will be conducted
by SIO with on-board assistance by the
scientists who have proposed the study.
The Chief Scientist is Dr. Franco
Marcantonio of Texas A&M University.
The vessel will be self-contained, and
the crew will live aboard the vessel for
the entire cruise.
Vessel Specifications
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The Melville has a length of 85 m
(278.9 ft), a beam of 14 m (45.9 ft), and
a maximum draft of 5 m (16.4 ft). The
ship is powered by two 1385-hp diesel
engines and a 900-hp retracting
azimuthing bow thruster. Operation
speeds of approximately 11 km/hr (5.9
knots) and 15–18.5 km/hr (8.1–10 knots)
will be used during seismic acquisition
within the survey areas and between the
areas and stations, respectively. When
not towing seismic survey gear, the
Melville cruises at 21.7 km/hr (11.7
knots) and has a maximum speed of
25.9 km/hr (14 knots). The Melville will
also serve as the platform from which
vessel-based protected species observers
(PSOs) will watch for animals before
and during airgun operations (discussed
later in this document).
Acoustic Source Specifications
(1) Seismic Airguns
The Melville will tow a pair of 45-in3
Sercel GI airguns and a streamer
containing hydrophones along
predetermined lines. Seismic pulses
will be emitted at intervals of 8–10 s. At
speeds of approximately 11–18.5 km/hr
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(5.9–10 knots), the 8–10 s spacing
corresponds to shot intervals of
approximately 25–50 m (82–164 ft).
The generator chamber of each GI
airgun, responsible for introducing the
sound pulse into the ocean, is 45 in3.
The larger (105-in3) injector chamber
injects air into the previously-generated
bubble to maintain its shape and does
not introduce more sound into the
water. The two 45-in3 GI airguns will be
towed 8 m (26.2 ft) apart side by side,
21 m (68.9 ft) behind the Melville, at a
depth of 2 m (6.6 ft).
As the GI airgun is towed along the
survey line, the towed hydrophone
array in the streamer receives the
reflected signals and transfers the data
to the on-board processing system.
Given the relatively short streamer
length behind the vessel, the turning
rate of the vessel while the gear is
deployed is much higher than the limit
of five degrees per minute for a seismic
vessel towing a streamer of more typical
length (greater than l km (0.6 mi)). Thus,
the maneuverability of the vessel is not
limited much during operations.
The root mean square (rms) received
levels that are used as impact criteria for
marine mammals are not directly
comparable to the peak (pk or 0-pk) or
peak-to-peak (pk-pk) values normally
used to characterize source levels of
airgun arrays. The measurement units
used to describe airgun sources, peak or
peak-to-peak decibels, are always higher
than the rms decibels referred to in
biological literature. A measured
received level of 160 dB re 1 μPa (rms)
in the far field would typically
correspond to a peak measurement of
approximately 170 dB and to a peak-topeak measurement of approximately
176–178 dB, as measured for the same
pulse received at the same location
(Greene, 1997; McCauley et al., 1998,
2000). The precise difference between
rms and peak or peak-to-peak values
depends on the frequency content and
duration of the pulse, among other
factors. However, the rms level is
always lower than the peak or peak-topeak level for an airgun-type source.
The actual received level at any location
in the water near the GI airguns will not
exceed the source level of the strongest
individual source. In this case, that will
be about 224.6 dB re 1 μPa-m peak or
229.8 dB re 1 μPa-m peak-to-peak. The
dominant frequency components of the
GI airguns are 0–188 Hertz (Hz).
Received sound levels have been
modeled by Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory (L–DEO) for a number of
airgun configurations, including two 45
in3 Nucleus G. Guns, in relation to
distance and direction from the airgun
(see Figure 2 of SIO’s application). The
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model does not allow for bottom
interactions and is most directly
applicable to deep water. Based on the
modeling, estimates of the maximum
distances from the GI airguns where
sound levels of 190, 180, and 160 dB re
1 μPa (rms) are predicted to be received
in deep (>1,000 m (3280.8 ft)) water are
shown in Table 1 below. Because the
model results are for G. Guns, which
have more energy than GI airguns of the
same size, the distances in Table 1
overestimate the distances for the 45 in3
GI airguns.
(2) Multibeam Echosounder and SubBottom Profiler
Along with the GI airgun operations,
an MBES and a SBP will be operated
from the source vessel at certain times
during the planned study to help verify
seafloor conditions at possible coring
sites and to collect additional seafloor
bathymetric data.
The Kongsberg EM 122 MBES
operates at 10.5–13 (usually 12)
kilohertz (kHz) and is hull-mounted on
the Melville. The transmitting
beamwidth is 1° fore-aft and 150°
athwartship. The maximum source level
is 242 dB re 1 μPa-m (rms). Each ‘‘ping’’
consists of eight (in water >1000 m
deep) or four (<1000 m deep) successive
fan-shaped transmissions, each
ensonifying a sector that extends 1° foreaft. Continuous-wave pulses increase
from 2 to 15 ms long in water depths up
to 2600 m (8530.2 ft), and FM chirp
pulses up to 100 ms long are used in
water >2600 m. The successive
transmissions span an overall crosstrack angular extent of about 150°, with
2-ms gaps between the pulses for
successive sectors.
The Knudsen Engineering Model
320B/R SBP is a dual-frequency
transceiver designed to operate at 3.5
and/or 12 kHz. It is used in conjunction
with the MBES to provide data about
the sedimentary features that occur
below the sea floor. The energy from the
SBP is directed downward via a 3.5-kHz
transducer array mounted in the hull of
the Melville. The maximum power
output of the 320B/R is 10 kilowatts for
the 3.5-kHz section and 2 kilowatts for
the 12-kHz section. The nominal
beamwidth is 80°.
The pulse length for the 3.5-kHz
section of the 320B/R is 0.8–24 ms,
controlled by the system operator in
regards to water depth and reflectivity
of the bottom sediments and will
usually be 6, 12, or 24 ms at the water
depths at the study sites and in transit
from Puntarenas and to Arica. The
system produces one sound pulse and
then waits for its return before
transmitting again. Thus, the pulse
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interval is directly dependent upon
water depth, and in this survey is 0.8–
1.5 s. Using the Sonar Equations and
assuming 100 percent efficiency in the
system (impractical in real world
applications), the source level for the
320B/R is calculated to be 211 dB re 1
μPa-m. In practice, the system is rarely
operated above 80 percent power level.
(3) Safety Radii
NMFS has determined that for
acoustic effects, using acoustic
thresholds in combination with
corresponding safety radii is an effective
way to consistently apply measures to
avoid or minimize the impacts of an
action, and to quantitatively estimate
the effects of an action. Thresholds are
used in two ways: (1) To establish a
mitigation shut-down or power-down
zone, i.e., if an animal enters an area
calculated to be ensonified above the
level of an established threshold, a
sound source is powered down or shut
down; and (2) to calculate take, in that
a model may be used to calculate the
area around the sound source that will
be ensonified to that level or above,
then, based on the estimated density of
animals and the distance that the sound
source moves, NMFS can estimate the
conducted by L–DEO in the northern
Gulf of Mexico from May 27–June 3,
2003 (Tolstoy et al., 2004). Although the
results are limited, the data showed that
radii around the airguns where the
received level would be 180 dB re 1 μPa
(rms), the safety criterion applicable to
cetaceans (NMFS 2000), vary with water
depth. Similar depth-related variation is
likely in the 190 dB distances applicable
to pinnipeds. Correction factors were
developed for water depths 100–1000 m
and <100 m. The proposed survey will
occur in depths of approximately 1000–
4800 m, so the correction factors for
shallow water are not relevant here. All
of the seismic operations will be in
depths >1000 m.
The empirical data indicate that, for
deep water (>1000 m), the L–DEO
model tends to overestimate the
received sound levels at a given
distance (Tolstoy et al., 2004). However,
to be precautionary pending acquisition
of additional empirical data, it is
proposed that safety radii during GI
airgun operations in deep water will be
values predicted by L–DEO’s model (see
Table 1 in this document). Therefore,
the assumed 180- and 190-dB radii are
40 m (131.2 ft) and 10 m (32.8 ft),
respectively.
number of marine mammals that may be
‘‘taken.’’
As a matter of past practice and based
on the best available information at the
time regarding the effects of marine
sound, NMFS estimates that Level A
harassment from acoustic sources may
occur when animals are exposed to
levels above 180 dB re 1 μPa (rms) level
for cetaceans and 190 dB re 1 μPa (rms)
for pinnipeds. A review of the available
scientific data using an application of
science-based extrapolation procedures
(Southall et al., 2007) strongly suggests
that Level A harassment (as well as
temporary threshold shift (TTS)) from
single sound exposure impulse events
may occur at much higher levels than
the levels previously estimated using
very limited data. However, for
purposes of this proposed action, SIO’s
application sets forth, and NMFS is
using, the more conservative 180 and
190 dB re 1 μPa (rms) criteria. NMFS
also considers 160 dB re 1 μPa (rms) as
the criterion for estimating the onset of
Level B harassment from acoustic
sources producing impulse sounds, as
in this seismic survey.
Empirical data concerning the 180and 160-dB distances have been
acquired based on measurements during
the acoustic verification study
TABLE 1—PREDICTED DISTANCES TO WHICH SOUND LEVELS ≥190, 180 AND 160 DB RE 1 μPA (RMS) MIGHT BE RECEIVED FROM TWO 45 IN3 GI AIRGUNS THAT WILL BE USED DURING THE SEISMIC SURVEYS IN THE EASTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC OCEAN DURING OCTOBER-NOVEMBER 2010
[Distances are based on model results provided by L–DEO.]
Estimated distances at received levels (m)
Source and volume
Tow depth (m)
Water depth
190 dB
Two GI airguns, 45 in3 each
2
Deep (>1000 m) ............................
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Description of Marine Mammals in the
Area of the Specified Activity
Forty-three species of marine
mammals, including 29 odontocetes, 7
mysticetes, 6 pinnipeds, and the marine
sea otter (Enhydra lutris), are known to
occur in the ETP. Of these, 23 cetacean
species are likely to occur in the
proposed survey areas in the ETP during
October–November (see Table 2 in this
document), and are considered further
here. Three of these 23 cetacean species
are listed under the Endangered Species
Act (ESA) as Endangered: The sperm
(Physeter macrocephalus), humpback
(Megaptera novaeangliae), and blue
(Balaenoptera musculus) whales.
Nine cetacean species, although
present in the wider ETP, likely would
not be found in the proposed seismic
survey areas because their ranges do not
extend that far south or north. Pacific
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180 dB
160 dB
10
40
400
white-sided dolphins (Lagenorhynchus
obliquidens) and Baird’s beaked whales
(Berardius bairdii) are seen very
occasionally in the northernmost
portions of the ETP (Ferguson and
Barlow, 2001). Long-beaked common
dolphins (Delphinus capensis) are
known to occur in the northernmost
areas of the ETP off Baja California,
Mexico, and off the coast of Peru
(Heyning and Perrin, 1994). Southern
right whales (Eubalaena australis) are
seen on rare occasions off the coasts of
Peru and Chile (Aguayo et al., 1992;
Santillan et al., 2004). Gray’s beaked
whales (Mesoplodon grayi) are
distributed in the southernmost portions
of the ETP and off the coast of southern
Peru (Culik, 2010). Dusky dolphins
(Lagenorhynchus obscurus), southern
right whale dolphins (Lissodelphis
peronii), Burmeister’s porpoises
(Phocoena spinipinnis), and long-finned
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pilot whales (Globicephala melas) also
occur near the Peruvian coast
(Leatherwood et al., 1991; Van
Waerebeek et al., 1991; Brownell and
Clapham, 1999; Olson and Reilly, 2002).
These nine species are not addressed in
detail in SIO’s application and are not
considered further in this Notice of
Proposed IHA.
Sei (Balaenoptera borealis) and fin (B.
physalus) whales, listed as Endangered
under the ESA, are known from the ETP
but are considered very rare in the
proposed survey area. Sei whales may
have been sighted during surveys in the
ETP (Wade and Gerrodette, 1993;
Kinzey et al., 1999, 2000, 2001);
however, it is difficult to distinguish sei
whales from Bryde’s whales (B. edeni) at
sea. Because sei whales generally have
a more northerly and temperate
distribution (Leatherwood et al., 1988),
Wade and Gerrodette (1993) classified
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any tentative sei whale observations in
the ETP as Bryde’s whale sightings. Sei
whales may also have been sighted near
the Galapagos Islands (Clarke, 1962);
although, Clarke and Aguayo (1965)
suggested that those sightings could
have been Bryde’s whales. Although the
occurrence of sei whales is documented
off Costa Rica (Rodriguez-Herrera et al.,
2002), the reliability of the
identification is uncertain. Neither
Ferguson and Barlow (2001) or Jackson
et al. (2008) positively identified sei
whales in or near the proposed project
area during surveys conducted during
July–December. Similarly, Rasmussen et
al. (2004) did not report sei whales in
8 years of surveys off Costa Rica or
Panama. No sei whales were detected
during L–DEO seismic surveys off Costa
Rica or Nicaragua in November–
December 2004 or February–March 2008
(Holst et al., 2005b; Holst and Smultea,
2008), in the Hess Deep approximately
1100 km (683.5 mi) west of the
Galapagos Islands in July 2003 (Smultea
and Holst, 2003), or 1600–1950 km
(994.2–1211.7 mi) west of the proposed
survey area in April–August 2008
(Hauser et al., 2008).
No confirmed fin whale sightings
were made in the proposed study area
during 10 years of survey effort in July–
December by Ferguson and Barlow
(2001) or by Jackson et al. (2008) during
July–December surveys in 2006. Despite
>30 years of NMFS and other surveys,
as well as stranding records from the
Pacific coast of Costa Rica, there have
been no confirmed records of fin whales
(May-Collado et al., 2005). A possible
sighting of a fin whale in this region
occurred off the Osa Peninsula in 1997;
however, the sighting was not
confirmed (May-Collado et al., 2005),
although Rodriguez-Herrera et al. (2002)
list the fin whale as having been
documented off Costa Rica. No fin
whales were detected during L–DEO
seismic surveys off Costa Rica or
Nicaragua in November–December 2004
or February–March 2008 (Holst et al.,
2005b; Holst and Smultea, 2008), in the
Hess Deep approximately 1100 km
(683.5 mi) west of the Galapagos Islands
in July 2003 (Smultea and Holst, 2003),
or 1600–1950 km (994.2–1211.7 mi)
west of the proposed survey area in
April–August 2008 (Hauser et al., 2008).
Sei and fin whales are not considered
further in this document.
The general distribution of minke
whales (Balaenoptera acutorostrata)
includes the offshore waters of the study
area (Reeves et al., 2002). However,
minke whales are likely to be rare in the
survey area. This species has been
found off the coast of Costa Rica on
occasion (Rodriguez-Herrera et al.,
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2002). No minke whales were found in
the proposed project region during July–
December surveys during 1986–1996 by
Ferguson and Barlow (2001) or in 2006
by Jackson et al. (2008). Rasmussen et
al. (2004) did not report seeing any
minke whales in 8 years of surveys
(1996–2003) off Costa Rica or in 2001–
2003 off Panama. May-Collado et al.
(2005) also did not report any minkes
based on compiled sightings off Costa
Rica during 1979–2001, nor have
minkes been reported among compiled
strandings off Costa Rica (RodriguezFonseca and Cubero-Pardo, 2001).
Minke whales are unlikely to occur in
the planned survey areas and are not
considered further in this document.
Longman’s beaked whale
(Indopacetus pacificus), also known as
the tropical bottlenose whale, is
considered rare in the ETP. Although
widespread throughout the tropical
Pacific, the species is considered rare
because of a scarcity of sightings despite
a great deal of survey effort (Pitman et
al., 1999). In the ETP, most tropical
bottlenose whale sightings have been
made between 3–10° N (Pitman et al.,
1999). Kinzey et al. (2001) reported one
sighting of I. pacificus in the ETP at
about 135° W. Jackson et al. (2008) also
reported I. pacificus in the ETP well to
the west of the proposed study area. No
Longman’s beaked whales were reported
by May-Collado et al. (2005) based on
compiled sightings off Costa Rica from
1979–2001. The species is very rare in
the study area and is not considered
further in this document.
Dwarf (Kogia sima) and pygmy (K.
breviceps) sperm whales may occur in
the proposed survey area, although
dwarf sperm whales are likely to be very
rare and pygmy sperm whales are likely
to be rare. No Kogia sp. were detected
during L–DEO seismic surveys off Costa
Rica and Nicaragua in November–
December 2004 (Holst et al., 2005b) or
in the Hess Deep approximately 1100
km (683.5 mi) west of the Galapagos
Islands in July 2003 (Smultea and Holst,
2003). One sighting of a dwarf sperm
whale and one sighting of two pygmy
sperm whales were observed off the
coast of Costa Rica in waters
approximately 2000 m (6561.7 ft) and
3500 m (11482.9 ft) deep, respectively,
during an L–DEO seismic survey off
Costa Rica and Nicaragua in February–
March 2008 (Holst and Smultea, 2008),
and one unidentified Kogia sp. was
sighted during L–DEO seismic surveys
1600–1950 km (994.2–1211.7 mi) west
of the proposed survey area in April–
August 2008 (Hauser et al., 2008). Due
to the rarity of these species, no take has
been requested and none will be
authorized.
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54099
Six species of pinnipeds are known to
occur in the ETP: The Guadalupe fur
seal (Arctocephalus townsendi),
California sea lion (Zalophus
californianus), Galapagos sea lion (Z.
wollebaeki), Galapagos fur seal (A.
galapagoensis), southern sea lion
(Otaria flavescens), and the South
American fur seal (A. australis). Ranges
of the first two are substantially north of
the proposed seismic survey areas, and
the last four species are not expected to
occur in the offshore waters of the study
areas. The marine sea otter, which is
managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, is a coastal species and does
not occur in offshore waters. Pinnipeds
are highly unlikely to occur in the
survey area and are not considered in
further detail here.
The ETP is a biologically productive
area that supports a variety of cetacean
species (Au and Perryman, 1985).
Several studies of marine mammal
distribution and abundance have been
conducted in the wider ETP. The most
extensive regional distribution and
abundance data that encompass the
study area come primarily from multiyear vessel surveys conducted in the
wider ETP by the NMFS Southwest
Fisheries Science Center (SWFSC).
Information on the distribution of
cetaceans inhabiting the ETP has been
summarized in several studies
(Polacheck, 1987; Wade and Gerrodette,
1993; Ferguson and Barlow, 2001;
Gerrodette et al., 2008). However, for
some species, abundance in the
proposed seismic survey area could be
quite different from that of the wider
ETP, depending on local oceanographic
variability.
In addition, procedures used during
the various surveys that are cited have
differed somewhat, and those
differences could affect the results. For
example, Ferguson and Barlow (2001)
calculated cetacean densities in the ETP
based on summer/fall research surveys
in 1986–1996. Their densities are
corrected for both changes in
detectability of species with distance
from the survey track line and for
perception and availability bias.
Gerrodette et al. (2008) calculated
dolphin abundance in the ETP based on
summer/fall research surveys in 1986–
1990, 1998–2000, 2003, and 2006. Their
estimates are corrected for the former
but not the latter.
Additional sighting records are
available from recent surveys in the
ETP. Jackson et al. (2008) described
cetacean sightings data collected during
a survey from July 28–December 7,
2006. The survey area extended from
30° N–18° S from the coastline to 153°
W, overlapping with the proposed
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seismic survey area. Rasmussen et al.
(2004) and Calambokidis et al. (2010)
described cetacean sightings resulting
from humpback whale surveys off Costa
Rica and surrounding waters from
January to March in 1996–2003 and
2010. Recent at-sea monitoring for L–
DEO in the ETP also provided sighting
records for cetaceans during seismic
programs. Seismic monitoring programs
took place at the Hess Deep in July
2003, approximately 1100 km (683.5 mi)
west of the Galapagos Islands (Smultea
and Holst, 2003); from Costa Rica to El
Salvador in November–December 2004,
mainly within approximately 100 km
(62.1 mi) of the coast in water depths
extending to 5000 m (16,404.2 ft) (Holst
et al., 2005b); from Costa Rica to
Nicaragua in March–April 2008, up to
approximately 200 km (124.3 mi) from
the coast in water depths extending to
5000 m (Holst and Smultea, 2008); and
approximately 1600–1900 km (994.2–
1,180.6 mi) west of the study area in
April–August 2008 (Hauser et al., 2008).
Information on the occurrence,
distribution, population size, and
conservation status for each of the 23
cetacean species that may occur in the
proposed project area during October–
November is presented in Table 2 in this
document. The five species of marine
mammals expected to be most common
in the waters of the project area, all
delphinids, include the short beaked
common dolphin (Delphinus delphis),
pantropical spotted dolphin (Stenella
attenuata), bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops
truncatus), Risso’s dolphin (Grampus
griseus), and short-finned pilot whale
(Globicephala macrorhynchus).
Additional information regarding the
abundance and distribution, population
status, and life history and behavior of
these species expected to be found in
the project area and how the estimated
densities were calculated may be found
in SIO’s application. NMFS has
reviewed these data and determined
them to be the best available scientific
information for the purposes of the
proposed IHA. Please refer to the
application for that information (see
ADDRESSES). Additional information can
also be found in the NMFS Stock
Assessment Report (SAR). The Pacific
2009 SAR is available at: https://
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/sars/
po2009.pdf.
TABLE 2—THE OCCURRENCE, HABITAT, REGIONAL ABUNDANCE, CONSERVATION STATUS, AND BEST AND MAXIMUM DENSITY ESTIMATES FOR MARINE MAMMALS IN OR NEAR THE PROPOSED LOW-ENERGY SEISMIC SURVEY AREA IN THE
EASTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC OCEAN. CETACEAN DENSITIES ARE BASED ON NMFS SWFSC SHIP TRANSECT SURVEYS CONDUCTED IN 1986–2006 FROM PREDICTIVE MODELING (BARLOW ET AL. 2009; READ ET AL. 2009) OR IN
1986–1996 FROM FERGUSON AND BARLOW (2003)
[See text and Tables 2–4 in SIO’s application for further detail.]
Species
Occurrence in survey area during
Oct–Nov
Mysticetes:
Bryde’s Whale, (Balaenoptera edeni) ...
Blue whale, (Balaenoptera musculus) ..
Humpback
whale,
(Megaptera
novaeangliae).
Odontocetes:
Sperm
whale,
macrocephalus).
Density
(best) 3
Density
(max) 4
ESA 2
Uncommon .............
Uncommon .............
Uncommon .............
Pelagic and coastal 13,000 5 ..................
Pelagic and coastal 1415 6 .....................
Mainly nearshore
NE Pacific 1392 13;
waters and banks.
SE Pacific
2900 14.
NL .....
EN ....
EN ....
0.53
0.13
15 0.1
1.15
0.23
15 0.2
(Physeter
Common ................
EN ....
3.95
15.20
Rare .......................
NA 8 ........................
NL .....
16 0.01
16 0.02
Dwarf sperm whale, (Kogia sima) ........
Very rare ................
11,200 9 ..................
NL .....
16 0.01
16 0.02
Cuvier’s beaked whale, (Ziphius
cavirostris).
Blainville’s beaked whale, (Mesoplodon
densirostris).
Pygmy beaked whale, (Mesoplodon
peruvianus).
Gingko-toothed
beaked
whale,
(Mesoplodon stejnegeri).
Bottlenose
dolphin,
(Tursiops
truncatus).
Rough-toothed
dolphin,
(Steno
bredanensis).
Short-beaked
common
dolphin,
(Delphinus delphis).
Pantropical spotted dolphin, (Stenella
attenuata).
Risso’s dolphin, (Grampus griseus) .....
Common ................
Usually deep pelagic, steep topography.
Deep waters off
shelf.
Deep waters off
shelf.
Slope and pelagic ..
26,053 7 ..................
Pygmy sperm whale, (Kogia breviceps)
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Regional population
size 1
20,000 6 ..................
NL .....
1.83
3.70
Uncommon .............
Pelagic ...................
25,300 10 ................
NL .....
17 0.21
17 0.37
Uncommon .............
Pelagic ...................
25,300 10 ................
NL .....
17 0.21
17 0.37
Very rare ................
Pelagic ...................
25,300 10 ................
NL .....
17 0.21
17 0.37
Very common .........
Coastal, shelf, pelagic.
Mainly pelagic ........
335,834 ..................
NL .....
15.14
23.09
107,633 ..................
NL .....
1.60
2.34
3,127,203 ...............
NL .....
143.21
242.80
857,884 ..................
NL .....
12.43
22.53
Spinner dolphin, (Stenella longirostris)
Striped dolphin, (Stenella coeruleoalba)
Fraser’s dolphin, (Lagenodelphis hosei)
Melon-headed whale, (Peponocephala
electra).
Pygmy killer whale, (Feresa attenuata)
False
killer
whale,
(Pseudorca
crassidens).
Killer whale, (Orcinus orca) ..................
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15:33 Sep 02, 2010
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Common ................
Very common .........
Very common .........
Very common .........
Habitat
Shelf, pelagic, high
relief.
Coastal and pelagic
110,457 ..................
NL .....
10.21
37.40
Very common .........
Very common .........
Common ................
Common ................
Shelf, slope,
seamounts.
Coastal and pelagic
Off continental shelf
Pelagic ...................
Pelagic ...................
1,797,716 ...............
964,362 ..................
289,300 6 ................
45,400 6 ..................
NL
NL
NL
NL
.....
.....
.....
.....
3.81
35.23
1.03
2.80
5.74
53.67
5.60
9.30
Uncommon .............
Uncommon .............
Pelagic ...................
Pelagic ...................
38,900 6 ..................
39,800 6 ..................
NL .....
NL .....
0.60
0.39
1.80
2.10
Uncommon .............
Widely distributed ..
8,500 11 ..................
NL .....
0.85
4.00
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TABLE 2—THE OCCURRENCE, HABITAT, REGIONAL ABUNDANCE, CONSERVATION STATUS, AND BEST AND MAXIMUM DENSITY ESTIMATES FOR MARINE MAMMALS IN OR NEAR THE PROPOSED LOW-ENERGY SEISMIC SURVEY AREA IN THE
EASTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC OCEAN. CETACEAN DENSITIES ARE BASED ON NMFS SWFSC SHIP TRANSECT SURVEYS CONDUCTED IN 1986–2006 FROM PREDICTIVE MODELING (BARLOW ET AL. 2009; READ ET AL. 2009) OR IN
1986–1996 FROM FERGUSON AND BARLOW (2003)—Continued
[See text and Tables 2–4 in SIO’s application for further detail.]
Occurrence in survey area during
Oct–Nov
Species
Short-finned pilot whale, (Globicephala
macrorhynchus).
Common ................
Habitat
Mostly pelagic,
high-relief.
Regional population
size 1
ESA 2
589,315 12 ..............
NL .....
Density
(best) 3
6.29
Density
(max) 4
11.74
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
NA—Data not available or species status was not assessed. For density estimates, NA indicates that estimates would be lower than the lowest
estimate in this table.
1 Abundance from Gerrodette et al. (2008) unless otherwise stated.
2 U.S. Endangered Species Act: EN = Endangered, T = Threatened, NL = Not listed.
3 Best density (#/1000km2) estimate as listed in Table 3 of the application. Cetecean densities are based on NMFS SWFSC ship transect surveys conducted in 1986–2006 from predictive modeling (Barlow et al. 2009; Read et al. 2009) or in 1986–1996 from Ferguson and Barlow
(2003).
4 Maximum density (#/1000km2) estimate as listed in Table 3 of the application.
5 This estimate is mainly for Balaenoptera edeni but may include some B. borealis.
6 ETP (Wade and Gerrodette 1993).
7 Eastern temperate North Pacific (Whitehead 2002).
8 California/Oregon/Washington (Carretta et al. 2010).
9 This abundance estimate is mostly for Kogia sima but may also include some K. breviceps. Density estimates for Kogia spp. combined.
10 Estimates for population size and for density include all species of the genus Mesoplodon in the ETP (Ferguson and Barlow 2001).
11 ETP (Ford 2002).
12 This estimate is for Globicephala macrorhynchus and G. melas in the ETP (Gerrodette and Forcada 2002).
13 U.S. west coast (Carretta et al. 2010).
14 Southeast Pacific; Felix et al. (2005).
15 Approximate estimates.
16 Density estimates are combined for pygmy and dwarf sperm whales.
17 Density estimates are combined for species of the genus Mesoplodon.
Marine Mammal Hearing
The primary effect on marine
mammals anticipated from the specified
activities will result from exposure of
animals to underwater sound. Exposure
to sound can affect marine mammal
hearing. When considering the
influence of various kinds of sound on
the marine environment, it is necessary
to understand that different kinds of
marine life are sensitive to different
frequencies of sound. Based on available
behavioral data, audiograms derived
using auditory evoked potential
techniques, anatomical modeling, and
other data, Southall et al. (2007)
designate ‘‘functional hearing groups’’
for marine mammals and estimate the
lower and upper frequencies of
functional hearing of the groups. The
functional groups and the associated
frequencies are indicated below (though
animals are less sensitive to sounds at
the outer edge of their functional range
and most sensitive to sounds of
frequencies within a smaller range
somewhere in the middle of their
functional hearing range):
• Low frequency cetaceans (13
species of mysticetes): Functional
hearing is estimated to occur between
approximately 7 Hz and 22 kHz;
• Mid-frequency cetaceans (32
species of dolphins, six species of larger
toothed whales, and 19 species of
beaked and bottlenose whales):
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Jkt 220001
Functional hearing is estimated to occur
between approximately 150 Hz and 160
kHz;
• High frequency cetaceans (six
species of true porpoises, four species of
river dolphins, two members of the
genus Kogia, and four dolphin species
of the genus Cephalorhynchus):
Functional hearing is estimated to occur
between approximately 200 Hz and 180
kHz; and
• Pinnipeds in water: Functional
hearing is estimated to occur between
approximately 75 Hz and 75 kHz, with
the greatest sensitivity between
approximately 700 Hz and 20 kHz.
As mentioned previously in this
document, 21 cetacean species are likely
to occur in the proposed survey area. Of
the 21 species likely to occur in SIO’s
project area, two are classified as low
frequency cetaceans (Bryde’s,
humpback, and blue whales) and 18 are
classified as mid-frequency cetaceans
(sperm, Cuvier’s beaked, Blainville’s
beaked, pygmy beaked, gingko-toothed
beaked, melon-headed, pygmy killer,
false killer, killer, and short-finned pilot
whales and rough-toothed, bottlenose,
pantropical spotted, spinner, striped,
Fraser’s, short-beaked common, and
Risso’s dolphins) (Southall et al., 2007).
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Potential Effects of the Specified
Activity on Marine Mammals
Potential Effects of Airguns
The effects of sounds from airguns
might result in one or more of the
following: Tolerance, masking of natural
sounds, behavioral disturbances,
temporary or permanent hearing
impairment, and non-auditory physical
or physiological effects (Richardson et
al., 1995; Gordon et al., 2004; Nowacek
et al., 2007; Southall et al., 2007).
Permanent hearing impairment, or PTS,
in the unlikely event that it occurred,
would constitute injury, but temporary
threshold shift (TTS) is not an injury
(Southall et al., 2007). It is unlikely that
the project would result in any cases of
temporary or especially permanent
hearing impairment or any significant
non-auditory physical or physiological
effects for reasons discussed later in this
document. Some behavioral disturbance
is expected, but it is expected that this
would be localized and short-term
because of the short amount of time that
would be spent at any particular site
within the survey area (approximately
two days of seismic data acquisition at
any one site).
(1) Tolerance
Numerous studies have shown that
pulsed sounds from airguns are often
readily detectable in the water at
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distances of many kilometers. For a brief
summary of the characteristics of airgun
pulses, see Appendix A(3) of the
supporting EA (see ADDRESSES).
However, it should be noted that most
of the measurements are for airguns that
would be detectable considerably
farther away than the GI airgun planned
for use in the present project.
Several studies have shown that
marine mammals at distances more than
a few kilometers from operating seismic
vessels often show no apparent
response; see Appendix A(5) of the EA.
That is often true even in cases when
the pulsed sounds must be readily
audible to the animals based on
measured received levels and the
hearing sensitivity of the mammal
group. Although various baleen whales,
toothed whales, and (less frequently)
pinnipeds have been shown to react
behaviorally to airgun pulses under
some conditions, at other times,
mammals of all three types have shown
no overt reactions. In general, pinnipeds
usually seem to be more tolerant of
exposure to airgun pulses than are
cetaceans, with the relative
responsiveness of baleen and toothed
whales being variable. Given the
relatively small and low-energy GI
airgun source planned for use in this
project, mammals are expected to
tolerate being closer to this source than
would be the case for a larger airgun
source typical of most seismic surveys.
in the northeast Pacific Ocean went
silent for an extended period starting
soon after the onset of a seismic survey
in the area. Similarly, there has been
one report that sperm whales ceased
calling when exposed to pulses from a
very distant seismic ship (Bowles et al.,
1994). However, more recent studies
found that sperm whales continued
calling in the presence of seismic pulses
(Madsen et al., 2002; Tyack et al., 2003;
Smultea et al., 2004; Holst et al., 2006;
Jochens et al., 2008). Given the small
source planned for use during the
proposed survey, there is even less
potential for masking of baleen or sperm
whale calls during the present study
than in most seismic surveys. Masking
effects of seismic pulses are expected to
be negligible in the case of small
odontocetes, given the intermittent
nature of seismic pulses. Dolphins and
porpoises commonly are heard calling
while airguns are operating (Gordon et
al., 2004; Smultea et al., 2004; Holst et
al., 2005a,b; Potter et al., 2007). The
sounds important to small odontocetes
are predominantly at much higher
frequencies than are the dominant
components of airgun sounds, thus
limiting the potential for masking. In
general, masking effects of seismic
pulses are expected to be minor, given
the normally intermittent nature of
seismic pulses. Masking effects on
marine mammals are discussed further
in Appendix A(4) of the EA.
(2) Masking
Obscuring of sounds of interest by
interfering sounds, generally at similar
frequencies, is known as masking.
Masking effects of pulsed sounds (even
from large arrays of airguns, much larger
than that proposed for use in this
survey) on marine mammal calls and
other natural sounds are expected to be
limited, although there are few specific
data of relevance. Because of the
intermittent nature and low duty cycle
of seismic pulses, animals can emit and
receive sounds in the relatively quiet
intervals between pulses. However, in
some situations, multi-path arrivals and
reverberation cause airgun sound to
arrive for much or all of the interval
between pulses (Simard et al., 2005;
Clark and Gagnon, 2006), which could
mask calls. Whale calls often can be
heard between the seismic pulses
(Richardson et al., 1986; McDonald et
al., 1995; Greene et al., 1999a,b;
Nieukirk et al., 2004; Smultea et al.,
2004; Holst et al., 2005a,b, 2006; Dunn
and Hernandez, 2009), and certain
baleen and toothed whales are known to
continue calling in the presence of
seismic pulses. However, Clark and
Gagnon (2006) reported that fin whales
(3) Disturbance Reactions
Disturbance includes a variety of
effects, including subtle changes in
behavior, more conspicuous changes in
activities, and displacement. Reactions
to sound, if any, depend on species,
state of maturity, experience, current
activity, reproductive state, time of day,
and many other factors (Richardson et
al., 1995; Wartzok et al., 2004; Southall
et al., 2007; Weilgart, 2007). If a marine
mammal responds to an underwater
sound by changing its behavior or
moving a small distance, the response
may or may not rise to the level of
‘‘taking’’, or affect the stock or the
species as a whole. However, if a sound
source displaces marine mammals from
an important feeding or breeding area
for a prolonged period, impacts on
animals or on the stock or species could
potentially be significant (Lusseau and
Bejder, 2007; Weilgart, 2007). Given the
many uncertainties in predicting the
quantity and types of impacts of noise
on marine mammals, it is common
practice to estimate how many
mammals are likely to be present within
a particular distance of a given activity,
or exposed to a particular level of
sound. This practice potentially
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overestimates the numbers of marine
mammals that are affected in some
biologically-important manner.
The sound exposure thresholds that
are used to estimate how many marine
mammals might be harassed by a
seismic survey are based on behavioral
observations during studies of several
species. However, information is lacking
for many species. Detailed studies have
been done on humpback, gray
(Eschrichtius robustus), bowhead
(Balaena mysticetus), and sperm
whales, and on ringed seals (Phoca
hispida). Less detailed data are available
for some other species of baleen whales,
small toothed whales, and sea otters, but
for many species there are no data on
responses to marine seismic surveys.
Most of those studies have concerned
reactions to much larger airgun sources
than planned for use in the proposed
SIO project. Thus, effects are expected
to be limited to considerably smaller
distances and shorter periods of
exposure in the present project than in
most of the previous work concerning
marine mammal reactions to airguns.
Baleen Whales—Baleen whales
generally tend to avoid operating
airguns, but avoidance radii are quite
variable. Whales are often reported to
show no overt reactions to pulses from
large arrays of airguns at distances
beyond a few kilometers, even though
the airgun pulses remain well above
ambient noise levels out to much longer
distances. However, as reviewed in
Appendix A(5) of the EA, baleen whales
exposed to strong noise pulses from
airguns often react by deviating from
their normal migration route
(Richardson et al., 1999) and/or
interrupting their feeding activities and
moving away from the sound source. In
the cases of migrating gray and bowhead
whales, the observed changes in
behavior appeared to be of little or no
biological consequence to the animals.
They simply avoided the sound source
by displacing their migration route to
varying degrees, but within the natural
boundaries of the migration corridors
(Schick and Urban, 2000; Richardson et
al., 1999; Malme et al., 1983).
Studies of gray, bowhead, and
humpback whales have shown that
seismic pulses with received levels of
pulses in the 160–170 dB re 1 μPa (rms)
range seem to cause obvious avoidance
behavior in a substantial fraction of the
animals exposed (Richardson et al.,
1995). In many areas, seismic pulses
from large arrays of airguns diminish to
those levels at distances ranging from
4.5–14.5 km (2.8–9 mi) from the source.
A substantial proportion of the baleen
whales within those distances may
show avoidance or other strong
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disturbance reactions to the airgun
array. Subtle behavioral changes
sometimes become evident at somewhat
lower received levels, and studies
summarized in Appendix A(5) of the EA
have shown that some species of baleen
whales, notably bowhead and
humpback whales, at times show strong
avoidance at received levels lower than
160–170 dB re 1 μPa (rms). Reaction
distances would be considerably smaller
during the proposed project, for which
the 160 dB radius is predicted to be 400
m (1312.3 ft) (see Table 1 in this
document), as compared with several
kilometers when a large array of airguns
is operating.
Responses of humpback whales to
seismic surveys have been studied
during migration, on summer feeding
grounds, and on Angolan winter
breeding grounds; there has also been
discussion of effects on the Brazilian
wintering grounds. McCauley et al.
(1998, 2000a) studied the responses of
humpback whales off Western Australia
to a full-scale seismic survey with a
16-airgun, 2678-in 3 array, and to a
single 20-in 3 airgun with a source level
of 227 dB re 1 μPa-m peak-to-peak.
McCauley et al. (1998) documented that
initial avoidance reactions began at 5–
8 km (3.1–5 mi) from the array, and that
those reactions kept most pods
approximately 3–4 km (1.9–2.5 mi) from
the operating seismic boat. McCauley et
al. (2000a) noted localized displacement
during migration of 4–5 km (2.5–3.1 mi)
by traveling pods and 7–12 km (4.3–7.5
mi) by cow-calf pairs. Avoidance
distances with respect to the single
airgun were smaller but consistent with
the results from the full array in terms
of received sound levels. The mean
received level for initial avoidance
reactions to an approaching airgun was
140 dB re 1 μPa (rms) for humpback
whale pods containing females. The
standoff range, i.e., the mean closest
point of approach of the whales to the
airgun, corresponded to a received level
of 143 dB re 1 μPa (rms). The initial
avoidance response generally occurred
at distances of 5–8 km (3.1–5.0 mi) from
the airgun array and 2 km (1.2 mi) from
the single airgun. However, some
individual humpback whales, especially
males, approached within distances of
100–400 m (328.1–1312.3 ft), where the
maximum received level was 179 dB re
1 μPa (rms).
Humpback whales on their summer
feeding grounds in southeast Alaska did
not exhibit persistent avoidance when
exposed to seismic pulses from a 100in 3 airgun (Malme et al., 1985). Some
humpbacks seemed ‘‘startled’’ at
received levels of 150–169 dB re 1 μPa
on an (approximate) rms basis. Malme et
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al. (1985) concluded that there was no
clear evidence of avoidance, despite the
possibility of subtle effects, at received
levels up to 172 re 1 μPa on an
(approximate) rms basis.
It has been suggested that South
Atlantic humpback whales wintering off
Brazil may be displaced or even strand
upon exposure to seismic surveys (Engel
et al., 2004). The evidence for this was
circumstantial and subject to alternative
explanations (IAGC 2004). Also, the
evidence was not consistent with
subsequent results from the same area of
Brazil (Parente et al., 2006), or with
results from direct studies of humpback
whales exposed to seismic surveys in
other areas and seasons. After allowance
for data from subsequent years, there
was ‘‘no observable direct correlation’’
between strandings and seismic surveys
(IWC 2007).
Studies of bowhead whales show that
their responsiveness can be quite
variable depending on the activity (e.g.,
migrating vs. feeding). Bowhead whales
migrating west across the Alaskan
Beaufort Sea in autumn, in particular,
are unusually responsive, with
substantial avoidance occurring out to
distances of 20–30 km (12.4–18.6 mi)
from a medium-sized airgun source at
received sound levels of around 120–
130 dB re 1 μPa (rms) (Miller et al.,
1999; Richardson et al., 1999; see also
Appendix A (5) of the EA). However,
more recent research on bowhead
whales (Miller et al., 2005; Harris et al.,
2007) corroborates earlier evidence that,
during the summer feeding season,
bowheads are not as sensitive to seismic
sources. Nonetheless, subtle but
statistically significant changes in
surfacing-respiration-dive cycles were
evident upon statistical analysis
(Richardson et al., 1986). In summer,
bowheads typically begin to show
avoidance reactions at received levels of
about 152–178 dB re 1 μPa (rms)
(Richardson et al., 1986, 1995;
Ljungblad et al., 1988; Miller et al.,
2005).
Reactions of migrating and feeding
(but not wintering) gray whales to
seismic surveys have been studied.
Malme et al. (1986, 1988) studied the
responses of feeding Eastern Pacific gray
whales to pulses from a single 100-in3
airgun off St. Lawrence Island in the
northern Bering Sea. They estimated,
based on small sample sizes, that 50
percent of feeding gray whales ceased
feeding at an average received pressure
level of 173 dB re 1 μPa on an
(approximate) rms basis and that 10
percent of feeding whales interrupted
feeding at received levels of 163 dB re
1 μPa (rms). Those findings were
generally consistent with the results of
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experiments conducted on larger
numbers of gray whales that were
migrating along the California coast
(Malme et al., 1984; Malme and Miles,
1985) and with observations of Western
Pacific gray whales feeding off Sakhalin
Island, Russia, when a seismic survey
was underway just offshore of their
feeding area (Wursig et al., 1999; Gailey
et al., 2007; Johnson et al., 2007;
Yazvenko et al., 2007a,b), along with
data on gray whales off British
Columbia (Bain and Williams, 2006).
Gray whales typically show no
conspicuous responses to airgun pulses
with received levels up to 150 to 160 dB
re 1 μPa (rms), but are increasingly
likely to show avoidance as received
levels increase above that range. While
neither bowhead nor gray whales are
present in the study area, these studies
can be used to draw general inference
about the potential reactions of other
baleen whales to underwater sound.
Various species of the genus
Balaenoptera (e.g., blue, sei, fin,
Bryde’s, and minke whales) have
occasionally been reported in areas
ensonified by airgun pulses (Stone,
2003; MacLean and Haley, 2004; Stone
and Tasker, 2006), and calls from blue
and fin whales have been localized in
areas with airgun operations (McDonald
et al., 1995; Dunn and Hernandez,
2009). Sightings by observers on seismic
vessels off the United Kingdom from
1997–2000 suggest that, at times of good
sightability, sighting rates for mysticetes
(mainly fin and sei whales) were similar
when large arrays of airguns were
shooting and not shooting (Stone, 2003;
Stone and Tasker, 2006). However, these
whales tended to exhibit localized
avoidance, remaining significantly
further (on average) from the airgun
array during seismic operations
compared with non-seismic periods
(Stone and Tasker, 2006). In a study off
Nova Scotia, Moulton and Miller (2005)
found little difference in sighting rates
(after accounting for water depth) and
initial sighting distances of
balaenopterid whales when airguns
were operating vs. silent. However,
there were indications that these whales
were more likely to be moving away
when seen during airgun operations.
Similarly, ship-based monitoring
studies of blue, fin, sei, and minke
whales offshore of Newfoundland
(Orphan Basin and Laurentian Subbasin) found no more than small
differences in sighting rates and swim
direction during seismic vs. non-seismic
periods (Moulton et al., 2005, 2006a,b).
Data on short-term reactions, or lack
thereof, by cetaceans to impulsive
noises do not necessarily provide
information about long-term effects. It is
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not known whether impulsive noises
affect reproductive rate or distribution
and habitat use in subsequent days or
years. However, gray whales continued
to migrate annually along the west coast
of North America with substantial
increases in the population over recent
years, despite intermittent seismic
exploration (and much ship traffic) in
that area for decades (see Appendix A
in Malme et al., 1984; Richardson et al.,
1995; Angliss and Allen, 2009). The
Western Pacific gray whale population
did not seem affected by a seismic
survey in its feeding ground during a
prior year (Johnson et al., 2007).
Bowhead whales have continued to
travel to the eastern Beaufort Sea each
summer, and their numbers have
increased notably (3.4 percent annually
for nearly a decade), despite seismic
exploration in their summer and
autumn range for many years
(Richardson et al., 1987; Angliss and
Allen 2009). In any event, brief
exposures to sound pulses from the
proposed airgun source are highly
unlikely to result in prolonged effects.
Toothed Whales—Little systematic
information is available about reactions
of toothed whales to noise pulses. Few
studies similar to the more extensive
baleen whale/seismic pulse work
summarized above have been reported
for toothed whales. However, systematic
studies on sperm whales have been
done (Gordon et al., 2006; Madsen et al.,
2006; Winsor and Mate, 2006; Jochens et
al., 2008; Miller et al., 2009), and there
is an increasing amount of information
about responses of various odontocetes
to seismic surveys based on monitoring
studies (Stone 2003; Smultea et al.,
2004; Moulton and Miller, 2005; Bain
and Williams, 2006; Holst et al., 2006;
Stone and Tasker, 2006; Potter et al.,
2007; Hauser et al., 2008; Holst and
Smultea, 2008; Weir, 2008; Barkaszi
et al., 2009; Richardson et al., 2009).
Seismic operators and PSOs on
seismic vessels regularly see dolphins
and other small toothed whales near
operating airgun arrays, but, in general,
there seems to be a tendency for most
delphinids to show some avoidance of
operating seismic vessels (Goold,
1996a,b,c; Calambokidis and Osmek,
1998; Stone, 2003; Moulton and Miller,
2005; Holst et al., 2006; Stone and
Tasker, 2006; Weir, 2008; Richardson et
al., 2009; see also Barkaszi et al., 2009).
Some dolphins seem to be attracted to
the seismic vessel and floats, and some
ride the bow wave of the seismic vessel
even when large airgun arrays are firing
(Moulton and Miller, 2005).
Nonetheless, there have been
indications that small toothed whales
sometimes tend to head away, or to
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maintain a somewhat greater distance
from the vessel, when a large array of
airguns is operating than when it is
silent (Stone and Tasker, 2006; Weir,
2008). In most cases, the avoidance radii
for delphinids appear to be small, on the
order of 1 km (0.62 mi) or less, and
some individuals show no apparent
avoidance. The beluga whale
(Delphinapterus leucas) is a species that
(at least at times) shows long-distance
avoidance of seismic vessels. Aerial
surveys conducted during seismic
operations in the southeastern Beaufort
Sea during summer recorded much
lower sighting rates of beluga whales
within 10–20 km (6.2–12.4 mi)
compared with 20–30 km (12.4–18.6 mi)
from an operating airgun array, and
observers on seismic boats in that area
rarely see beluga whales (Miller et al.,
2005; Harris et al., 2007). However,
beluga whales are not found in SIO’s
proposed project area.
Captive bottlenose dolphins and
beluga whales exhibited changes in
behavior when exposed to strong pulsed
sounds similar in duration to those
typically used in seismic surveys
(Finneran et al., 2000, 2002, 2005). The
animals tolerated high received levels of
sound before exhibiting aversive
behaviors.
Most studies of sperm whales exposed
to airgun sounds indicate that this
species shows considerable tolerance of
airgun pulses (Stone, 2003; Moulton et
al., 2005, 2006a; Stone and Tasker,
2006; Weir, 2008). In most cases the
whales do not show strong avoidance
and continue to call (see Appendix A of
the EA for review). However, controlled
exposure experiments in the Gulf of
Mexico indicate that foraging effort is
somewhat altered upon exposure to
airgun sound (Jochens et al., 2008;
Miller et al., 2009; Tyack, 2009).
There are almost no specific data on
the behavioral reactions of beaked
whales (Family Ziphiidae) to seismic
surveys. However, northern bottlenose
whales (Hyperoodon ampullatus)
continued to produce high-frequency
clicks when exposed to sound pulses
from distant seismic surveys (Gosselin
and Lawson, 2004; Laurinolli and
Cochrane, 2005; Simard et al., 2005).
Most beaked whales tend to avoid
approaching vessels of other types
(Wursig et al., 1998). They may also
dive for an extended period when
approached by a vessel (Kasuya, 1986),
although it is uncertain how much
longer such dives may be as compared
to dives by undisturbed beaked whales,
which also are often quite long (Baird
et al., 2006; Tyack et al., 2006). In any
event, it is likely that most beaked
whales would also show strong
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avoidance of an approaching seismic
vessel, although this has not been
documented explicitly.
Odontocete reactions to large arrays of
airguns are variable and, at least for
delphinids and Dall’s porpoises, seem to
be confined to a smaller radius than has
been observed for the more responsive
of the mysticetes, beluga whales, and
harbor porpoises (Appendix A of the
EA).
Additional details on the behavioral
reactions (or the lack thereof) by all
types of marine mammals to seismic
vessels can be found in Appendix A (5)
of the EA.
(4) Hearing Impairment and Other
Physical Effects
Temporary (TTS) or permanent (PTS)
hearing impairment is a possibility
when marine mammals are exposed to
very strong sounds. TTS has been
demonstrated and studied in certain
captive odontocetes and pinnipeds
exposed to strong sounds (reviewed in
Southall et al., 2007). However, there
has been no specific documentation of
this for marine mammals exposed to
sequences of airgun pulses.
Several aspects of the planned
monitoring and mitigation measures for
this project (see the ‘‘Proposed
Mitigation’’ and ‘‘Proposed Monitoring
and Reporting’’ sections later in this
document) are designed to detect
marine mammals occurring near the
airguns to avoid exposing them to sound
pulses that might, at least in theory,
cause hearing impairment. In addition,
many cetaceans are likely to show some
avoidance of the area where received
levels of airgun sound are high enough
that hearing impairment could
potentially occur. In those cases, the
avoidance responses of the animals
themselves will reduce or (most likely)
avoid any possibility of hearing
impairment.
Non-auditory physical effects may
also occur in marine mammals exposed
to strong underwater pulsed sound.
Possible types of non-auditory
physiological effects or injuries that
theoretically might occur in mammals
close to a strong sound source include
stress, neurological effects, bubble
formation, resonance effects, and other
types of organ or tissue damage. It is
possible that some marine mammal
species (i.e., beaked whales) may be
especially susceptible to injury and/or
stranding when exposed to strong
pulsed sounds. However, as discussed
later in this document, there is no
definitive evidence that any of these
effects occur even for marine mammals
in close proximity to large arrays of
airguns. It is especially unlikely that any
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effects of these types would occur
during the present project given the
brief duration of exposure for any given
individual and the planned monitoring
and mitigation measures (see the
‘‘Proposed Mitigation’’ and ‘‘Proposed
Monitoring and Reporting’’ sections later
in this document). The following
subsections discuss in somewhat more
detail the possibilities of TTS,
permanent threshold shift (PTS), and
non-auditory physical effects.
Temporary Threshold Shift—TTS is
the mildest form of hearing impairment
that can occur during exposure to a
strong sound (Kryter, 1985). While
experiencing TTS, the hearing threshold
rises, and a sound must be stronger in
order to be heard. At least in terrestrial
mammals, TTS can last from minutes or
hours to (in cases of strong TTS) days.
For sound exposures at or somewhat
above the TTS threshold, hearing
sensitivity in both terrestrial and marine
mammals recovers rapidly after
exposure to the noise ends. Few data on
sound levels and durations necessary to
elicit mild TTS have been obtained for
marine mammals, and none of the
published data concern TTS elicited by
exposure to multiple pulses of sound.
Available data on TTS in marine
mammals are summarized in Southall et
al., (2007). The distances from the
Melville’s airguns at which the received
energy level (per pulse, flat-weighted)
that would be expected to be greater
than or equal to 180 dB re 1 μPa are
estimated in Table 1.
Given the available data, the received
level of a single seismic pulse (with no
frequency weighting) might need to be
approximately 186 dB re 1 μPa2-s (i.e.,
186 dB sound exposure level (SEL) or
approximately 221–226 dB pk-pk) in
order to produce brief, mild TTS.
Exposure to several strong seismic
pulses that each have received levels
near 190 dB re 1 μPa (rms) (175–180 dB
SEL) might result in cumulative
exposure of approximately 186 dB SEL
and thus slight TTS in a small
odontocete, assuming the TTS threshold
is (to a first approximation) a function
of the total received pulse energy.
Levels ≥190 dB re 1 μPa (rms) are
expected to be restricted to radii no
more than 15 m (49.2 ft) from the
Melville’s GI airguns. For an odontocete
closer to the surface, the maximum
radius with ≥190 dB re 1 μPa (rms)
would be smaller.
The above TTS information for
odontocetes is derived from studies on
the bottlenose dolphin and beluga
whale. There is not published TTS
information for other species of
cetaceans. However, preliminary
evidence from a harbor porpoise
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exposed to airgun sound suggests that
its TTS threshold may have been lower
(Lucke et al., 2009).
For baleen whales, there are no data,
direct or indirect, on levels or properties
for any sound source required to induce
TTS. The frequencies to which baleen
whales are most sensitive are lower than
those for odontocetes, and natural
background noise levels at those low
frequencies tend to be higher. Marine
mammals can hear sounds at varying
frequency levels. However, sounds that
are produced in the frequency range at
which an animal hears the best do not
need to be as loud as sounds in less
functional frequencies to be detected by
the animal. As a result, auditory
thresholds of baleen whales within their
frequency band of best hearing are
believed to be higher (less sensitive)
than are those of odontocetes at their
best frequencies (Clark and Ellison,
2004), meaning that baleen whales
require sounds to be louder (i.e., higher
dB levels) than odontocetes in the
frequency ranges at which each group
hears the best. From this, it is suspected
that received levels causing TTS onset
may also be higher in baleen whales
(Southall et al., 2007). Since current
NMFS practice assumes the same
thresholds for the onset of hearing
impairment in both odontocetes and
mysticetes, the threshold is likely
conservative for mysticetes. In any
event, no cases of TTS are expected
given two considerations: (1) The small
size of the GI airgun source (a total
discharge volume of approximately 90
in3 as opposed to arrays of much larger
volumes up to 6,600 in3); and (2) the
strong likelihood that baleen whales
would avoid the approaching airguns
(i.e., the vessel) before being exposed to
levels high enough for TTS to possibly
occur (as discussed previously in this
document).
As noted above, most cetacean species
tend to avoid operating airguns,
although not all individuals do so. In
addition, ramping up airgun arrays,
which is standard operational protocol
for large airgun arrays and proposed for
the much smaller airgun array for this
action, should allow cetaceans to move
away from the seismic source and avoid
being exposed to the full acoustic
output of the airgun array. Even with a
large airgun array, it is unlikely that the
cetaceans would be exposed to airgun
pulses at a sufficiently high level for a
sufficiently long period to cause more
than mild TTS, given the relative
movement of the vessel and the marine
mammal. The potential for TTS is much
lower in this project because of the
much smaller airgun array proposed to
be used. With a large array of airguns,
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TTS would be most likely in any
odontocetes that bow-ride or otherwise
linger near the airguns. While bowriding, odontocetes would be at or above
the surface, and thus not exposed to
strong pulses given the pressure-release
effect at the surface. However, bowriding animals generally dive below the
surface intermittently. If they did so
while bow-riding near airguns, they
would be exposed to strong sound
pulses, possibly repeatedly. If some
cetaceans did incur TTS through
exposure to airgun sounds, this would
very likely be mild, temporary, and
reversible.
To avoid the potential for injury,
NMFS has determined that cetaceans
should not be exposed to pulsed
underwater noise at received levels
exceeding 180 dB re 1 μPa (rms). As
summarized above, data that are now
available imply that TTS is unlikely to
occur unless odontocetes (and probably
mysticetes as well) are exposed to
airgun pulses stronger than 180 dB re 1
μPa (rms).
Permanent Threshold Shift—When
PTS occurs, there is physical damage to
the sound receptors in the ear. In severe
cases, there can be total or partial
deafness, while in other cases the
animal has an impaired ability to hear
sounds in specific frequency ranges
(Kryter, 1985).
There is no specific evidence that
exposure to pulses of airgun sound can
cause PTS in any marine mammal, even
with large arrays of airguns. However,
given the possibility that mammals
close to an airgun array might incur
TTS, there has been further speculation
about the possibility that some
individuals occurring very close to
airguns might incur PTS (Richardson et
al., 1995, Gedamke et al., 2008). Single
or occasional occurrences of mild TTS
are not indicative of permanent auditory
damage, but repeated or (in some cases)
single exposures to a level well above
that causing TTS onset might elicit PTS.
Relationships between TTS and PTS
thresholds have not been studied in
marine mammals but are assumed to be
similar to those in humans and other
terrestrial mammals. PTS might occur at
a received sound level at least several
decibels above that inducing mild TTS
if the animal were exposed to strong
sound pulses with rapid rise time (see
Appendix A (6) of the EA). Based on
data from terrestrial mammals, a
precautionary assumption is that the
PTS threshold for impulse sounds (such
as airgun pulses as received close to the
source) is at least 6 dB higher than the
TTS threshold on a peak-pressure basis
and probably > 6 dB (Southall et al.,
2007). On an SEL basis, Southall et al.,
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(2007) estimated that received levels
would need to exceed the TTS threshold
by at least 15 dB for there to be risk of
PTS. Thus, for cetaceans, Southall et al.
estimate that the PTS threshold might
be an M-weighted SEL (for the sequence
of received pulses) of approximately 198
dB re 1 μPa2-s (15 dB higher than the
TTS threshold for an impulse).
Southall et al. (2007) also note that,
regardless of the SEL, there is concern
about the possibility of PTS if a cetacean
or pinniped receives one or more pulses
with peak pressure exceeding 230 or
218 dB re 1 μPa (peak), respectively. A
peak pressure of 230 dB re 1 μPa (3.2
bar -m, 0-pk) would only be found
within a meter from a GI gun, which has
a peak pressure of 224.6 dB re 1μPa-m.
A peak pressure of 218 dB re 1 μPa
could be received somewhat farther
away; to estimate that specific distance,
one would need to apply a model that
accurately calculates peak pressures in
the near-field around an array of
airguns. However, no pinnipeds are
expected in the proposed survey areas.
Given the higher level of sound
necessary to cause PTS as compared
with TTS, it is considerably less likely
that PTS could occur. Baleen whales
generally avoid the immediate area
around operating seismic vessels, as do
some other marine mammals.
Non-auditory Physiological Effects—
Non-auditory physiological effects or
injuries that theoretically might occur in
marine mammals exposed to strong
underwater sound include stress,
neurological effects, bubble formation,
resonance effects, and other types of
organ or tissue damage (Cox et al., 2006;
Southall et al., 2007). Studies examining
such effects are limited. However,
resonance (Gentry 2002) and direct
noise-induced bubble formation (Crum
et al., 2005) are not expected in the case
of an impulsive source like an airgun
array. If seismic surveys disrupt diving
patterns of deep diving species, this
might perhaps result in bubble
formation and a form of ‘‘the bends,’’ as
speculated to occur in beaked whales
exposed to sonar. However, there is no
specific evidence of this upon exposure
to airgun pulses.
In general, little is known about the
potential for seismic survey sounds to
cause auditory impairment or other
physical effects in marine mammals.
Available data suggest that such effects,
if they occur at all, would presumably
be limited to short distances from the
sound source and to activities that
extend over a prolonged period. The
available data do not allow
identification of a specific exposure
level above which non-auditory effects
can be expected (Southall et al., 2007)
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or any meaningful quantitative
predictions of the numbers (if any) of
marine mammals that might be affected
in those ways. Marine mammals that
show behavioral avoidance of seismic
vessels, including most baleen whales,
some odontocetes, and some pinnipeds,
are especially unlikely to incur auditory
impairment or non-auditory physical
effects.
(5) Strandings and Mortality
Marine mammals close to underwater
detonations of high explosives can be
killed or severely injured, and their
auditory organs are especially
susceptible to injury (Ketten et al., 1993;
Ketten, 1995). However, explosives are
no longer used for marine seismic
research or commercial seismic surveys
and have been replaced entirely by
airguns or related non-explosive pulse
generators. Airgun pulses are less
energetic and have slower rise times,
and there is no specific evidence that
they can cause injury, death, or
stranding even in the case of large
airgun arrays. However, the association
of mass strandings of beaked whales
with naval exercises and, in one case, an
L–DEO seismic survey (Malakoff, 2002;
Cox et al., 2006) has raised the
possibility that beaked whales exposed
to strong ‘‘pulsed’’ sounds may be
especially susceptible to injury and/or
behavioral reactions that can lead to
stranding (Hildebrand, 2005; Southall et
al., 2007). Appendix A (6) of the EA
provides additional details.
Specific sound-related processes that
lead to strandings and mortality are not
well documented, but may include: (1)
Swimming in avoidance of a sound into
shallow water; (2) a change in behavior
(such as a change in diving behavior)
that might contribute to tissue damage,
gas bubble formation, hypoxia, cardiac
arrhythmia, hypertensive hemorrhage or
other forms of trauma; (3) a
physiological change such as a
vestibular response leading to a
behavioral change or stress-induced
hemorrhagic diathesis, leading in turn
to tissue damage; and (4) tissue damage
directly from sound exposure, such as
through acoustically-mediated bubble
formation and growth or acoustic
resonance of tissues. As noted in SIO’s
application, some of these mechanisms
are unlikely to apply in the case of
impulse sounds. However, there are
increasing indications that gas-bubble
disease (analogous to ‘‘the bends’’),
induced in super-saturated tissue by a
behavioral response to acoustic
exposure, could be a pathologic
mechanism for the strandings and
mortality of some deep-diving cetaceans
exposed to sonar. The evidence for this
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remains circumstantial and associated
with exposure to naval mid-frequency
sonar, not seismic surveys (Cox et al.,
2006; Southall et al., 2007).
Seismic pulses and mid-frequency
sonar pulses are quite different, and
some mechanisms by which sonar
sounds have been hypothesized to affect
beaked whales are unlikely to apply to
airgun pulses. Sounds produced by
airgun arrays are broadband impulses
with most of the energy below 1 kHz.
Typical military mid-frequency sonars
operate at frequencies of 2–10 kHz,
generally with a relatively narrow
bandwidth at any one time. A further
difference between seismic surveys and
naval exercises is that naval exercises
can involve sound sources on more than
one vessel. Thus, it is not appropriate to
assume that there is a direct correlation
between the effects of military sonar and
those of seismic surveys on marine
mammals. However, evidence that sonar
pulses can, in special circumstances,
lead (at least indirectly) to physical
damage and mortality (Balcomb and
Claridge, 2001; NOAA and USN, 2001;
Jepson et al., 2003; Fernandez et al.,
2004, 2005; Hildebrand, 2005; Cox et
al., 2006) suggests that caution is
warranted when dealing with exposure
of marine mammals to any highintensity pulsed sound.
There is no conclusive evidence of
cetacean strandings or deaths at sea as
a result of exposure to seismic surveys,
but a few cases of strandings in the
general area where a seismic survey was
ongoing have led to speculation
concerning a possible link between
seismic surveys and strandings.
Suggestions that there was a link
between seismic surveys and strandings
of humpback whales in Brazil (Engel et
al., 2004) were not well founded based
on available data (IAGC, 2004; IWC,
2007). In September 2002, there was a
stranding of two Cuvier’s beaked whales
(Ziphius cavirostris) in the Gulf of
California, Mexico, when the L–DEO
vessel R/V Maurice Ewing was operating
a 20-airgun, 8490-in3 array in the
general area. The link between the
stranding and the seismic surveys was
inconclusive and not based on any
physical evidence (Hogarth, 2002;
Yoder, 2002). Nonetheless, the Gulf of
California incident plus the beaked
whale strandings near naval exercises
involving use of mid-frequency sonar
suggests a need for caution when
conducting seismic surveys in areas
occupied by beaked whales until more
is known about effects of seismic
surveys on those species (Hildebrand,
2005). No injuries of beaked whales are
anticipated during the proposed study
because of (1) the high likelihood that
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any beaked whales nearby would avoid
the approaching vessel before being
exposed to high sound levels, and (2)
differences between the sound sources
operated by SIO and those involved in
the naval exercises associated with
strandings.
Potential Effects of Other Acoustic
Devices
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(1) Multi-Beam Echosounder Signals
The Kongsberg EM 122 12-kHz MBES
will be operated from the source vessel
at some times during the planned study.
Information about this equipment was
provided earlier in this document. Any
given mammal at depth near the
trackline would be in the main beam for
only one or two of the segments. Also,
marine mammals that encounter the
Kongsberg EM 122 are unlikely to be
subjected to repeated pulses because of
the narrow fore-aft width of the beam
and will receive only limited amounts
of pulse energy because of the short
pulses. Animals close to the ship (where
the beam is narrowest) are especially
unlikely to be ensonified for more than
one 2–15 ms pulse or 100-ms chirp (or
two pulses or chirps if in the overlap
area). Similarly, Kremser et al. (2005)
noted that the probability of a cetacean
swimming through the area of exposure
when an MBES emits a pulse is small.
The animal would have to pass the
transducer at close range and be
swimming at speeds similar to the
vessel in order to receive the multiple
pulses that might result in sufficient
exposure to cause TTS.
Navy sonars that have been linked to
avoidance reactions and stranding of
cetaceans generally have longer pulse
durations than the Kongsberg EM 122
and are often directed close to
horizontally vs. more downward for the
MBES. The area of possible influence of
the MBES is much smaller—a narrow
band below the source vessel. The
duration of exposure for a given marine
mammal can be much longer for Navy
sonar. During SIO’s operations, the
individual pulses will be very short, and
a given mammal would not receive
many of the downward-directed pulses
as the vessel passes by. Possible effects
of an MBES on marine mammals are
outlined below.
Marine mammal communications will
not be masked appreciably by the MBES
signals given the low duty cycle of the
echosounder and the brief period when
an individual mammal is likely to be
within its beam. Furthermore, in the
case of baleen whales, the echosounder
signals (12 kHz) do not overlap with the
predominant frequencies in the calls,
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which would avoid any significant
masking.
Behavioral reactions of free-ranging
marine mammals to sonars,
echosounders, and other sound sources
appear to vary by species and
circumstance. Observed reactions have
included silencing and dispersal by
sperm whales (Watkins et al., 1985),
increased vocalizations and no dispersal
by pilot whales (Globicephala spp.)
(Rendell and Gordon, 1999), and the
previously-mentioned beachings by
beaked whales. During exposure to a
21–25 kHz ‘‘whale-finding’’ sonar with a
source level of 215 dB re 1 μPa-m, gray
whales reacted by orienting slightly
away from the source and being
deflected from their course by
approximately 200 m (656.2 ft) (Frankel,
2005). When a 38-kHz echosounder and
a 150-kHz acoustic Doppler current
profiler were transmitting during
studies in the ETP, baleen whales
showed no significant responses, while
spotted (Stenella spp.) and spinner
(Stenella longirostris) dolphins were
detected slightly more often and beaked
whales less often during visual surveys
(Gerrodette and Pettis, 2005).
Captive bottlenose dolphins and a
beluga whale exhibited changes in
behavior when exposed to 1-s tonal
signals at frequencies similar to those
that will be emitted by the MBES used
by SIO, and to shorter broadband pulsed
signals. Behavioral changes typically
involved what appeared to be deliberate
attempts to avoid the sound exposure
(Schlundt et al., 2000; Finneran et al.,
2002; Finneran and Schlundt, 2004).
The relevance of those data to freeranging odontocetes is uncertain, and in
any case, the test sounds were quite
different in duration as compared with
those from an MBES.
Given recent stranding events that
have been associated with the operation
of naval sonar, there is concern that
mid-frequency sonar sounds can cause
serious impacts to marine mammals (see
above). However, the MBES proposed
for use by SIO is quite different than
sonar used for Navy operations. Pulse
duration of the MBES is very short
relative to naval sonar. Also, at any
given location, an individual marine
mammal would be in the beam of the
MBES for much less time given the
generally downward orientation of the
beam and its narrow fore-aft beamwidth;
Navy sonar often use near-horizontally
directed sound. Those factors would all
reduce the sound energy received from
the MBES relative to that from the sonar
used by the Navy.
As noted earlier in this document,
animals are unlikely to be exposed to
levels that would result in TTS or Level
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54107
B harassment because of the shape of
the beam, the duration of the signal, and
the likelihood that they will be avoiding
the vessel at greater horizontal distance
when airguns are operating.
(2) Sub-Bottom Profiler Signals
A SBP will be operated from the
source vessel during the planned study.
Details about this equipment were
provided earlier in this document. The
SBP on the Melville has a maximum
source level of 211 dB re 1 μPa-m.
Kremser et al. (2005) noted that the
probability of a cetacean swimming
through the area of exposure when a
bottom profiler emits a pulse is small,
and—even for an SBP more powerful
than those on the Melville—if the
animal was in the area, it would have
to pass the transducer at close range in
order to be subjected to sound levels
that could cause TTS.
Marine mammal communications will
not be masked appreciably by the SBP
signals given their directionality and the
brief period when an individual
mammal is likely to be within their
beams. Furthermore, in the case of most
baleen whales, the SBP signals do not
overlap with the predominant
frequencies in the calls, which would
avoid significant masking.
Marine mammal behavioral reactions
to other pulsed sound sources were
discussed previously, and responses to
the SBP are likely to be similar to those
for other pulsed sources if received at
the same levels. However, the pulsed
signals from the SBPs are considerably
weaker than those from the MBES.
Therefore, behavioral responses are not
expected unless marine mammals are
within 10 m of the source, which is not
expected to occur.
The source levels of the SBP are much
lower than those of the airguns. It is
unlikely that the SBP produces pulse
levels strong enough to cause hearing
impairment or other physical injuries
even in an animal that is (briefly) in a
position near the source. The SBP is
usually operated simultaneously with
other higher-power acoustic sources.
Many marine mammals will move away
in response to the approaching higherpower sources or the vessel itself before
the mammals would be close enough for
there to be any possibility of effects
from the less intense sounds from the
SBP. Because of the shape of the beams
of these sources and their power, NMFS
believes it unlikely that marine
mammals will be exposed to either the
MBES or the SBP at levels at or above
those likely to cause harassment.
Further, NMFS believes that the brief
exposure of cetaceans to a few signals
from the multi-beam bathymetric sonar
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system is not likely to result in the
harassment of marine mammals.
As stated above, current NMFS
practice assumes that the onset of Level
A harassment corresponds to 180 dB re
1 μPa (rms) for cetaceans. The
precautionary nature of these criteria is
discussed in Appendix A (5) of the
supporting EA, including the fact that
the minimum sound level necessary to
cause permanent hearing impairment is
higher, by a variable and generally
unknown amount, than the level that
induces barely-detectable TTS, and the
level associated with the onset of TTS
is often considered to be a level below
which there is no danger of permanent
damage. NMFS also assumes that
cetaceans or pinnipeds exposed to
levels exceeding 160 dB re 1 μPa (rms)
may experience Level B (behavioral)
harassment.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
Potential Effects on Marine Mammal
Habitat
The proposed SIO seismic survey will
not result in any permanent impact to
habitats used by marine mammals or to
their food sources, and there will be no
physical damage to any habitat. While it
is anticipated that the specified activity
may result in marine mammals avoiding
certain areas due to temporary
ensonification, this impact to habitat is
temporary and reversible and was
considered in further detail earlier in
this document, as behavioral
modification. The main impact issue
associated with the proposed activity
will be temporarily elevated noise levels
and the associated direct effects on
marine mammals, as described
previously.
Effects on Fish and Invertebrates
The existing body of information on
the impacts of seismic survey sound on
marine fish and invertebrates is very
limited. Furthermore, the available
information on the impacts of seismic
surveys on fish and invertebrates is from
studies of individuals or portions of a
population; there have been no studies
at the population scale. Thus, available
information provides limited insight on
possible real-world effects at the ocean
or population scale. This makes drawing
conclusions about impacts problematic
because ultimately, the most important
aspect of potential impacts relates to
how exposure to seismic survey sound
affects populations and their viability,
including their availability to fisheries.
However, there is some unpublished
and very limited evidence of the
potential for adverse effects on fish and
invertebrates, thereby justifying further
discussion and analysis of this issue.
The three types of potential effects of
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exposure to seismic surveys on fish and
marine invertebrates are pathological,
physiological, and behavioral.
Pathological effects involve lethal and
temporary or permanent sublethal
injury. Physiological effects involve
temporary and permanent primary and
secondary stress responses, such as
changes in levels of enzymes and
proteins. Behavioral effects refer to
temporary and (if they occur) permanent
changes in exhibited behavior (e.g.,
startle and avoidance behavior). The
three categories are interrelated in
complex ways. For example, it is
possible that certain physiological and
behavioral changes potentially could
lead to an ultimate pathological effect
on individuals (i.e., mortality). The
specific received sound levels at which
permanent adverse effects to fish
potentially could occur are little studied
and largely unknown.
Based on the physical structure of
their sensory organs, marine
invertebrates appear to be specialized to
respond to particle displacement
components of an impinging sound field
and not to the pressure component
(Popper et al., 2001; see also Appendix
D of the EA). More details concerning
the effects of airguns on fish and
invertebrates are included in SIO’s
application and the associated EA. In
conclusion, NMFS has preliminarily
determined that SIO’s proposed seismic
survey operations are not expected to
have any habitat-related effects that
could cause significant or long-term
consequences for individual marine
mammals or on the food sources they
utilize.
Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an incidental take
authorization (ITA) under Sections
101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA,
NMFS must, where applicable, set forth
the permissible methods of taking
pursuant to such activity, and other
means of effecting the least practicable
adverse impact on such species or stock
and its habitat, paying particular
attention to rookeries, mating grounds,
and areas of similar significance, and on
the availability of such species or stock
for taking for certain subsistence uses
(where relevant).
Mitigation and monitoring measures
proposed to be implemented for the
proposed seismic survey have been
developed and refined during previous
SIO seismic studies and associated EAs,
IHA applications, and IHAs. The
mitigation and monitoring measures
described herein represent a
combination of procedures required by
past IHAs for other similar projects and
on best practices recommended in
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Sfmt 4703
Richardson et al. (1995), Pierson et al.
(1998), and Weir and Dolman (2007).
The measures are described in detail
below.
Mitigation measures proposed by SIO
for adoption during the proposed survey
include (1) visual monitoring by
protected species observers (discussed
later in this document), (2)
establishment of an exclusion zone (EZ),
(3) speed or course alteration, provided
that doing so will not compromise
operational safety requirements, (4) GI
airgun shut down procedures, and (5)
ramp-up procedures. Although powerdown procedures are often standard
operating practice for seismic surveys,
they will not be used here because
powering down from two airguns to one
airgun would make only a small
difference in the 180-dB safety radius.
The difference is not enough to allow
continued one-airgun operations if a
mammal came within the safety radius
for two airguns.
Exclusion Zones—As discussed
previously in this document, NMFS has
determined that for acoustic effects,
using acoustic thresholds in
combination with corresponding safety
radii is an effective way to consistently
apply measures to avoid or minimize
the impacts of an action. Thresholds are
used to establish a mitigation shutdown, or exclusion, zone, i.e., if an
animal enters an area calculated to be
ensonified above the level of an
established threshold, a sound source is
shut down.
As a matter of past practice and based
on the best available information at the
time regarding the effects of marine
sound, NMFS estimates that Level A
harassment from acoustic sources may
occur when cetaceans are exposed to
levels above 180 dB re 1 μPa (rms) level.
NMFS also considers 160 dB re 1 μPa
(rms) as the criterion for estimating the
onset of Level B harassment from
acoustic sources producing impulse
sounds, as in this seismic survey.
Empirical data concerning the 180and 160-dB distances have been
acquired based on measurements during
the acoustic verification study
conducted by L–DEO in the northern
Gulf of Mexico from May 27–June 3,
2003 (Tolstoy et al., 2004). The
empirical data indicate that, for this
survey, the assumed 180- and 160-dB
radii are 40 m (131.2 ft) and 400 m
(1312.3 ft), respectively (see Table 1 in
this document).
Speed or Course Alteration—If a
marine mammal is detected outside the
EZ but is likely to enter it based on
relative movement of the vessel and the
animal, and if safety and scientific
objectives allow, the vessel speed and/
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or course will be adjusted to minimize
the likelihood of the animal entering the
EZ. In the event that safety and/or
scientific objectives do not allow for
alteration of speed and/or course as a
needed mitigation measure, shut-down
procedures will still be utilized (see
below). Major course and speed
adjustments are often impractical when
towing long seismic streamers and large
source arrays but are possible in this
case because only a small source and
short streamers will be used.
Shut-down Procedures—If a marine
mammal is detected by PSOs outside
the EZ but is likely to enter the EZ, and
if the vessel’s speed and/or course
cannot be changed to avoid having the
animal enter the EZ, the airgun array,
MBES, and SBP will be shut down
before the animal is within the EZ.
Likewise, if a marine mammal is already
within the EZ when first detected, the
airgun array, MBES, and SBP will be
shut down immediately. Following a
shut down, seismic activity will not
resume until the marine mammal has
cleared the EZ. The animal will be
considered to have cleared the EZ if it
(a) is visually observed to have left the
EZ, or (b) has not been seen within the
EZ for 15 min in the case of small
odontocetes, or has not been seen
within the EZ for 30 min in the case of
mysticetes and large odontocetes,
including sperm and beaked whales.
Ramp-up Procedures—A ramp-up
procedure will be followed when the GI
airguns begin operating after a specified
period without GI airgun operations. It
is proposed that, for the present cruise,
this period would be approximately 1–
2 min. This period is based on the 180dB radii for the GI airguns (see Table 1
in this document) in relation to the
planned speed of the Melville while
shooting. Ramp-up will begin with a
single GI airgun (45 in3). The second GI
airgun (45 in3) will be added after 5
min. During ramp up, the PSOs will
monitor the exclusion zone, and, if
marine mammals are sighted, a shutdown will be implemented as though
both GI airguns were operational.
If the complete EZ has not been
visible for at least 30 min prior to the
start of operations in either daylight or
nighttime, ramp-up will not commence.
If one GI airgun has operated, ramp-up
to full power will be permissible at
night or in poor visibility on the
assumption that marine mammals will
be alerted to the approaching seismic
vessel by the sounds from the single GI
airgun and could move away if they
choose. A ramp-up from a shut-down
may occur at night, but only when the
entire EZ is visible, and it has been
determined from the pre-ramp up watch
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that the EZ is clear of marine mammals.
Ramp-up of the GI airguns will not be
initiated if a marine mammal is sighted
within or near the applicable EZ during
day or night.
NMFS has carefully evaluated the
applicant’s proposed mitigation
measures and considered a range of
other measures in the context of
ensuring that NMFS prescribes the
means of effecting the least practicable
impact on the affected marine mammal
species and stocks and their habitat. Our
evaluation of potential measures
included consideration of the following
factors in relation to one another:
• The manner in which, and the
degree to which, the successful
implementation of the measure is
expected to minimize adverse impacts
to marine mammals;
• The proven or likely efficacy of the
specific measure to minimize adverse
impacts as planned; and
• The practicability of the measure
for applicant implementation.
Based on our evaluation of the
applicant’s proposed measures, as well
as other measures considered by NMFS,
NMFS has preliminarily determined
that the proposed mitigation measures
provide the means of effecting the least
practicable impact on marine mammal
species or stocks and their habitat,
paying particular attention to rookeries,
mating grounds, and areas of similar
significance.
Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an ITA for an
activity, Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the
MMPA states that NMFS must set forth
‘‘requirements pertaining to the
monitoring and reporting of such
taking’’. The MMPA implementing
regulations at 50 CFR 216.104(a)(13)
indicate that requests for ITAs must
include the suggested means of
accomplishing the necessary monitoring
and reporting that will result in
increased knowledge of the species and
of the level of taking or impacts on
populations of marine mammals that are
expected to be present in the proposed
action area.
SIO proposes to sponsor marine
mammal monitoring during the present
project in order to implement the
proposed mitigation measures that
require real-time monitoring and to
satisfy the anticipated monitoring
requirements of the IHA. SIO’s proposed
Monitoring Plan is described next. The
monitoring work described here has
been planned as a self-contained project
independent of any other related
monitoring projects that may be
occurring simultaneously in the same
regions. SIO is prepared to discuss
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54109
coordination of its monitoring program
with any related work that might be
done by other groups insofar as this is
practical and desirable.
Vessel-based Visual Monitoring
Three protected species observers
(PSOs) will be based aboard the seismic
source vessel for the duration of the
cruise and will watch for marine
mammals near the vessel during
daytime airgun operations and during
start-up of airguns at any time. Watches
will be conducted by at least one
observer 100% of the time during
seismic surveys in daylight hours.
Daylight observation by at least one
observer will continue during nonseismic periods, as long as weather
conditions make observations
meaningful, for comparison of sighting
rates and animal behavior during
periods with vs. without airgun
operations. PSOs will be appointed by
SIO with NMFS concurrence after a
review of their qualifications.
The Melville is a suitable platform for
marine mammal observations. The
observer platform is located one deck
below and forward of the bridge (12.46
meters (40.88 ft) above the waterline),
affording a relatively unobstructed 180degree forward view. Aft views can be
obtained along the port and starboard
decks. During daytime hours, the
observer(s) will scan the area
systematically using reticulated 25x150
big-eye binoculars and 7x50 hand-held
binoculars to determine bearing and
distance of sightings. A clinometer is
used to determine distances of animals
in close proximity to the vessel. Handheld fixed rangefinders and distance
marks on the ship’s side rails are used
to measure the exact location of the
safety zone. Laser rangefinders, which
have proven to be less reliable for open
water sighting, are also provided.
During darkness, night-vision
equipment will be available. The PSOs
will be in wireless communication with
ship’s officers on the bridge and
scientists in the vessel’s operations
laboratory, so they can advise promptly
of the need for avoidance maneuvers or
GI airgun shut down.
Before commencing seismic
operations during daylight hours, two
observers will maintain a 360-degree
watch for all marine mammals for at
least 30 minutes prior to the start of
seismic operations after an extended
shutdown of the airguns (1–2 minutes,
depending on vessel speed). If no
marine mammals are observed within
the EZ during this time, the observers
will notify the seismic personnel of an
‘‘all clear’’ status. Watch periods are
scheduled as a 2-hour rotation. The
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observers continually scan the water
from the horizon to the ship’s hull, and
forward of 90 degrees from the port and
starboard beams. Based on PSO
observations, the GI airgun will be shut
down (as described earlier in this
document) when marine mammals are
detected within or about to enter a
designated EZ that corresponds to the
180-dB re 1 μPa (rms) isopleths. The
PSOs will continue to maintain watch to
determine when the animal(s) are
outside the EZ, and airgun operations
will not resume until the animal has left
that EZ. The predicted distance for the
180-dB EZ is listed in Table 1 earlier in
this document. Seismic operations will
resume only after the animals are seen
to exit the safety radius or after no
further visual detection of the animal for
15 minutes (for small odontocetes and
pinnipeds) or 30 minutes (for mysticetes
and large odontocetes, including beaked
whales).
The bridge officers and other crew
will be instructed to alert the observer
on watch of any suspected marine
mammal sighting. If needed, the bridge
will be contacted in order to maneuver
the ship to avoid interception with
approaching marine mammals.
PSO Data and Documentation
PSOs will record data to estimate the
numbers of marine mammals exposed to
various received sound levels and to
document reactions or lack thereof. Data
will be used to estimate numbers of
animals potentially ‘taken’ by
harassment (as defined in the MMPA).
They will also provide information
needed to order a shutdown of the
seismic source when a marine mammal
is within or near the EZ. When a
sighting is made, the following
information about the sighting will be
recorded:
• Species, group size, and age/size/
sex categories (if determinable);
behavior when first sighted and after
initial sighting; heading (if consistent),
bearing and distance from seismic
vessel; sighting cue, apparent reaction to
the seismic source or vessel (e.g., none,
avoidance, approach, paralleling, etc.);
and behavioral pace; and
• Time, location, heading, speed,
activity of the vessel, sea state,
visibility, cloud cover, and sun glare.
The data will also be recorded at the
start and end of each observation watch
and during a watch whenever there is a
change in one or more of the variables.
All observations, as well as
information regarding seismic source
shutdown, will be recorded in a
standardized format. Data collection
procedures are adapted from the linetransect protocols developed by the
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SWFSC for their marine mammal
abundance research cruises. A laptop
computer is located on the observer
platform for ease of data entry. The
computer is connected to the ship’s
Global Positioning System, which
allows a record of time and position to
be made at 3-minute intervals and for
each event entered (such as sightings,
weather updates and effort changes).
Data accuracy will be verified by the
PSOs at sea and preliminary reports will
be prepared during the field program
and summaries forwarded to the SIO’s
shore facility and to NSF weekly or
more frequently. PSO observations will
provide the following information:
• The basis for decisions about
shutting down the airgun arrays;
• Information needed to estimate the
number of marine mammals potentially
‘taken by harassment’, which will be
reported to NMFS;
• Data on the occurrence,
distribution, and activities of marine
mammals in the area where the seismic
study is conducted; and
• Data on the behavior and movement
patterns of marine mammals seen at
times with and without seismic activity.
A report will be submitted to NMFS
within 90 days after the end of the
cruise. The report will describe the
operations that were conducted and
sightings of marine mammals near the
operations. The report will be submitted
to NMFS, providing full documentation
of methods, results, and interpretation
pertaining to all monitoring. The 90-day
report will summarize the dates and
locations of seismic operations and all
marine mammal sightings (dates, times,
locations, activities, associated seismic
survey activities). The report will also
include estimates of the amount and
nature of potential ‘‘take’’ of marine
mammals by harassment or in other
ways. All injured or dead marine
mammals (regardless of cause) will be
reported to NMFS as soon as
practicable. The report should include
species or description of animal,
condition of animal, location, time first
found, observed behaviors (if alive), and
photo or video, if available.
Estimated Takes by Incidental
Harassment
With respect to the activities described
here, the MMPA defines ‘‘harassment’’ as:
any act of pursuit, torment, or annoyance
which (i) has the potential to injure a marine
mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild
[Level A harassment]; or (ii) has the potential
to disturb a marine mammal or marine
mammal stock in the wild by causing
disruption of behavioral patterns, including,
but not limited to, migration, breathing,
nursing, breeding, feeding, or sheltering
[Level B harassment].
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All anticipated takes would be by
Level B harassment, involving
temporary changes in behavior. The
proposed mitigation and monitoring
measures are expected to minimize the
possibility of injurious or lethal takes
such that take by Level A harassment,
serious injury or mortality is considered
remote. However, as noted earlier, there
is no specific information demonstrating
that injurious or lethal ‘‘takes’’ would
occur even in the absence of the
planned mitigation and monitoring
measures. The sections here describe
methods to estimate ‘‘take by Level B
harassment’’ and present estimates of
the numbers of marine mammals that
might be affected during the proposed
seismic program. The estimates of ‘‘take’’
are based on data collected in the ETP
by NMFS SWFSC during 12 ship-based
cetacean and ecosystem assessment
surveys conducted during July–
December from 1986–2006.
It is assumed that, during
simultaneous operations of the seismic
sources and the other sources, any
marine mammals close enough to be
affected by the MBES or SBP would
already be affected by the seismic
sources. However, whether or not the
seismic sources are operating
simultaneously with the other sources,
marine mammals are expected to exhibit
no more than short-term and
inconsequential responses to the MBES
and SBP given their characteristics (e.g.,
narrow downward-directed beam) and
other considerations described above,
such as the unlikelihood of being
exposed to the source at higher levels
and the fact that it would likely only be
for one or two pulses. Such reactions are
not considered to constitute ‘‘taking’’
(NMFS, 2001). Therefore, no additional
allowance is included for animals that
might be affected by sound sources
other than the seismic sources (i.e., air
guns).
Extensive systematic ship-based
surveys have been conducted by NMFS
SWFSC for marine mammals in the ETP.
SWFSC has recently developed habitat
modeling as a method to estimate
cetacean densities on a finer spatial
scale than traditional line-transect
analyses by using a continuous function
of habitat variables, e.g., sea surface
temperature, depth, distance from shore,
and prey density (Barlow et al., 2009).
The models have been incorporated into
a Web-based Geographic Information
System (GIS) developed by Duke
University’s Department of Defense
Strategic Environmental Research and
Development Program (SERDP) team in
close collaboration with the SWFSC
SERDP team (Read et al., 2009). The GIS
was used to obtain densities for the 11
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cetaceans in the model (Bryde’s whale,
blue whale, Kogia spp., Mesoplodon
spp., rough-toothed, bottlenose,
pantropical spotted, spinner, striped,
and short-beaked common dolphins,
and short-finned pilot whale) in each of
eight areas: the four proposed survey
areas (see Figure 1 in SIO’s application),
and corridors 1° wide and centered on
the tracklines between the survey areas
and from the southernmost survey area
to the EEZ of Peru. For species sighted
in SWFSC surveys whose sample sizes
were too small to model density (sperm
whale, humpback whale, Cuvier’s
beaked whale, Fraser’s dolphin, Risso’s
dolphin, melon-headed, pygmy killer,
false killer, and killer whales), SIO used
densities from the surveys conducted
during summer and fall 1986–1996, as
summarized by Ferguson and Barlow
(2001). Densities were calculated from
Ferguson and Barlow (2003) for 5° x 5°
blocks that include the proposed survey
areas and corridors. Those blocks
included 27,275 km (16,947.9 mi) of
survey effort in Beaufort sea states 0–5
and 2564 km (1593.2 mi) of survey effort
in Beaufort sea states 0–2. Densities
were obtained for an additional eight
species that were sighted in one or more
of those blocks.
Oceanographic conditions, including
occasional El Nino and La Nina events,
influence the distribution and numbers
of marine mammals present in the ETP,
resulting in considerable year-to-year
variation in the distribution and
abundance of many marine mammal
species (Escorza-Trevino, 2009). Thus,
for some species, the densities derived
from recent surveys (see Table 2 of this
document) may not be representative of
the densities that will be encountered
during the proposed seismic survey.
Table 3 in SIO’s application gives the
average (or ‘‘best’’) and maximum
densities for each species of cetacean
likely to occur in the study area, i.e.,
species for which densities were
obtained or assigned. These densities
have been corrected for both
detectability and availability bias by the
study authors. Detectability bias is
associated with diminishing sightability
with increasing lateral distance from the
trackline. Availability bias refers to the
fact that there is less than 100 percent
probability of sighting an animal that is
present along the survey trackline.
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The estimated numbers of individuals
potentially exposed are presented next
based on the 160-dB re 1 μPa (rms)
Level B harassment criterion for all
cetaceans. It is assumed that marine
mammals exposed to airgun sounds at
that level might change their behavior
sufficiently to be considered ‘‘taken by
harassment’’.
It should be noted that the following
estimates of ‘‘takes by harassment’’
assume that the surveys will be
undertaken and completed; in fact, the
planned number of line-kilometers has
been increased to accommodate lines
that may need to be repeated,
equipment testing, etc. As is typical on
offshore ship surveys, inclement
weather and equipment malfunctions
are likely to cause delays and may limit
the number of useful line-kilometers of
seismic operations that can be
undertaken. Furthermore, any marine
mammal sightings within or near the
designated EZ will result in the
shutdown of seismic operations as a
mitigation measure. Thus, the following
estimates of the numbers of marine
mammals potentially exposed to 160-dB
re 1 μPa (rms) sounds are precautionary
and probably overestimate the actual
numbers of marine mammals that might
be taken. These estimates assume that
there will be no weather, equipment, or
mitigation delays, which is highly
unlikely.
There is some uncertainty about the
representativeness of the data and the
assumptions used in the calculations
presented here. However, the approach
used here is believed to be the best
available approach. Also, to provide
some allowance for these uncertainties,
‘‘maximum estimates’’ as well as ‘‘best
estimates’’ of the densities present and
numbers potentially affected have been
derived. Best estimates of density are
the mean densities weighted by effort in
the eight survey areas or corridors from
Read et al. (2009) or the nine 5° x 5°
blocks from Ferguson and Barlow (2001,
2003), whereas maximum estimates of
density are the highest densities in any
of those survey areas/corridors or
blocks.
The number of different individuals
that may be exposed to GI airgun sounds
with received levels ≥160 dB re 1 μPa
(rms) on one or more occasions was
estimated by considering the total
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54111
marine area that would be within the
160-dB radius around the operating
airgun array on at least one occasion,
along with the expected density of
animals in the area. The proposed
seismic lines do not run parallel to each
other in close proximity, which
minimizes the number of times an
individual mammal may be exposed
during the survey; in this case, an
individual could be exposed 1.01 times
on average. The numbers of different
individuals potentially exposed to ≥160
dB re 1 μPa (rms) were calculated by
multiplying the expected species
density, either ‘‘mean’’ (i.e., best
estimate) or ‘‘maximum’’, times the
anticipated area to be ensonified to that
level during GI airgun operations.
The area expected to be ensonified
was determined by entering the planned
survey lines into a MapInfo GIS, using
the GIS to identify the relevant areas by
‘‘drawing’’ the applicable 160-dB buffer
(see Table 1 in this document) around
each seismic line, and then calculating
the total area within the buffers. Areas
where overlap occurred (because of
intersecting lines) were included only
once when estimating the number of
individuals exposed.
Applying the approach described
here, approximately 4340 km2 (1675.7
mi2) would be within the 160-dB
isopleth on one or more occasions
during the surveys. This approach does
not allow for turnover in the mammal
populations in the study area during the
course of the survey. That might
underestimate actual numbers of
individuals exposed, although the
conservative distances used to calculate
the area may offset this. In addition, the
approach assumes that no cetaceans will
move away or toward the trackline as
the Melville approaches in response to
increasing sound levels prior to the time
the levels reach 160 dB. Another way of
interpreting the estimates that follow
(Table 3 in this document) is that they
represent the number of individuals that
are expected (in the absence of a seismic
program) to occur in the waters that will
be exposed to ≥160 dB re 1 μPa (rms).
The take estimates presented here do
not take the proposed mitigation
measures into consideration and thus
are likely to be overestimates.
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TABLE 3—THE ESTIMATES OF THE POSSIBLE NUMBERS OF MARINE MAMMALS EXPOSED TO SOUND LEVELS GREATER
THAN OR EQUAL TO 160 DB DURING SIO’S PROPOSED SEISMIC SURVEY IN THE EASTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC OCEAN
IN OCT–NOV 2010. THE PROPOSED SOUND SOURCE IS A PAIR OF GI AIRGUNS. RECEIVED LEVELS ARE EXPRESSED
IN DB RE 1 μPA (RMS) (AVERAGED OVER PULSE DURATION), CONSISTENT WITH NMFS’ PRACTICE. NOT ALL MARINE
MAMMALS WILL CHANGE THEIR BEHAVIOR WHEN EXPOSED TO THESE SOUND LEVELS, BUT SOME MAY ALTER THEIR
BEHAVIOR WHEN LEVELS ARE LOWER (SEE TEXT)
[See Tables 2–4 in SIO’s Application for Further Detail]
Number of individuals exposed
(best) 1
Species
Number of individuals exposed
(max) 1
Approx. % regional population
(best) 2
3
1
1
6
1
1
0.02
0.05
3 NA
3
*2
*2
23
10
1
9
67
21
82
6
6
777
3
15
55
2
5
34
82
20
2
13
122
31
125
291
30
1317
10
50
203
11
22
64
0.09
0.05
<0.01
0.01
0.01
<0.01
0.02
<0.01
<0.01
0.02
0.01
0.03
0.05
0.01
0.05
0.01
23
10
1
* 15
* 131
* 109
82
6
* 440
777
* 30
* 258
55
* 11
5
34
Mysticetes:
Bryde’s whale, (Balaenoptera edeni) .......................................
Blue whale, (Balaenoptera musculus) ......................................
Humpback whale, (Megaptera novaeangliae) ..........................
Odontocetes:
Sperm whale, (Physeter macrocephalus) ................................
Cuvier’s beaked whale, (Ziphius cavirostris) ............................
Mesoplodon sp. (unidentified) ..................................................
Rough-toothed dolphin, (Steno bredanensis) ..........................
Pantropical spotted dolphin, (Stenella attenuata) ....................
Spinner dolphin, (Stenella longirostris) ....................................
Bottlenose dolphin, (Tursiops truncatus) ..................................
Striped dolphin, (Stenella coeruleoalba) ..................................
Fraser’s dolphin, (Lagenodelphis hosei) ..................................
Short-beaked common dolphin, (Delphinus delphis) ...............
Pygmy killer whale, (Feresa attenuata) ....................................
Melon-headed whale, (Peponocephala electra) .......................
Risso’s dolphin, (Grampus griseus) .........................................
False killer whale, (Pseudorca crassidens) ..............................
Killer whale, (Orcinus orca) ......................................................
Short-finned pilot whale, (Globicephala macrorhynchus) .........
Requested take
authorization
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
* Requested take authorization increased from ‘best’ exposure estimate to mean group size as reported in Ferguson et al. (2006).
1 Best estimate and maximum estimate density are from Table 3 of SIO’s application; therefore, takes are not anticipated for sei, fin, humpback, minke, Longman’s beaked whales, pygmy sperm whales, and dwarf sperm whales. Humpback whale estimates calculated independently
using methodology described previously.
2 Regional population size estimates are from Table 2 in this document.
3 Southern Hemisphere population sizes are poorly understood. However, the number of individuals potentially exposed is low relative to regional population.
Table 4 in SIO’s application shows
the best and maximum estimates of the
number of exposures and the number of
individual marine mammals that
potentially could be exposed to ≥160 dB
re 1 μPa (rms) during the seismic survey
if no animals moved away from the
survey vessel. Proposed take
authorizations are based on best
estimates, calculated according to the
methodology described previously. The
best estimate of the number of
individual cetaceans that could be
exposed to seismic sounds with
received levels ≥160 dB re 1 μPa (rms)
(but below Level A harassment
thresholds) during the survey is shown
in Table 4 of SIO’s application and
Table 3 here. That total includes 25
endangered whales: 1 blue whale
(0.05% of the regional population), 1
humpback whale, and 23 sperm whales
(0.09%). Percentage of regional
population for humpback whale is not
listed because Southern Hemisphere
population numbers are poorly
understood; however, the authorized
take is low compared to regional
population. It should be noted that the
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applicant did not initially request take
authorization for humpback whales,
believing that migrating individuals
would depart the proposed study area
prior to the activity dates. In subsequent
discussions between NMFS and the
applicant, it was agreed that there was
some reasonable chance that latemigrant Southern Hemisphere
individuals could be present in one or
more of the study areas. The proposed
take authorization for humpback whales
reflects this decision. Most (96.8%) of
the cetaceans potentially exposed are
delphinids; short-beaked common,
pantropical spotted, bottlenose, and
Risso’s dolphins and short-finned pilot
whales are estimated to be the most
common species in the area, with best
estimates of 777 (0.02% of the regional
population), 67 (0.01%), 82 (0.02%), 55
(0.05%), and 34 (0.01%) exposed to
≥160 dB re 1 μPa (rms), respectively. For
certain species where the calculated
number of individuals exposed was
between 1 and the mean group size, the
requested take authorization has been
increased to the mean group size as
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observed in the ETP (Ferguson et al.,
2006).
Negligible Impact and Small Numbers
Analysis and Preliminary
Determination
NMFS has defined ‘‘negligible impact’’
in 50 CFR 216.103 as ‘‘* * * an impact
resulting from the specified activity that
cannot be reasonably expected to, and is
not reasonably likely to, adversely affect
the species or stock through effects on
annual rates of recruitment or survival.’’
In making a negligible impact
determination, NMFS considers a
variety of factors, including but not
limited to: (1) The number of
anticipated mortalities; (2) the number
and nature of anticipated injuries; (3)
the number, nature, intensity, and
duration of Level B harassment; and (4)
the context in which the take occurs.
NMFS has preliminarily determined
that the impact of conducting the lowenergy marine seismic survey in the
ETP may result, at worst, in a temporary
modification in behavior (Level B
harassment) of small numbers of marine
mammals. No mortality or injuries are
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anticipated as a result of the specified
activity, and none are proposed to be
authorized. Additionally, animals in the
area are not expected to incur hearing
impairment (i.e., TTS or PTS) or nonauditory physiological effects. Due to
the nature, degree, and context of
behavioral harassment anticipated, the
activity is not expected to impact rates
of recruitment or survival. This activity
is expected to result in a negligible
impact on the affected species or stocks.
Many animals perform vital functions,
such as feeding, resting, traveling, and
socializing, on a diel cycle (24-hr cycle).
Behavioral reactions to noise exposure
(such as disruption of critical life
functions, displacement, or avoidance of
important habitat) are more likely to be
significant if they last more than one
diel cycle or recur on subsequent days
(Southall et al., 2007). Consequently, a
behavioral response lasting less than
one day and not recurring on
subsequent days is not considered
particularly severe unless it could
directly affect reproduction or survival
(Southall et al., 2007). Seismic
operations are only scheduled to occur
at each site for approximately 2 days.
Additionally, the source vessel will be
constantly moving and will not remain
in any one spot for a prolonged period
of time. Survey operations will be
conducted solely in deep-water areas of
no specifically-known (e.g., breeding)
importance for the species described.
Several species for which take
authorization is requested are either
ESA-listed and/or are considered
‘‘Depleted’’ under the MMPA. Blue,
sperm, and humpback whales are listed
as Endangered under the ESA (as well
as MMPA–Depleted). Along the
California coast blue whale abundance
has been increasing during the past two
decades (Calambokidis et al., 1990;
Barlow, 1994; Calambokidis, 1995).
Though the magnitude of this apparent
increase is too large to be accounted for
by population growth alone and,
therefore, is assumed to partly result
from a shift in distribution, there is an
apparent increasing trend. Some
individuals from this stock may be
present year-round on the Costa Rica
Dome (Reilly and Thayer, 1990).
Although the population in the North
Pacific is expected to have grown since
being given protected status in 1966,
there is no evidence showing that the
eastern North Pacific stock is currently
growing, and no information exists on
the rate of growth of blue whale
populations in the Pacific (Best, 1993).
Slightly more information is available
for sperm whales, and it has been
suggested that ETP animals of this
species may form a distinct stock
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(Dufault and Whitehead 1995; Jaquet et
al., 2003). However, little is known
about population trends and growth
rates in the survey area. Again,
populations are assumed to have
increased since the species gained
protection. Humpback whales
potentially seen in the survey area
would likely be late migrant individuals
belonging to Southern Hemisphere
stocks, where the International Whaling
Commission has designated seven major
breeding stocks linked to seven major
feeding areas. In most areas for which
there are good data, humpback whales
have shown evidence of strong recovery
towards their unexploited size, with
annual increase rates of about 10%
being recorded in a number of areas
including off South America. The total
Southern Hemisphere abundance is
probably at least 60,000, although little
data on which to base this number
exists. The eastern spinner dolphin (S.
l. orientalis), considered an offshore
species and common in the survey area,
is considered a Depleted stock under the
MMPA. The long-term trend is flat for
this stock. For all of these species, the
levels of requested take are small
relative to the regional population (see
Table 3 in this document).
For reasons stated previously in this
document, the negligible impact
determination is also supported by the
likelihood that, given sufficient ‘‘notice’’
through relatively slow ship speed,
marine mammals are expected to move
away from a noise source that is
annoying prior to its becoming
potentially injurious; the fact that
cetaceans would have to be closer than
40 m (131.2 ft) in deep water when the
GI airgun is in use from the vessel to be
exposed to levels of sound (180 dB)
believed to have even a minimal chance
of causing PTS; and the likelihood that
marine mammal detection ability by
trained observers is high at that short
distance from the vessel, enabling the
implementation of shut-downs to avoid
injury, serious injury, or mortality. As a
result, no take by injury or death is
anticipated, and the potential for
temporary or permanent hearing
impairment is very low and will be
avoided through the incorporation of
the proposed mitigation measures.
While the number of marine
mammals potentially incidentally
harassed will depend on the
distribution and abundance of marine
mammals in the vicinity of the survey
activity, the number of potential
harassment takings is estimated to be
small, less than one percent of any of
the estimated population sizes, and has
been mitigated to the lowest level
practicable through incorporation of the
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54113
proposed mitigation and monitoring
measures mentioned previously in this
document.
Based on the analysis contained
herein of the likely effects of the
specified activity on marine mammals
and their habitat, and taking into
consideration the implementation of the
mitigation and monitoring measures,
NMFS preliminarily finds that the
proposed SIO seismic survey will result
in the incidental take of small numbers
of marine mammal, by Level B
harassment only, and that the total
taking from the seismic survey will have
a negligible impact on the affected
species or stocks.
Impact on Availability of Affected
Species or Stock for Taking for
Subsistence Uses
Subsistence whaling of several
species of small cetaceans, including the
bottlenose dolphin, takes place in
territorial coastal waters of Peru (Read et
al., 1998). This hunt is mainly for
human consumption and uses gill nets,
purse seines, and harpoons. Read et al.
(1998) estimated that approximately
10,000 dolphins and porpoises were
landed in Peru in 1985. Because the
seismic surveys are in offshore waters,
the proposed activities will not have
any impact on the availability of the
species or stocks for subsistence users.
However, there are no relevant
subsistence uses of marine mammals
implicated by this action.
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
There are six marine mammal species
that are listed as endangered under the
ESA with confirmed or possible
occurrence in the study area: The
humpback whale, South Pacific right
whale, sei whale, fin whale, blue whale,
and sperm whale. Under section 7 of the
ESA, SIO has begun consultation with
NMFS on the proposed seismic survey.
NMFS will also consult internally on
the issuance of an IHA under section
101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA for this
activity. As discussed previously in this
document, take is requested only for
species likely to occur in the survey area
during the project timeframe (blue,
humpback, and sperm whales), and
consultation will consider these three
species. Consultation will be concluded
prior to a determination on the issuance
of an IHA.
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA)
On behalf of NSF, LGL Limited,
Environmental Research Associates,
prepared an EA titled ‘‘Environmental
Assessment of a Marine Geophysical
Survey by the R/V Melville in the Pacific
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Ocean off Central and South America,
October-November 2010’’. NMFS, after
independently reviewing and evaluating
the document for sufficiency and
compliance with the Council on
Environmental Quality regulations and
NOAA Administrative Order 216–6,
will either adopt NSF’s EA or conduct
a separate NEPA analysis, as necessary,
prior to making a determination on the
issuance of the IHA.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary
determinations, NMFS proposes to issue
an IHA for Level B harassment, at levels
specified in Table 3 of this document,
to SIO incidental to conducting a lowenergy marine seismic survey in the
ETP during the period OctoberNovember 2010, provided the
previously mentioned mitigation,
monitoring, and reporting requirements
are incorporated.
Dated: August 30, 2010.
James H. Lecky,
Director, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2010–22080 Filed 9–2–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
COMMITTEE FOR PURCHASE FROM
PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND OR
SEVERELY DISABLED
Procurement List Additions
Committee for Purchase From
People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled.
ACTION: Additions to the Procurement
List.
AGENCY:
This action adds products and
services to the Procurement List that
will be furnished by nonprofit agencies
employing persons who are blind or
have other severe disabilities.
DATES: Effective Date: 10/4/2010.
ADDRESSES: Committee for Purchase
From People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled, Jefferson Plaza 2, Suite 10800,
1421 Jefferson Davis Highway,
Arlington, Virginia 22202–3259.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Barry S. Lineback, Telephone: (703)
603–7740, Fax: (703) 603–0655, or email CMTEFedReg@AbilityOne.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
Additions
On 7/2/2010 (75 FR 38467–38468)
and 7/9/2010 (75 FR 39497–39499), the
Committee for Purchase From People
Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled
published Notices of proposed additions
to the Procurement List.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:33 Sep 02, 2010
Jkt 220001
Comments were received from a
nonprofit agency that was not selected
as the designated nonprofit agency to
perform the Janitorial and Grounds
Service at the Alan Bible Federal
Building and Lloyd George U.S.
Courthouse in Las Vegas, NV. In its
comments, the nonprofit agency
questions the fairness of the process
used by the central nonprofit agency to
identify the nonprofit agency to perform
this project.
The Committee for Purchase From
People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled (Committee) operates pursuant
to statutory and regulatory
requirements. In accordance with these
requirements, the Committee has
designated central nonprofit agencies to
perform certain duties, including
facilitating the distribution of
Government orders for goods and
services among qualified nonprofit
agencies. The central nonprofit agencies
have established order distribution
procedures which include dispute
resolution processes. Accordingly, in
this instance, if a qualified nonprofit
agency questions the fairness of the
order distribution process conducted by
the central nonprofit agency, they must
utilize the established dispute
resolution process.
After consideration of the material
presented to it concerning capability of
qualified nonprofit agencies to provide
the products and services and impact of
the additions on the current or most
recent contractors, the Committee has
determined that the products and
services listed below are suitable for
procurement by the Federal Government
under 41 U.S.C. 46–48c and 41 CFR 51–
2.4.
Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
I certify that the following action will
not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The major factors considered for this
certification were:
1. The action will not result in any
additional reporting, recordkeeping or
other compliance requirements for small
entities other than the small
organizations that will furnish the
products and services to the
Government.
2. The action will result in
authorizing small entities to furnish the
products and services to the
Government.
3. There are no known regulatory
alternatives which would accomplish
the objectives of the Javits-WagnerO’Day Act (41 U.S.C. 46–48c) in
connection with the products and
services proposed for addition to the
Procurement List.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
End of Certification
Accordingly, the following products
and services are added to the
Procurement List:
Products
NSN: 7220–00–NIB–0367—Disposable Urinal
Floor Mat.
NSN: 7220–00–NIB–0368—Disposable Toilet
Floor Mat.
NPA: NewView Oklahoma, Inc., Oklahoma
City, OK.
Contracting Activity: GSA/Federal
Acquisition Service, Fort Worth, TX.
Coverage: B-List for the Broad Government
Requirement as aggregated by the
General Services Administration.
NSN: 7520–01–377–9534—Cord Connector/
Rotator, Telephone, Twisstop, Black.
NSN: 7520–00–NIB–2084—Shoulder Rest,
Telephone, Black, Softak II.
NSN: 7520–00–NIB–2085—Shoulder Rest,
Telephone, Black.
Coverage: A-List for the Total Government
Requirement as aggregated by the
General Services Administration.
NSN: 7520–01–253–1283—Shoulder Rest,
Telephone, Beige, 21⁄4″ W × 7″ L.
NSN: 7520–01–377–9533—Cord Connector/
Rotator, Telephone, Twisstop, Clear.
Coverage: B-List for the Broad Government
Requirement as aggregated by the
General Services Administration.
NPA: Bestwork Industries for the Blind, Inc.,
Runnemede, NJ.
Contracting Activity: GSA/Federal
Acquisition Service, New York, NY.
NSN: 7910–00–NIB–0236—Surface Prep pad
13.’’
NSN: 7910–00–NIB–0240—Surface Prep pad
17.’’
NSN: 7910–00–NIB–0243—Surface Prep pad
20.’’
NPA: Beacon Lighthouse, Inc., Wichita Falls,
TX.
Contracting Activity: Department of Veteran
Affairs, National Acquisition Center,
Hines, IL.
Coverage: C-List for 100% of the
requirement of the Department of Veterans
Affairs as aggregated by the Department of
Veterans Affairs National Acquisition Center,
Hines, IL.
NSN: 8415–00–NIB–0210—Pants, United
States Coast Guard Running Suit, Size
XS.
NSN: 8415–00–NIB–0778—Pants, United
States Coast Guard Running Suit, Size
SM.
NSN: 8415–00–NIB–0779—Pants, United
States Coast Guard Running Suit, Size
MD.
NSN: 8415–00–NIB–0780—Pants, United
States Coast Guard Running Suit, Size
LG.
NSN: 8415–00–NIB–0781—Pants, United
States Coast Guard Running Suit, Size
X–LG.
NSN: 8415–00–NIB–0782—Pants, United
States Coast Guard Running Suit, Size
XX–LG.
NPA: Association for the Blind & Visually
Impaired & Goodwill Ind. of Greater
Rochester, Rochester, NY.
Contracting Activity: Department of
E:\FR\FM\03SEN1.SGM
03SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 171 (Friday, September 3, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 54095-54114]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-22080]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XY12
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Low-
Energy Marine Seismic Survey in the Eastern Tropical Pacific Ocean Off
Central and South America, October-November 2010
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed Incidental Harassment Authorization; request
for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS has received an application from the Scripps Institution
of Oceanography (SIO) of the University of California for an Incidental
Harassment Authorization (IHA) to take marine mammals, by harassment,
incidental to conducting a low-energy marine seismic survey. Pursuant
to the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS is requesting comments
on its proposal to issue an IHA to SIO to take, by Level B Harassment
only, 21 species of marine mammals during the specified activity.
DATES: Comments and information must be received no later than October
4, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Comments on the application should be addressed to Michael
Payne, Chief, Permits, Conservation and Education Division, Office of
Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service, 1315 East-West
Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910. The mailbox address for providing e-
mail comments is PR1.0648-XY12@noaa.gov. NMFS is not responsible for e-
mail comments sent to addresses other than the one provided here.
Comments sent via e-mail, including all attachments, must not exceed a
10-megabyte file size.
Instructions: All comments received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted to https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm without change. All Personal Identifying Information
(for example, name, address, etc.) voluntarily submitted by the
commenter may be publicly accessible. Do not submit Confidential
Business Information or otherwise sensitive or protected information.
A copy of the application containing a list of the references used
in this document may be obtained by writing to the address specified
above, telephoning the contact listed below (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT), or visiting the Internet at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm. The National Science
Foundation (NSF), which is providing funding for the proposed action,
has prepared a draft Environmental Assessment (EA) titled ``Marine
Geophysical Survey by the R/V Melville in the Pacific Ocean off Central
and South America, October-November 2010''. The NSF draft EA
incorporates an ``Environmental Assessment of a Marine Geophysical
Survey by the R/V Melville in the Pacific Ocean off Central and South
America, October-November 2010'', prepared by LGL Limited,
Environmental Research Associates, on behalf of NSF. These associated
documents, prepared in compliance with the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA), are also available at the same Internet address.
Documents cited in this notice may also be viewed, by appointment,
during regular business hours, at the aforementioned address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ben Laws or Candace Nachman, Office of
Protected Resources, NMFS, (301) 713-2289.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.)
direct the Secretary of Commerce to allow, upon request, the
incidental, but not intentional, taking of small numbers of marine
mammals by U.S. citizens who engage in a specified activity (other than
commercial fishing) within a specified geographical region if certain
findings are made and either regulations are issued or, if the taking
is limited to harassment, a notice of a proposed
[[Page 54096]]
authorization is provided to the public for review.
Authorization for incidental takings shall be granted if NMFS finds
that the taking will have a negligible impact on the species or
stock(s), will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for subsistence uses (where
relevant), and if the permissible methods of taking and requirements
pertaining to the mitigation, monitoring and reporting of such takings
are set forth. NMFS has defined ``negligible impact'' in 50 CFR 216.103
as ``* * * an impact resulting from the specified activity that cannot
be reasonably expected to, and is not reasonably likely to, adversely
affect the species or stock through effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival.''
Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA established an expedited process
by which citizens of the U.S. can apply for an authorization to
incidentally take small numbers of marine mammals by harassment.
Section 101(a)(5)(D) establishes a 45-day time limit for NMFS review of
an application followed by a 30-day public notice and comment period on
any proposed authorizations for the incidental harassment of marine
mammals. Within 45 days of the close of the comment period, NMFS must
either issue or deny the authorization. Except with respect to certain
activities not pertinent here, the MMPA defines ``harassment'' as:
any act of pursuit, torment, or annoyance which (i) has the
potential to injure a marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the
wild [Level A harassment]; or (ii) has the potential to disturb a
marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild by causing
disruption of behavioral patterns, including, but not limited to,
migration, breathing, nursing, breeding, feeding, or sheltering
[Level B harassment].
Summary of Request
NMFS received an application on May 28, 2010 from SIO for the
taking, by harassment, of marine mammals incidental to conducting, in
collaboration with Texas A&M University and with research funding
provided by the National Science Foundation, a low-energy marine
seismic survey. NMFS reviewed SIO's application and identified a number
of issues requiring further clarification. After addressing comments
from NMFS, SIO modified its application and submitted a revised
application on July 14, 2010. NMFS carefully evaluated SIO's
application, including their analyses, and determined that the
application is complete and provides sufficient data for NMFS to make
the necessary preliminary determinations pursuant to the MMPA. The July
14, 2010 application is the one available for public comment (see
ADDRESSES) and considered by NMFS for this proposed IHA.
The proposed survey will occur in the Eastern Tropical Pacific
Ocean (ETP), encompassing the area from approximately 8[deg] N-12[deg]
S and 80-91[deg] W, off the coasts of Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia,
Ecuador, and Peru, in International Waters and within the Exclusive
Economic Zones (EEZs) of Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador, and
is scheduled to occur from October 19-November 14, 2010. Some minor
deviation from these dates is possible, depending on logistics and
weather. The survey will use a pair of Generator Injector (GI) airguns,
each with a discharge volume of 45 in\3\. Seismic airgun operations are
expected to result in the incidental take, by Level B harassment only,
of up to 21 species of marine mammals. These species include: Bryde's
whale; blue whale; sperm whale; humpback whale; Cuvier's beaked whale;
Blainville's beaked whale; pygmy beaked whale; gingko-toothed beaked
whale; rough-toothed dolphin; bottlenose dolphin; pantropical spotted
dolphin; spinner dolphin; striped dolphin; Fraser's dolphin; short-
beaked common dolphin; Risso's dolphin; melon-headed whale; pygmy
killer whale; false killer whale; killer whale; and short-finned pilot
whale.
Description of the Specified Activity
SIO plans to conduct a seismic survey as part of an integrated
geophysical and geochemical study. In addition to the GI airguns, a
multibeam echosounder (MBES) and a sub-bottom profiler (SBP) will be
utilized for research purposes. The planned survey will involve one
source vessel, the R/V Melville (Melville).
The purpose of this project is to better understand how marine
sediments record paleo-oceanographic information. The deposition of
sediments in the upper 500 m (1640.4 ft) of the sediment column will be
studied using known seismic horizons in the sediment column to estimate
rates of deposition downstream from potential sediment sources on the
topographic highs and to estimate loss from the ridges. The seismic
survey and associated coring and water sampling will allow comparisons
of geophysical estimates of the level of erosion from marine ridges and
highs with geochemical estimates of sediment focusing based upon the
distribution of Th-230, a particle-reactive isotope produced by the
decay of dissolved uranium in the water column. In addition, the study
will examine whether there are sediment sources for Th-230 in slowly-
accumulating sediments.
The Melville is expected to depart Puntarenas, Costa Rica, on
October 19, 2010, and spend approximately 15 days conducting seismic
surveys, 10 days collecting water and core samples, and approximately 2
days in transit, arriving at Arica, Chile, on November 14, 2010. At
each of four sites (see Figure 1 of SIO's application), seismic
operations will be conducted for approximately 2 days, and each water
sampling and coring station will be occupied for 1-2 days. Some minor
deviation from these dates is possible, depending on logistics and
weather.
The source vessel, the Melville, will deploy a pair of low-energy
GI airguns as an energy source at a depth of 2 m (each with a discharge
volume of 45 in\3\), plus either of two towed hydrophone streamers, one
725 m (2378.6 ft) long with 40 channels, and the other 350 m (1148.3
ft) long with 16 channels. Hydrophone streamers are towed at adjustable
depth to afford best reception of returning seismic signals, depending
upon surface conditions, but are typically towed in at approximately 10
m. The energy to the GI airgun is compressed air supplied by
compressors onboard the source vessel. As the GI airgun is towed along
the survey lines, the receiving systems will receive the returning
acoustic signals.
In addition to the GI airguns, an MBES and an SBP will be used
throughout the cruise, except while at water/core stations, to help
verify seafloor conditions at possible coring sites and to collect
additional seafloor bathymetric data. Passive geophysical sensors (a
gravimeter and a magnetometer) will also be operated continuously
throughout the entire cruise.
All potential incidental take, by harassment only, is expected to
result from the operation of the GI airguns. Take is not expected to
result from the use of the MBES or SBP, for reasons discussed below, or
from collision with the vessel because it is a single vessel, moving at
a relatively slow speed (operational speeds of approximately 11 km/hr
[6 knots] during seismic acquisition within the survey areas and 15-
18.5 km/hr [8-10 knots] between survey areas and stations), for a
relatively short period of time (approximately 30 days). It is likely
that any marine mammal would be able to avoid the vessel.
The seismic program will consist of approximately 5475 km (3402 mi)
of
[[Page 54097]]
survey lines, including turns (see Figure 1 of SIO's application).
Water depths at the seismic survey locations are approximately 1000-
4800 m (3280.8-15,748 ft). The GI airguns will be operated on a small
grid for approximately 45 hours at each of four sites (see Figure 1 of
SIO's application) where the 40-channel streamer will be used, and for
most of the time during transits between the sites, to the first site,
and after the last site, where the 12-channel streamer will be used.
There will be additional seismic operations associated with equipment
testing, startup, and possible line changes or repeat coverage of any
areas where initial data quality is sub-standard. Those additional
operations are allowed for in the estimated total line-kilometers given
above. The Melville is expected to depart Puntarenas, Costa Rica, on
October 19, 2010 and spend approximately 15 days conducting seismic
surveys, 10 days collecting water and core samples, and approximately 2
days in transit, arriving at Arica, Chile, on November 14, 2010.
All planned geophysical data acquisition activities will be
conducted by SIO with on-board assistance by the scientists who have
proposed the study. The Chief Scientist is Dr. Franco Marcantonio of
Texas A&M University. The vessel will be self-contained, and the crew
will live aboard the vessel for the entire cruise.
Vessel Specifications
The Melville has a length of 85 m (278.9 ft), a beam of 14 m (45.9
ft), and a maximum draft of 5 m (16.4 ft). The ship is powered by two
1385-hp diesel engines and a 900-hp retracting azimuthing bow thruster.
Operation speeds of approximately 11 km/hr (5.9 knots) and 15-18.5 km/
hr (8.1-10 knots) will be used during seismic acquisition within the
survey areas and between the areas and stations, respectively. When not
towing seismic survey gear, the Melville cruises at 21.7 km/hr (11.7
knots) and has a maximum speed of 25.9 km/hr (14 knots). The Melville
will also serve as the platform from which vessel-based protected
species observers (PSOs) will watch for animals before and during
airgun operations (discussed later in this document).
Acoustic Source Specifications
(1) Seismic Airguns
The Melville will tow a pair of 45-in\3\ Sercel GI airguns and a
streamer containing hydrophones along predetermined lines. Seismic
pulses will be emitted at intervals of 8-10 s. At speeds of
approximately 11-18.5 km/hr (5.9-10 knots), the 8-10 s spacing
corresponds to shot intervals of approximately 25-50 m (82-164 ft).
The generator chamber of each GI airgun, responsible for
introducing the sound pulse into the ocean, is 45 in\3\. The larger
(105-in\3\) injector chamber injects air into the previously-generated
bubble to maintain its shape and does not introduce more sound into the
water. The two 45-in\3\ GI airguns will be towed 8 m (26.2 ft) apart
side by side, 21 m (68.9 ft) behind the Melville, at a depth of 2 m
(6.6 ft).
As the GI airgun is towed along the survey line, the towed
hydrophone array in the streamer receives the reflected signals and
transfers the data to the on-board processing system. Given the
relatively short streamer length behind the vessel, the turning rate of
the vessel while the gear is deployed is much higher than the limit of
five degrees per minute for a seismic vessel towing a streamer of more
typical length (greater than l km (0.6 mi)). Thus, the maneuverability
of the vessel is not limited much during operations.
The root mean square (rms) received levels that are used as impact
criteria for marine mammals are not directly comparable to the peak (pk
or 0-pk) or peak-to-peak (pk-pk) values normally used to characterize
source levels of airgun arrays. The measurement units used to describe
airgun sources, peak or peak-to-peak decibels, are always higher than
the rms decibels referred to in biological literature. A measured
received level of 160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) in the far field would
typically correspond to a peak measurement of approximately 170 dB and
to a peak-to-peak measurement of approximately 176-178 dB, as measured
for the same pulse received at the same location (Greene, 1997;
McCauley et al., 1998, 2000). The precise difference between rms and
peak or peak-to-peak values depends on the frequency content and
duration of the pulse, among other factors. However, the rms level is
always lower than the peak or peak-to-peak level for an airgun-type
source. The actual received level at any location in the water near the
GI airguns will not exceed the source level of the strongest individual
source. In this case, that will be about 224.6 dB re 1 [micro]Pa-m peak
or 229.8 dB re 1 [micro]Pa-m peak-to-peak. The dominant frequency
components of the GI airguns are 0-188 Hertz (Hz).
Received sound levels have been modeled by Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory (L-DEO) for a number of airgun configurations, including
two 45 in\3\ Nucleus G. Guns, in relation to distance and direction
from the airgun (see Figure 2 of SIO's application). The model does not
allow for bottom interactions and is most directly applicable to deep
water. Based on the modeling, estimates of the maximum distances from
the GI airguns where sound levels of 190, 180, and 160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa
(rms) are predicted to be received in deep (>1,000 m (3280.8 ft)) water
are shown in Table 1 below. Because the model results are for G. Guns,
which have more energy than GI airguns of the same size, the distances
in Table 1 overestimate the distances for the 45 in\3\ GI airguns.
(2) Multibeam Echosounder and Sub-Bottom Profiler
Along with the GI airgun operations, an MBES and a SBP will be
operated from the source vessel at certain times during the planned
study to help verify seafloor conditions at possible coring sites and
to collect additional seafloor bathymetric data.
The Kongsberg EM 122 MBES operates at 10.5-13 (usually 12)
kilohertz (kHz) and is hull-mounted on the Melville. The transmitting
beamwidth is 1[deg] fore-aft and 150[deg] athwartship. The maximum
source level is 242 dB re 1 [mu]Pa-m (rms). Each ``ping'' consists of
eight (in water >1000 m deep) or four (<1000 m deep) successive fan-
shaped transmissions, each ensonifying a sector that extends 1[deg]
fore-aft. Continuous-wave pulses increase from 2 to 15 ms long in water
depths up to 2600 m (8530.2 ft), and FM chirp pulses up to 100 ms long
are used in water >2600 m. The successive transmissions span an overall
cross-track angular extent of about 150[deg], with 2-ms gaps between
the pulses for successive sectors.
The Knudsen Engineering Model 320B/R SBP is a dual-frequency
transceiver designed to operate at 3.5 and/or 12 kHz. It is used in
conjunction with the MBES to provide data about the sedimentary
features that occur below the sea floor. The energy from the SBP is
directed downward via a 3.5-kHz transducer array mounted in the hull of
the Melville. The maximum power output of the 320B/R is 10 kilowatts
for the 3.5-kHz section and 2 kilowatts for the 12-kHz section. The
nominal beamwidth is 80[deg].
The pulse length for the 3.5-kHz section of the 320B/R is 0.8-24
ms, controlled by the system operator in regards to water depth and
reflectivity of the bottom sediments and will usually be 6, 12, or 24
ms at the water depths at the study sites and in transit from
Puntarenas and to Arica. The system produces one sound pulse and then
waits for its return before transmitting again. Thus, the pulse
[[Page 54098]]
interval is directly dependent upon water depth, and in this survey is
0.8-1.5 s. Using the Sonar Equations and assuming 100 percent
efficiency in the system (impractical in real world applications), the
source level for the 320B/R is calculated to be 211 dB re 1 [mu]Pa-m.
In practice, the system is rarely operated above 80 percent power
level.
(3) Safety Radii
NMFS has determined that for acoustic effects, using acoustic
thresholds in combination with corresponding safety radii is an
effective way to consistently apply measures to avoid or minimize the
impacts of an action, and to quantitatively estimate the effects of an
action. Thresholds are used in two ways: (1) To establish a mitigation
shut-down or power-down zone, i.e., if an animal enters an area
calculated to be ensonified above the level of an established
threshold, a sound source is powered down or shut down; and (2) to
calculate take, in that a model may be used to calculate the area
around the sound source that will be ensonified to that level or above,
then, based on the estimated density of animals and the distance that
the sound source moves, NMFS can estimate the number of marine mammals
that may be ``taken.''
As a matter of past practice and based on the best available
information at the time regarding the effects of marine sound, NMFS
estimates that Level A harassment from acoustic sources may occur when
animals are exposed to levels above 180 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) level for
cetaceans and 190 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) for pinnipeds. A review of the
available scientific data using an application of science-based
extrapolation procedures (Southall et al., 2007) strongly suggests that
Level A harassment (as well as temporary threshold shift (TTS)) from
single sound exposure impulse events may occur at much higher levels
than the levels previously estimated using very limited data. However,
for purposes of this proposed action, SIO's application sets forth, and
NMFS is using, the more conservative 180 and 190 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms)
criteria. NMFS also considers 160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) as the criterion
for estimating the onset of Level B harassment from acoustic sources
producing impulse sounds, as in this seismic survey.
Empirical data concerning the 180- and 160-dB distances have been
acquired based on measurements during the acoustic verification study
conducted by L-DEO in the northern Gulf of Mexico from May 27-June 3,
2003 (Tolstoy et al., 2004). Although the results are limited, the data
showed that radii around the airguns where the received level would be
180 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms), the safety criterion applicable to cetaceans
(NMFS 2000), vary with water depth. Similar depth-related variation is
likely in the 190 dB distances applicable to pinnipeds. Correction
factors were developed for water depths 100-1000 m and <100 m. The
proposed survey will occur in depths of approximately 1000-4800 m, so
the correction factors for shallow water are not relevant here. All of
the seismic operations will be in depths >1000 m.
The empirical data indicate that, for deep water (>1000 m), the L-
DEO model tends to overestimate the received sound levels at a given
distance (Tolstoy et al., 2004). However, to be precautionary pending
acquisition of additional empirical data, it is proposed that safety
radii during GI airgun operations in deep water will be values
predicted by L-DEO's model (see Table 1 in this document). Therefore,
the assumed 180- and 190-dB radii are 40 m (131.2 ft) and 10 m (32.8
ft), respectively.
Table 1--Predicted Distances To Which Sound Levels [gteqt]190, 180 and 160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) Might Be Received From Two 45 in\3\ GI Airguns That Will
Be Used During the Seismic Surveys in the Eastern Tropical Pacific Ocean During October-November 2010
[Distances are based on model results provided by L-DEO.]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated distances at received levels (m)
Source and volume Tow depth (m) Water depth --------------------------------------------------------
190 dB 180 dB 160 dB
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two GI airguns, 45 in\3\ each............... 2 Deep (>1000 m)................ 10 40 400
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Description of Marine Mammals in the Area of the Specified Activity
Forty-three species of marine mammals, including 29 odontocetes, 7
mysticetes, 6 pinnipeds, and the marine sea otter (Enhydra lutris), are
known to occur in the ETP. Of these, 23 cetacean species are likely to
occur in the proposed survey areas in the ETP during October-November
(see Table 2 in this document), and are considered further here. Three
of these 23 cetacean species are listed under the Endangered Species
Act (ESA) as Endangered: The sperm (Physeter macrocephalus), humpback
(Megaptera novaeangliae), and blue (Balaenoptera musculus) whales.
Nine cetacean species, although present in the wider ETP, likely
would not be found in the proposed seismic survey areas because their
ranges do not extend that far south or north. Pacific white-sided
dolphins (Lagenorhynchus obliquidens) and Baird's beaked whales
(Berardius bairdii) are seen very occasionally in the northernmost
portions of the ETP (Ferguson and Barlow, 2001). Long-beaked common
dolphins (Delphinus capensis) are known to occur in the northernmost
areas of the ETP off Baja California, Mexico, and off the coast of Peru
(Heyning and Perrin, 1994). Southern right whales (Eubalaena australis)
are seen on rare occasions off the coasts of Peru and Chile (Aguayo et
al., 1992; Santillan et al., 2004). Gray's beaked whales (Mesoplodon
grayi) are distributed in the southernmost portions of the ETP and off
the coast of southern Peru (Culik, 2010). Dusky dolphins
(Lagenorhynchus obscurus), southern right whale dolphins (Lissodelphis
peronii), Burmeister's porpoises (Phocoena spinipinnis), and long-
finned pilot whales (Globicephala melas) also occur near the Peruvian
coast (Leatherwood et al., 1991; Van Waerebeek et al., 1991; Brownell
and Clapham, 1999; Olson and Reilly, 2002). These nine species are not
addressed in detail in SIO's application and are not considered further
in this Notice of Proposed IHA.
Sei (Balaenoptera borealis) and fin (B. physalus) whales, listed as
Endangered under the ESA, are known from the ETP but are considered
very rare in the proposed survey area. Sei whales may have been sighted
during surveys in the ETP (Wade and Gerrodette, 1993; Kinzey et al.,
1999, 2000, 2001); however, it is difficult to distinguish sei whales
from Bryde's whales (B. edeni) at sea. Because sei whales generally
have a more northerly and temperate distribution (Leatherwood et al.,
1988), Wade and Gerrodette (1993) classified
[[Page 54099]]
any tentative sei whale observations in the ETP as Bryde's whale
sightings. Sei whales may also have been sighted near the Galapagos
Islands (Clarke, 1962); although, Clarke and Aguayo (1965) suggested
that those sightings could have been Bryde's whales. Although the
occurrence of sei whales is documented off Costa Rica (Rodriguez-
Herrera et al., 2002), the reliability of the identification is
uncertain. Neither Ferguson and Barlow (2001) or Jackson et al. (2008)
positively identified sei whales in or near the proposed project area
during surveys conducted during July-December. Similarly, Rasmussen et
al. (2004) did not report sei whales in 8 years of surveys off Costa
Rica or Panama. No sei whales were detected during L-DEO seismic
surveys off Costa Rica or Nicaragua in November-December 2004 or
February-March 2008 (Holst et al., 2005b; Holst and Smultea, 2008), in
the Hess Deep approximately 1100 km (683.5 mi) west of the Galapagos
Islands in July 2003 (Smultea and Holst, 2003), or 1600-1950 km (994.2-
1211.7 mi) west of the proposed survey area in April-August 2008
(Hauser et al., 2008).
No confirmed fin whale sightings were made in the proposed study
area during 10 years of survey effort in July-December by Ferguson and
Barlow (2001) or by Jackson et al. (2008) during July-December surveys
in 2006. Despite >30 years of NMFS and other surveys, as well as
stranding records from the Pacific coast of Costa Rica, there have been
no confirmed records of fin whales (May-Collado et al., 2005). A
possible sighting of a fin whale in this region occurred off the Osa
Peninsula in 1997; however, the sighting was not confirmed (May-Collado
et al., 2005), although Rodriguez-Herrera et al. (2002) list the fin
whale as having been documented off Costa Rica. No fin whales were
detected during L-DEO seismic surveys off Costa Rica or Nicaragua in
November-December 2004 or February-March 2008 (Holst et al., 2005b;
Holst and Smultea, 2008), in the Hess Deep approximately 1100 km (683.5
mi) west of the Galapagos Islands in July 2003 (Smultea and Holst,
2003), or 1600-1950 km (994.2-1211.7 mi) west of the proposed survey
area in April-August 2008 (Hauser et al., 2008). Sei and fin whales are
not considered further in this document.
The general distribution of minke whales (Balaenoptera
acutorostrata) includes the offshore waters of the study area (Reeves
et al., 2002). However, minke whales are likely to be rare in the
survey area. This species has been found off the coast of Costa Rica on
occasion (Rodriguez-Herrera et al., 2002). No minke whales were found
in the proposed project region during July-December surveys during
1986-1996 by Ferguson and Barlow (2001) or in 2006 by Jackson et al.
(2008). Rasmussen et al. (2004) did not report seeing any minke whales
in 8 years of surveys (1996-2003) off Costa Rica or in 2001-2003 off
Panama. May-Collado et al. (2005) also did not report any minkes based
on compiled sightings off Costa Rica during 1979-2001, nor have minkes
been reported among compiled strandings off Costa Rica (Rodriguez-
Fonseca and Cubero-Pardo, 2001). Minke whales are unlikely to occur in
the planned survey areas and are not considered further in this
document.
Longman's beaked whale (Indopacetus pacificus), also known as the
tropical bottlenose whale, is considered rare in the ETP. Although
widespread throughout the tropical Pacific, the species is considered
rare because of a scarcity of sightings despite a great deal of survey
effort (Pitman et al., 1999). In the ETP, most tropical bottlenose
whale sightings have been made between 3-10[deg] N (Pitman et al.,
1999). Kinzey et al. (2001) reported one sighting of I. pacificus in
the ETP at about 135[deg] W. Jackson et al. (2008) also reported I.
pacificus in the ETP well to the west of the proposed study area. No
Longman's beaked whales were reported by May-Collado et al. (2005)
based on compiled sightings off Costa Rica from 1979-2001. The species
is very rare in the study area and is not considered further in this
document.
Dwarf (Kogia sima) and pygmy (K. breviceps) sperm whales may occur
in the proposed survey area, although dwarf sperm whales are likely to
be very rare and pygmy sperm whales are likely to be rare. No Kogia sp.
were detected during L-DEO seismic surveys off Costa Rica and Nicaragua
in November-December 2004 (Holst et al., 2005b) or in the Hess Deep
approximately 1100 km (683.5 mi) west of the Galapagos Islands in July
2003 (Smultea and Holst, 2003). One sighting of a dwarf sperm whale and
one sighting of two pygmy sperm whales were observed off the coast of
Costa Rica in waters approximately 2000 m (6561.7 ft) and 3500 m
(11482.9 ft) deep, respectively, during an L-DEO seismic survey off
Costa Rica and Nicaragua in February-March 2008 (Holst and Smultea,
2008), and one unidentified Kogia sp. was sighted during L-DEO seismic
surveys 1600-1950 km (994.2-1211.7 mi) west of the proposed survey area
in April-August 2008 (Hauser et al., 2008). Due to the rarity of these
species, no take has been requested and none will be authorized.
Six species of pinnipeds are known to occur in the ETP: The
Guadalupe fur seal (Arctocephalus townsendi), California sea lion
(Zalophus californianus), Galapagos sea lion (Z. wollebaeki), Galapagos
fur seal (A. galapagoensis), southern sea lion (Otaria flavescens), and
the South American fur seal (A. australis). Ranges of the first two are
substantially north of the proposed seismic survey areas, and the last
four species are not expected to occur in the offshore waters of the
study areas. The marine sea otter, which is managed by the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, is a coastal species and does not occur in
offshore waters. Pinnipeds are highly unlikely to occur in the survey
area and are not considered in further detail here.
The ETP is a biologically productive area that supports a variety
of cetacean species (Au and Perryman, 1985). Several studies of marine
mammal distribution and abundance have been conducted in the wider ETP.
The most extensive regional distribution and abundance data that
encompass the study area come primarily from multi-year vessel surveys
conducted in the wider ETP by the NMFS Southwest Fisheries Science
Center (SWFSC). Information on the distribution of cetaceans inhabiting
the ETP has been summarized in several studies (Polacheck, 1987; Wade
and Gerrodette, 1993; Ferguson and Barlow, 2001; Gerrodette et al.,
2008). However, for some species, abundance in the proposed seismic
survey area could be quite different from that of the wider ETP,
depending on local oceanographic variability.
In addition, procedures used during the various surveys that are
cited have differed somewhat, and those differences could affect the
results. For example, Ferguson and Barlow (2001) calculated cetacean
densities in the ETP based on summer/fall research surveys in 1986-
1996. Their densities are corrected for both changes in detectability
of species with distance from the survey track line and for perception
and availability bias. Gerrodette et al. (2008) calculated dolphin
abundance in the ETP based on summer/fall research surveys in 1986-
1990, 1998-2000, 2003, and 2006. Their estimates are corrected for the
former but not the latter.
Additional sighting records are available from recent surveys in
the ETP. Jackson et al. (2008) described cetacean sightings data
collected during a survey from July 28-December 7, 2006. The survey
area extended from 30[deg] N-18[deg] S from the coastline to 153[deg]
W, overlapping with the proposed
[[Page 54100]]
seismic survey area. Rasmussen et al. (2004) and Calambokidis et al.
(2010) described cetacean sightings resulting from humpback whale
surveys off Costa Rica and surrounding waters from January to March in
1996-2003 and 2010. Recent at-sea monitoring for L-DEO in the ETP also
provided sighting records for cetaceans during seismic programs.
Seismic monitoring programs took place at the Hess Deep in July 2003,
approximately 1100 km (683.5 mi) west of the Galapagos Islands (Smultea
and Holst, 2003); from Costa Rica to El Salvador in November-December
2004, mainly within approximately 100 km (62.1 mi) of the coast in
water depths extending to 5000 m (16,404.2 ft) (Holst et al., 2005b);
from Costa Rica to Nicaragua in March-April 2008, up to approximately
200 km (124.3 mi) from the coast in water depths extending to 5000 m
(Holst and Smultea, 2008); and approximately 1600-1900 km (994.2-
1,180.6 mi) west of the study area in April-August 2008 (Hauser et al.,
2008).
Information on the occurrence, distribution, population size, and
conservation status for each of the 23 cetacean species that may occur
in the proposed project area during October-November is presented in
Table 2 in this document. The five species of marine mammals expected
to be most common in the waters of the project area, all delphinids,
include the short beaked common dolphin (Delphinus delphis),
pantropical spotted dolphin (Stenella attenuata), bottlenose dolphin
(Tursiops truncatus), Risso's dolphin (Grampus griseus), and short-
finned pilot whale (Globicephala macrorhynchus). Additional information
regarding the abundance and distribution, population status, and life
history and behavior of these species expected to be found in the
project area and how the estimated densities were calculated may be
found in SIO's application. NMFS has reviewed these data and determined
them to be the best available scientific information for the purposes
of the proposed IHA. Please refer to the application for that
information (see ADDRESSES). Additional information can also be found
in the NMFS Stock Assessment Report (SAR). The Pacific 2009 SAR is
available at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/sars/po2009.pdf.
Table 2--The Occurrence, Habitat, Regional Abundance, Conservation Status, and Best and Maximum Density
Estimates for Marine Mammals in or Near the Proposed Low-Energy Seismic Survey Area in the Eastern Tropical
Pacific Ocean. Cetacean Densities Are Based on NMFS SWFSC Ship Transect Surveys Conducted in 1986-2006 From
Predictive Modeling (Barlow et al. 2009; Read et al. 2009) or in 1986-1996 From Ferguson and Barlow (2003)
[See text and Tables 2-4 in SIO's application for further detail.]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Occurrence in Regional Density
Species survey area Habitat population size ESA \2\ (best) Density
during Oct-Nov \1\ \3\ (max) \4\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mysticetes:
Bryde's Whale, Uncommon....... Pelagic and 13,000 \5\..... NL...... 0.53 1.15
(Balaenoptera edeni). coastal.
Blue whale, (Balaenoptera Uncommon....... Pelagic and 1415 \6\....... EN...... 0.13 0.23
musculus). coastal.
Humpback whale, Uncommon....... Mainly NE Pacific 1392 EN...... \15\ 0.1 \15\ 0.2
(Megaptera novaeangliae). nearshore \13\; SE
waters and Pacific 2900
banks. \14\.
Odontocetes:
Sperm whale, (Physeter Common......... Usually deep 26,053 \7\..... EN...... 3.95 15.20
macrocephalus). pelagic, steep
topography.
Pygmy sperm whale, (Kogia Rare........... Deep waters off NA \8\......... NL...... \16\ 0.01 \16\ 0.02
breviceps). shelf.
Dwarf sperm whale, (Kogia Very rare...... Deep waters off 11,200 \9\..... NL...... \16\ 0.01 \16\ 0.02
sima). shelf.
Cuvier's beaked whale, Common......... Slope and 20,000 \6\..... NL...... 1.83 3.70
(Ziphius cavirostris). pelagic.
Blainville's beaked Uncommon....... Pelagic........ 25,300 \10\.... NL...... \17\ 0.21 \17\ 0.37
whale, (Mesoplodon
densirostris).
Pygmy beaked whale, Uncommon....... Pelagic........ 25,300 \10\.... NL...... \17\ 0.21 \17\ 0.37
(Mesoplodon peruvianus).
Gingko-toothed beaked Very rare...... Pelagic........ 25,300 \10\.... NL...... \17\ 0.21 \17\ 0.37
whale, (Mesoplodon
stejnegeri).
Bottlenose dolphin, Very common.... Coastal, shelf, 335,834........ NL...... 15.14 23.09
(Tursiops truncatus). pelagic.
Rough-toothed dolphin, Common......... Mainly pelagic. 107,633........ NL...... 1.60 2.34
(Steno bredanensis).
Short-beaked common Very common.... Shelf, pelagic, 3,127,203...... NL...... 143.21 242.80
dolphin, (Delphinus high relief.
delphis).
Pantropical spotted Very common.... Coastal and 857,884........ NL...... 12.43 22.53
dolphin, (Stenella pelagic.
attenuata).
Risso's dolphin, (Grampus Very common.... Shelf, slope, 110,457........ NL...... 10.21 37.40
griseus). seamounts.
Spinner dolphin, Very common.... Coastal and 1,797,716...... NL...... 3.81 5.74
(Stenella longirostris). pelagic.
Striped dolphin, Very common.... Off continental 964,362........ NL...... 35.23 53.67
(Stenella coeruleoalba). shelf.
Fraser's dolphin, Common......... Pelagic........ 289,300 \6\.... NL...... 1.03 5.60
(Lagenodelphis hosei).
Melon-headed whale, Common......... Pelagic........ 45,400 \6\..... NL...... 2.80 9.30
(Peponocephala electra).
Pygmy killer whale, Uncommon....... Pelagic........ 38,900 \6\..... NL...... 0.60 1.80
(Feresa attenuata).
False killer whale, Uncommon....... Pelagic........ 39,800 \6\..... NL...... 0.39 2.10
(Pseudorca crassidens).
Killer whale, (Orcinus Uncommon....... Widely 8,500 \11\..... NL...... 0.85 4.00
orca). distributed.
[[Page 54101]]
Short-finned pilot whale, Common......... Mostly pelagic, 589,315 \12\... NL...... 6.29 11.74
(Globicephala high-relief.
macrorhynchus).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NA--Data not available or species status was not assessed. For density estimates, NA indicates that estimates
would be lower than the lowest estimate in this table.
\1\ Abundance from Gerrodette et al. (2008) unless otherwise stated.
\2\ U.S. Endangered Species Act: EN = Endangered, T = Threatened, NL = Not listed.
\3\ Best density (/1000km\2\) estimate as listed in Table 3 of the application. Cetecean densities are
based on NMFS SWFSC ship transect surveys conducted in 1986-2006 from predictive modeling (Barlow et al. 2009;
Read et al. 2009) or in 1986-1996 from Ferguson and Barlow (2003).
\4\ Maximum density (/1000km\2\) estimate as listed in Table 3 of the application.
\5\ This estimate is mainly for Balaenoptera edeni but may include some B. borealis.
\6\ ETP (Wade and Gerrodette 1993).
\7\ Eastern temperate North Pacific (Whitehead 2002).
\8\ California/Oregon/Washington (Carretta et al. 2010).
\9\ This abundance estimate is mostly for Kogia sima but may also include some K. breviceps. Density estimates
for Kogia spp. combined.
\10\ Estimates for population size and for density include all species of the genus Mesoplodon in the ETP
(Ferguson and Barlow 2001).
\11\ ETP (Ford 2002).
\12\ This estimate is for Globicephala macrorhynchus and G. melas in the ETP (Gerrodette and Forcada 2002).
\13\ U.S. west coast (Carretta et al. 2010).
\14\ Southeast Pacific; Felix et al. (2005).
\15\ Approximate estimates.
\16\ Density estimates are combined for pygmy and dwarf sperm whales.
\17\ Density estimates are combined for species of the genus Mesoplodon.
Marine Mammal Hearing
The primary effect on marine mammals anticipated from the specified
activities will result from exposure of animals to underwater sound.
Exposure to sound can affect marine mammal hearing. When considering
the influence of various kinds of sound on the marine environment, it
is necessary to understand that different kinds of marine life are
sensitive to different frequencies of sound. Based on available
behavioral data, audiograms derived using auditory evoked potential
techniques, anatomical modeling, and other data, Southall et al. (2007)
designate ``functional hearing groups'' for marine mammals and estimate
the lower and upper frequencies of functional hearing of the groups.
The functional groups and the associated frequencies are indicated
below (though animals are less sensitive to sounds at the outer edge of
their functional range and most sensitive to sounds of frequencies
within a smaller range somewhere in the middle of their functional
hearing range):
Low frequency cetaceans (13 species of mysticetes):
Functional hearing is estimated to occur between approximately 7 Hz and
22 kHz;
Mid-frequency cetaceans (32 species of dolphins, six
species of larger toothed whales, and 19 species of beaked and
bottlenose whales): Functional hearing is estimated to occur between
approximately 150 Hz and 160 kHz;
High frequency cetaceans (six species of true porpoises,
four species of river dolphins, two members of the genus Kogia, and
four dolphin species of the genus Cephalorhynchus): Functional hearing
is estimated to occur between approximately 200 Hz and 180 kHz; and
Pinnipeds in water: Functional hearing is estimated to
occur between approximately 75 Hz and 75 kHz, with the greatest
sensitivity between approximately 700 Hz and 20 kHz.
As mentioned previously in this document, 21 cetacean species are
likely to occur in the proposed survey area. Of the 21 species likely
to occur in SIO's project area, two are classified as low frequency
cetaceans (Bryde's, humpback, and blue whales) and 18 are classified as
mid-frequency cetaceans (sperm, Cuvier's beaked, Blainville's beaked,
pygmy beaked, gingko-toothed beaked, melon-headed, pygmy killer, false
killer, killer, and short-finned pilot whales and rough-toothed,
bottlenose, pantropical spotted, spinner, striped, Fraser's, short-
beaked common, and Risso's dolphins) (Southall et al., 2007).
Potential Effects of the Specified Activity on Marine Mammals
Potential Effects of Airguns
The effects of sounds from airguns might result in one or more of
the following: Tolerance, masking of natural sounds, behavioral
disturbances, temporary or permanent hearing impairment, and non-
auditory physical or physiological effects (Richardson et al., 1995;
Gordon et al., 2004; Nowacek et al., 2007; Southall et al., 2007).
Permanent hearing impairment, or PTS, in the unlikely event that it
occurred, would constitute injury, but temporary threshold shift (TTS)
is not an injury (Southall et al., 2007). It is unlikely that the
project would result in any cases of temporary or especially permanent
hearing impairment or any significant non-auditory physical or
physiological effects for reasons discussed later in this document.
Some behavioral disturbance is expected, but it is expected that this
would be localized and short-term because of the short amount of time
that would be spent at any particular site within the survey area
(approximately two days of seismic data acquisition at any one site).
(1) Tolerance
Numerous studies have shown that pulsed sounds from airguns are
often readily detectable in the water at
[[Page 54102]]
distances of many kilometers. For a brief summary of the
characteristics of airgun pulses, see Appendix A(3) of the supporting
EA (see ADDRESSES). However, it should be noted that most of the
measurements are for airguns that would be detectable considerably
farther away than the GI airgun planned for use in the present project.
Several studies have shown that marine mammals at distances more
than a few kilometers from operating seismic vessels often show no
apparent response; see Appendix A(5) of the EA. That is often true even
in cases when the pulsed sounds must be readily audible to the animals
based on measured received levels and the hearing sensitivity of the
mammal group. Although various baleen whales, toothed whales, and (less
frequently) pinnipeds have been shown to react behaviorally to airgun
pulses under some conditions, at other times, mammals of all three
types have shown no overt reactions. In general, pinnipeds usually seem
to be more tolerant of exposure to airgun pulses than are cetaceans,
with the relative responsiveness of baleen and toothed whales being
variable. Given the relatively small and low-energy GI airgun source
planned for use in this project, mammals are expected to tolerate being
closer to this source than would be the case for a larger airgun source
typical of most seismic surveys.
(2) Masking
Obscuring of sounds of interest by interfering sounds, generally at
similar frequencies, is known as masking. Masking effects of pulsed
sounds (even from large arrays of airguns, much larger than that
proposed for use in this survey) on marine mammal calls and other
natural sounds are expected to be limited, although there are few
specific data of relevance. Because of the intermittent nature and low
duty cycle of seismic pulses, animals can emit and receive sounds in
the relatively quiet intervals between pulses. However, in some
situations, multi-path arrivals and reverberation cause airgun sound to
arrive for much or all of the interval between pulses (Simard et al.,
2005; Clark and Gagnon, 2006), which could mask calls. Whale calls
often can be heard between the seismic pulses (Richardson et al., 1986;
McDonald et al., 1995; Greene et al., 1999a,b; Nieukirk et al., 2004;
Smultea et al., 2004; Holst et al., 2005a,b, 2006; Dunn and Hernandez,
2009), and certain baleen and toothed whales are known to continue
calling in the presence of seismic pulses. However, Clark and Gagnon
(2006) reported that fin whales in the northeast Pacific Ocean went
silent for an extended period starting soon after the onset of a
seismic survey in the area. Similarly, there has been one report that
sperm whales ceased calling when exposed to pulses from a very distant
seismic ship (Bowles et al., 1994). However, more recent studies found
that sperm whales continued calling in the presence of seismic pulses
(Madsen et al., 2002; Tyack et al., 2003; Smultea et al., 2004; Holst
et al., 2006; Jochens et al., 2008). Given the small source planned for
use during the proposed survey, there is even less potential for
masking of baleen or sperm whale calls during the present study than in
most seismic surveys. Masking effects of seismic pulses are expected to
be negligible in the case of small odontocetes, given the intermittent
nature of seismic pulses. Dolphins and porpoises commonly are heard
calling while airguns are operating (Gordon et al., 2004; Smultea et
al., 2004; Holst et al., 2005a,b; Potter et al., 2007). The sounds
important to small odontocetes are predominantly at much higher
frequencies than are the dominant components of airgun sounds, thus
limiting the potential for masking. In general, masking effects of
seismic pulses are expected to be minor, given the normally
intermittent nature of seismic pulses. Masking effects on marine
mammals are discussed further in Appendix A(4) of the EA.
(3) Disturbance Reactions
Disturbance includes a variety of effects, including subtle changes
in behavior, more conspicuous changes in activities, and displacement.
Reactions to sound, if any, depend on species, state of maturity,
experience, current activity, reproductive state, time of day, and many
other factors (Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok et al., 2004; Southall
et al., 2007; Weilgart, 2007). If a marine mammal responds to an
underwater sound by changing its behavior or moving a small distance,
the response may or may not rise to the level of ``taking'', or affect
the stock or the species as a whole. However, if a sound source
displaces marine mammals from an important feeding or breeding area for
a prolonged period, impacts on animals or on the stock or species could
potentially be significant (Lusseau and Bejder, 2007; Weilgart, 2007).
Given the many uncertainties in predicting the quantity and types of
impacts of noise on marine mammals, it is common practice to estimate
how many mammals are likely to be present within a particular distance
of a given activity, or exposed to a particular level of sound. This
practice potentially overestimates the numbers of marine mammals that
are affected in some biologically-important manner.
The sound exposure thresholds that are used to estimate how many
marine mammals might be harassed by a seismic survey are based on
behavioral observations during studies of several species. However,
information is lacking for many species. Detailed studies have been
done on humpback, gray (Eschrichtius robustus), bowhead (Balaena
mysticetus), and sperm whales, and on ringed seals (Phoca hispida).
Less detailed data are available for some other species of baleen
whales, small toothed whales, and sea otters, but for many species
there are no data on responses to marine seismic surveys. Most of those
studies have concerned reactions to much larger airgun sources than
planned for use in the proposed SIO project. Thus, effects are expected
to be limited to considerably smaller distances and shorter periods of
exposure in the present project than in most of the previous work
concerning marine mammal reactions to airguns.
Baleen Whales--Baleen whales generally tend to avoid operating
airguns, but avoidance radii are quite variable. Whales are often
reported to show no overt reactions to pulses from large arrays of
airguns at distances beyond a few kilometers, even though the airgun
pulses remain well above ambient noise levels out to much longer
distances. However, as reviewed in Appendix A(5) of the EA, baleen
whales exposed to strong noise pulses from airguns often react by
deviating from their normal migration route (Richardson et al., 1999)
and/or interrupting their feeding activities and moving away from the
sound source. In the cases of migrating gray and bowhead whales, the
observed changes in behavior appeared to be of little or no biological
consequence to the animals. They simply avoided the sound source by
displacing their migration route to varying degrees, but within the
natural boundaries of the migration corridors (Schick and Urban, 2000;
Richardson et al., 1999; Malme et al., 1983).
Studies of gray, bowhead, and humpback whales have shown that
seismic pulses with received levels of pulses in the 160-170 dB re 1
[mu]Pa (rms) range seem to cause obvious avoidance behavior in a
substantial fraction of the animals exposed (Richardson et al., 1995).
In many areas, seismic pulses from large arrays of airguns diminish to
those levels at distances ranging from 4.5-14.5 km (2.8-9 mi) from the
source. A substantial proportion of the baleen whales within those
distances may show avoidance or other strong
[[Page 54103]]
disturbance reactions to the airgun array. Subtle behavioral changes
sometimes become evident at somewhat lower received levels, and studies
summarized in Appendix A(5) of the EA have shown that some species of
baleen whales, notably bowhead and humpback whales, at times show
strong avoidance at received levels lower than 160-170 dB re 1 [mu]Pa
(rms). Reaction distances would be considerably smaller during the
proposed project, for which the 160 dB radius is predicted to be 400 m
(1312.3 ft) (see Table 1 in this document), as compared with several
kilometers when a large array of airguns is operating.
Responses of humpback whales to seismic surveys have been studied
during migration, on summer feeding grounds, and on Angolan winter
breeding grounds; there has also been discussion of effects on the
Brazilian wintering grounds. McCauley et al. (1998, 2000a) studied the
responses of humpback whales off Western Australia to a full-scale
seismic survey with a 16-airgun, 2678-in \3\ array, and to a single 20-
in \3\ airgun with a source level of 227 dB re 1 [mu]Pa-m peak-to-peak.
McCauley et al. (1998) documented that initial avoidance reactions
began at 5-8 km (3.1-5 mi) from the array, and that those reactions
kept most pods approximately 3-4 km (1.9-2.5 mi) from the operating
seismic boat. McCauley et al. (2000a) noted localized displacement
during migration of 4-5 km (2.5-3.1 mi) by traveling pods and 7-12 km
(4.3-7.5 mi) by cow-calf pairs. Avoidance distances with respect to the
single airgun were smaller but consistent with the results from the
full array in terms of received sound levels. The mean received level
for initial avoidance reactions to an approaching airgun was 140 dB re
1 [mu]Pa (rms) for humpback whale pods containing females. The standoff
range, i.e., the mean closest point of approach of the whales to the
airgun, corresponded to a received level of 143 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms).
The initial avoidance response generally occurred at distances of 5-8
km (3.1-5.0 mi) from the airgun array and 2 km (1.2 mi) from the single
airgun. However, some individual humpback whales, especially males,
approached within distances of 100-400 m (328.1-1312.3 ft), where the
maximum received level was 179 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms).
Humpback whales on their summer feeding grounds in southeast Alaska
did not exhibit persistent avoidance when exposed to seismic pulses
from a 100-in \3\ airgun (Malme et al., 1985). Some humpbacks seemed
``startled'' at received levels of 150-169 dB re 1 [mu]Pa on an
(approximate) rms basis. Malme et al. (1985) concluded that there was
no clear evidence of avoidance, despite the possibility of subtle
effects, at received levels up to 172 re 1 [mu]Pa on an (approximate)
rms basis.
It has been suggested that South Atlantic humpback whales wintering
off Brazil may be displaced or even strand upon exposure to seismic
surveys (Engel et al., 2004). The evidence for this was circumstantial
and subject to alternative explanations (IAGC 2004). Also, the evidence
was not consistent with subsequent results from the same area of Brazil
(Parente et al., 2006), or with results from direct studies of humpback
whales exposed to seismic surveys in other areas and seasons. After
allowance for data from subsequent years, there was ``no observable
direct correlation'' between strandings and seismic surveys (IWC 2007).
Studies of bowhead whales show that their responsiveness can be
quite variable depending on the activity (e.g., migrating vs. feeding).
Bowhead whales migrating west across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea in
autumn, in particular, are unusually responsive, with substantial
avoidance occurring out to distances of 20-30 km (12.4-18.6 mi) from a
medium-sized airgun source at received sound levels of around 120-130
dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) (Miller et al., 1999; Richardson et al., 1999; see
also Appendix A (5) of the EA). However, more recent research on
bowhead whales (Miller et al., 2005; Harris et al., 2007) corroborates
earlier evidence that, during the summer feeding season, bowheads are
not as sensitive to seismic sources. Nonetheless, subtle but
statistically significant changes in surfacing-respiration-dive cycles
were evident upon statistical analysis (Richardson et al., 1986). In
summer, bowheads typically begin to show avoidance reactions at
received levels of about 152-178 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) (Richardson et
al., 1986, 1995; Ljungblad et al., 1988; Miller et al., 2005).
Reactions of migrating and feeding (but not wintering) gray whales
to seismic surveys have been studied. Malme et al. (1986, 1988) studied
the responses of feeding Eastern Pacific gray whales to pulses from a
single 100-in\3\ airgun off St. Lawrence Island in the northern Bering
Sea. They estimated, based on small sample sizes, that 50 percent of
feeding gray whales ceased feeding at an average received pressure
level of 173 dB re 1 [mu]Pa on an (approximate) rms basis and that 10
percent of feeding whales interrupted feeding at received levels of 163
dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms). Those findings were generally consistent with the
results of experiments conducted on larger numbers of gray whales that
were migrating along the California coast (Malme et al., 1984; Malme
and Miles, 1985) and with observations of Western Pacific gray whales
feeding off Sakhalin Island, Russia, when a seismic survey was underway
just offshore of their feeding area (Wursig et al., 1999; Gailey et
al., 2007; Johnson et al., 2007; Yazvenko et al., 2007a,b), along with
data on gray whales off British Columbia (Bain and Williams, 2006).
Gray whales typically show no conspicuous responses to airgun pulses
with received levels up to 150 to 160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms), but are
increasingly likely to show avoidance as received levels increase above
that range. While neither bowhead nor gray whales are present in the
study area, these studies can be used to draw general inference about
the potential reactions of other baleen whales to underwater sound.
Various species of the genus Balaenoptera (e.g., blue, sei, fin,
Bryde's, and minke whales) have occasionally been reported in areas
ensonified by airgun pulses (Stone, 2003; MacLean and Haley, 2004;
Stone and Tasker, 2006), and calls from blue and fin whales have been
localized in areas with airgun operations (McDonald et al., 1995; Dunn
and Hernandez, 2009). Sightings by observers on seismic vessels off the
United Kingdom from 1997-2000 suggest that, at times of good
sightability, sighting rates for mysticetes (mainly fin and sei whales)
were similar when large arrays of airguns were shooting and not
shooting (Stone, 2003; Stone and Tasker, 2006). However, these whales
tended to exhibit localized avoidance, remaining significantly further
(on average) from the airgun array during seismic operations compared
with non-seismic periods (Stone and Tasker, 2006). In a study off Nova
Scotia, Moulton and Miller (2005) found little difference in sighting
rates (after accounting for water depth) and initial sighting distances
of balaenopterid whales when airguns were operating vs. silent.
However, there were indications that these whales were more likely to
be moving away when seen during airgun operations. Similarly, ship-
based monitoring studies of blue, fin, sei, and minke whales offshore
of Newfoundland (Orphan Basin and Laurentian Sub-basin) found no more
than small differences in sighting rates and swim direction during
seismic vs. non-seismic periods (Moulton et al., 2005, 2006a,b).
Data on short-term reactions, or lack thereof, by cetaceans to
impulsive noises do not necessarily provide information about long-term
effects. It is
[[Page 54104]]
not known whether impulsive noises affect reproductive rate or
distribution and habitat use in subsequent days or years. However, gray
whales continued to migrate annually along the west coast of North
America with substantial increases in the population over recent years,
despite intermittent seismic exploration (and much ship traffic) in
that area for decades (see Appendix A in Malme et al., 1984; Richardson
et al., 1995; Angliss and Allen, 2009). The Western Pacific gray whale
population did not seem affected by a seismic survey in its feeding
ground during a prior year (Johnson et al., 2007). Bowhead whales have
continued to travel to the eastern Beaufort Sea each summer, and their
numbers have increased notably (3.4 percent annually for nearly a
decade), despite seismic exploration in their summer and autumn range
for many years (Richardson et al., 1987; Angliss and Allen 2009). In
any event, brief exposures to sound pulses from the proposed airgun
source are highly unlikely to result in prolonged effects.
Toothed Whales--Little systematic information is available about
reactions of toothed whales to noise pulses. Few studies similar to the
more extensive baleen whale/seismic pulse work summarized above have
been reported for toothed whales. However, systematic studies on sperm
whales have been done (Gordon et al., 2006; Madsen et al., 2006; Winsor
and Mate, 2006; Jochens et al., 2008; Miller et al., 2009), and there
is an increasing amount of information about responses of various
odontocetes to seismic surveys based on monitoring studies (Stone 2003;
Smultea et al., 2004; Moulton and Miller, 2005; Bain and Williams,
2006; Holst et al., 2006; Stone and Tasker, 2006; Potter et al., 2007;
Hauser et al., 2008; Holst and Smultea, 2008; Weir, 2008; Barkaszi et
al., 2009; Richardson et al., 2009).
Seismic operators and PSOs on seismic vessels regularly see
dolphins and other small toothed whales near operating airgun arrays,
but, in general, there seems to be a tendency for most delphinids to
show some avoidance of operating seismic vessels (Goold, 1996a,b,c;
Calambokidis and Osmek, 1998; Stone, 2003; Moulton and Miller, 2005;
Holst et al., 2006; Stone and Taske