Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to Marine Seismic Survey in the Chukchi Sea, Alaska, 28411-28440 [2013-11406]
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Vol. 78
Tuesday,
No. 93
May 14, 2013
Part III
Department of Commerce
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National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking Marine
Mammals Incidental to Marine Seismic Survey in the Chukchi Sea, Alaska;
Notice
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 93 / Tuesday, May 14, 2013 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
regular business hours, at the
aforementioned address.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Shane Guan, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427–8401.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
RIN 0648–XC562
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to
Specified Activities; Taking Marine
Mammals Incidental to Marine Seismic
Survey in the Chukchi Sea, Alaska
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental
harassment authorization; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS received an
application from Shell Gulf of Mexico
Inc. (Shell) for an Incidental Harassment
Authorization (IHA) to take marine
mammals, by harassment only,
incidental to a marine surveys program
in the Chukchi Sea, Alaska, during the
open water season of 2013. Pursuant to
the Marine Mammal Protection Act
(MMPA), NMFS is requesting comments
on its proposal to issue an IHA to Shell
to take, by Level B harassment, 13
species of marine mammals during the
specified activity.
DATES: Comments and information must
be received no later than June 13, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Comments on the
application should be addressed to P.
Michael Payne, Chief, Permits and
Conservation Division, Office of
Protected Resources, National Marine
Fisheries Service, 1315 East-West
Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910. The
mailbox address for providing email
comments is ITP.guan@noaa.gov. NMFS
is not responsible for email comments
sent to addresses other than the one
provided here. Comments sent via
email, 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#applications 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.
The application used in this
document may be obtained by visiting
the internet at: https://
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/
incidental.htm#applications.
Documents cited in this notice may also
be viewed, by appointment, during
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SUMMARY:
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Summary of Request
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
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’’].
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NMFS received an application on
January 2, 2013, from Shell for the
taking, by harassment, of marine
mammals incidental to a marine surveys
program in the Beaufort and Chukchi
seas, Alaska, during the open-water
season of 2013. Subsequently, Shell
revised its proposed marine surveys
program and limited its proposed
activities to the Chukchi Sea, and
resubmitted an IHA application on
March 25, 2013. Based on NMFS
comments, Shell further revised its IHA
application and submitted its final IHA
application on April 2, 2013. Shell’s
proposed activities discussed here are
based on its April 2, 2013, IHA
application.
Description of the Specified Activity
Shell plans to complete a marine
surveys program and conduct its
equipment recovery and maintenance
activity, during the 2013 open-water
season in the Chukchi Sea. A total of
three vessels would be utilized for the
proposed open-water activities: the
proposed marine surveys would be
conducted from a single vessel, a second
vessel would be used for equipment
recovery and maintenance activity at
Burger A, and a third vessel may be
used to provide logistical support to
either and/or both operations. Overall,
Shell’s proposed 2013 open-water
marine surveys program includes the
following three components:
• Chukchi Sea Offshore Ice Gouge
Surveys;
• Chukchi Sea Offshore Site
Clearance and Shallow Hazards Survey;
and
• Equipment Recovery and
Maintenance
Detailed locations of these activities
are shown in Figures 1–1 through 1–3
of Shell’s IHA application.
Ice and weather conditions will
influence when and where the openwater marine surveys will be conducted.
For initial planning purposes, Shell
states that the offshore marine surveys
and equipment recovery and
maintenance would be conducted
within the time frame of July through
October 2013.
Chukchi Sea Offshore Ice Gouge Surveys
Ice gouge information is required for
the design of potential pipelines and
pipeline trenching and installation
equipment. Ice gouges are created by ice
keels that project from the bottom of ice,
and gouge the seafloor sediment as the
ice moves with the wind or currents. Ice
gouge features can be mapped and
surveyed, and by surveying the same
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locations from year to year, new gouges
can be identified and the rate of ice
gouging can be estimated. The resulting
ice gouge information would assist Shell
in predicting the probability, frequency,
orientation, and depth of future ice
gouges.
Shell plans to conduct ice gouge
surveys along approximately 621 mi
(1,000 km) of tracklines in the Chukchi
Sea in 2013, within the area denoted in
Figure 1–1 of the IHA application.
These surveys will: (a) resurvey selected
tracklines for ice gouge features to
determine the rate or frequency of new
ice gouges; and (b) map seafloor
topography and characterize the upper
34 ft (10 m) of the seabed (seafloor and
sub-seafloor) using acoustic methods.
The ice gouge surveys will be conducted
using the conventional survey method
where the acoustic instrumentation will
be towed behind the survey vessel.
These acoustic instrumentation includes
dual-frequency side scan sonar, singlebeam bathymetric sonar, multi-beam
bathymetric sonar, shallow sub-bottom
profiler, and magnetometer.
Due to the low intensity and high
frequency acoustic sources being used
for the proposed ice gouge surveys (see
below), this activity is not expected to
result in takes of marine mammals.
Chukchi Sea Site Clearance and
Shallow Hazards Surveys
The proposed site clearance and
shallow hazards surveys are to gather
data on: (1) Bathymetry, (2) seabed
topography and other seabed
characteristics (e.g., ice gouges), (3)
potential shallow geohazards (e.g.,
shallow faults and shallow gas zones),
and (4) the presence of any possible
archeological features (prehistoric or
historic, e.g., middens, shipwrecks).
Marine surveys for site clearance and
shallow hazard surveys can be
accomplished by one vessel with
acoustic sources.
Shell plans to conduct site clearance
and shallow hazards surveys along
approximately 3,200 kilometers (km) of
tracklines in the Chukchi Sea in 2013
(see Figure 1–2 of the IHA application).
These surveys would characterize the
upper 1,000 meters (m) (3,128 feet [ft])
of the seabed and sub seafloor
topography and measure water depths
of potential exploratory drilling
locations using acoustic methods. The
site clearance and shallow hazard
surveys would be conducted using the
conventional survey method where the
acoustic instrumentation will be towed
behind the survey vessel. The acoustic
instrumentation used in site clearance
and shallow hazards surveys is largely
the same as those for the offshore ice
gouge surveys, but also includes a 4 ×
10 cubic inch (in3) airgun array.
Equipment Recovery and Maintenance
Shell’s proposed equipment recovery
and maintenance activities would occur
at the Burger A well site in the Chukchi
Sea (see Figure 1–3 of the IHA
application). The equipment recovery
and maintenance activity would be
accomplished by one vessel operating in
dynamic positioning (DP) mode for an
extended period over the drilling site.
The vessel may be resupplied during the
activity by vessel or aircraft.
Work would be conducted subsea
within the mudline cellar (MLC; ∼ 20 ft
wide by 40 ft. deep excavation dug for
the Burger A wellhead during 2012
drilling at this well site) with a suite of
Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROV) and
divers that would recover equipment
left sub-mudline on the well head
during the 2012 open water drilling
season. The survey vessel would be
dynamically positioned at the well site
for up to ∼28 days while subsurface
equipment recovery and maintenance
occurs, however Shell anticipates this
work being accomplished in less than
28 days. During this planned work
scope the state and integrity of the well
would not be changed since no form of
entry will be made into the well.
Acoustic Equipment and Vessels
Planned to be Used
For the proposed site clearance and
shallow hazards surveys, Shell plans to
use the same 4 × 10 in3 airgun array
configuration that was used during site
clearance and shallow hazards surveys
in the Chukchi Sea in 2008 and 2009.
Measurements during these two years
occurred at three locations: Honeyguide
(west of the Crackerjack prospect),
Crackerjack, and Burger. The distances
to various threshold radii from those
measurements are shown in Table 1.
The 160 dB (rms) re 1 mPa radius that
was measured at the Burger location
was the largest of the three sites.
TABLE 1—MEASURED DISTANCES IN (METERS) TO RECEIVED SOUND LEVELS FROM A 4 × 103 AIRGUN ARRAY AT THREE
LOCATIONS IN THE ALASKAN CHUKCHI SEA
Received Sound Level (dB re 1 μPa rms)
Location
190
Honeyguide ......................................................................................................
Crackerjack ......................................................................................................
Burger ..............................................................................................................
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Sound source characteristics that
would be used during the site clearance
and shallow hazard surveys and ice
gouge surveys include single-beam
bathymetric sonar, multi-beam
180
41
50
39
bathymetric sonar, dual frequency sidescan sonar, shallow sub-bottom profiler,
and an ultra-short baseline acoustic
positioning system. Representative
source characteristics of these acoustic
160
100
160
150
120
600
1,400
1,800
22,000
24,000
31,000
instrumentation were measured during
Statoil’s 2011 marine survey program in
the Chukchi Sea (Warner and McCrodan
2011), and are listed in Table 2.
TABLE 2—SOURCE CHARACTERISTICS AND DISTANCES TO 160 dB (rms) re 1 μPa SOUND LEVELS FROM ACOUSTIC
INSTRUMENTATION MEASURED IN THE CHUKCHI SEA
Instrument type
Single-beam
sonar.
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Model
Center frequency
Frequency range
Simrad EA502 ...
12 kHz ...............
8–20 kHz ...........
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source level
(dB re 1 μPa
rms)
<10°
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40 m
Out-of-beam
160 dB
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40 m
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TABLE 2—SOURCE CHARACTERISTICS AND DISTANCES TO 160 dB (rms) re 1 μPa SOUND LEVELS FROM ACOUSTIC
INSTRUMENTATION MEASURED IN THE CHUKCHI SEA—Continued
Instrument type
Multi-beam bathymetric sonar.
Side-scan sonar
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Sub-bottom profiler.
Ultra-short baseline acoustic
positioning
system.
Model
Kongsberg
EM2040.
GeoAcoustics
159D.
Kongsberg
SBP300.
SonarDyne
Ranger Pro.
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In-beam 160
dB distance
Out-of-beam
160 dB
distance
Frequency range
220 kHz .............
200–240 kHz .....
<2°
187.4
0m
0m
110 kHz .............
100–120 kHz .....
<2°
211.5
230 m
NA
3–7 kHz .............
3–7 kHz .............
15°
195.9
30 m
3m
27 kHz ...............
20–30 kHz .........
NA
215.1
47 m
8m
For Shell’s proposed equipment
recovery and maintenance at the Burger
A well site where drilling took place in
2012, a vessel would be deployed at or
near the well site using dynamic
positioning thrusters while remotely
operated vehicles or divers are used to
perform the required activities. Sounds
produced by the vessel while in
dynamic positioning mode would be
non-impulsive in nature and are thus
evaluated at the ≥120 dB (rms) re 1 mPa.
In 2011, Statoil conducted
geotechnical coring operations in the
Chukchi Sea using the vessel Fugro
Synergy. Measurements were taken
using bottom founded recorders at 50 m
(164 ft), 100 m (328 ft), and 1 km (0.6
mi) away from the borehole while the
vessel was in dynamic positioning mode
(Warner and McCrodan 2011). Sound
levels measured at the recorder 1 km
(0.6 mi) away ranged from 119 dB (rms)
to 129 dB (rms) re 1 mPa. A propagation
curve fit to the data and encompassing
90 percent of all measured values
during the period of strongest sound
emissions estimated sound levels would
drop below 120 dB (rms) re 1 mPa at 2.3
km (1.4 mi).
Acoustic measurements of the
Nordica in dynamic positioning mode
while supporting Shell’s 2012 drilling
operation in the Chukchi Sea were made
from multiple recorders deployed to
monitor sounds from the overall drilling
operation. Distances to these recorders
ranged from 1.3 km (0.8 mi) to 7.9 km
(4.9 mi) and maximum sound pressure
levels ranged from 112.7 dB (rms) to
129.9 dB (rms) re 1 mPa. Preliminary
analyses of these data indicate the
maximum 120 dB (rms) re 1 mPa
distance was approximately 4 km (2.5
mi) from the vessel. These same
recorders measured sounds produced by
the Tor Viking II while it operated near
the Discoverer drill rig in 2012. The
nature of the operations conducted by
the Tor Viking II during the reported
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Beam width
Nominal
source level
(dB re 1 μPa
rms)
Center frequency
measurement periods varied and
included activities such as anchor
handling, circling, and possibly holding
position using dynamic positioning
thrusters. Distances to the 120 dB (rms)
re 1 mPa level were estimated at 10 km
(6 mi), 13 km (8 mi), and 25 km (15.5
mi) during these various measurement
periods.
The vessel from which equipment
recovery and maintenance would be
conducted has not yet been determined.
Under most circumstances, sounds from
dynamic positioning thrusters are
expected to be well below 120 dB (rms)
re 1 mPa at distances greater than 10 km
(6 mi). However, since some of the
activities conducted by the Tor Viking II
at the Burger A well site in 2012 may
have included dynamic positioning, the
13 km (8 mi) distance has been selected
as the estimated ≥120 dB (rms) re 1 mPa
distance used in the calculations of
potential Level B harassment below. A
circle with a radius of 13 km (8 mi)
results in an estimated area of 531 km2
(205 mi2) that may be exposed to
continuous sounds ≥120 dB (rms) re 1
mPa.
Dates, Duration and Action Area
The schedule for the activities in the
Chukchi Sea will depend on ice
conditions and other factors. The
vessels will sail from south of the
Chukchi Sea and transit through the
Bering Strait into the Chukchi Sea on or
after 1 July or later depending on ice
conditions. The July entry is responsive
to concerns voiced by the local
communities of Wainwright and Point
Lay; these communities have requested
that entry into the Chukchi Sea be
delayed until after the walrus and
beluga whale hunts.
Given that access to the proposed
areas where Shell plans to conduct
activities is dependent on ice, weather,
and coordinated avoidance of potential
impacts to subsistence activities, Shell
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has estimated a broader range of time to
conduct these activities than if the
activities were not constrained. For
example, without any of the above
constraints to conducting the proposed
activities, the duration of time necessary
to complete offshore ice gouge surveys
could be as few as 13 days in the
Chukchi Sea. Likewise, the duration of
time necessary to complete site
clearance and shallow hazard surveys in
the Chukchi Sea could be on the order
of over 50 days. However, these time
estimates do not include transit between
survey locations, potential stand-by
time due to ice and/or weather, or crew
changes and re-supply. Therefore, Shell
requests an IHA to cover its incidental
take between July 1 and October 31,
2013.
Description of Marine Mammals in the
Area of the Specified Activity
The marine mammal species under
NMFS jurisdiction most likely to occur
in the seismic survey area include nine
cetacean species, beluga whale
(Delphinapterus leucas), harbor
porpoise (Phocoena phocoena), killer
whale (Orcinus orca), narwhal
(Monodon monoceros), bowhead whale
(Balaena mysticetus), gray whale
(Eschrichtius robustus), minke whale
(Balaenoptera acutorostrata), fin whale
(B. physalus), and humpback whale
(Megaptera novaeangliae), and four
pinniped species, ringed (Phoca
hispida), spotted (P. largha), bearded
(Erignathus barbatus), and ribbon seals
(Histriophoca fasciata).
The bowhead, fin, and humpback
whales are listed as ‘‘endangered’’, and
the ringed and bearded seals are listed
as ‘‘threatened’’ under the Endangered
Species Act (ESA) and as depleted
under the MMPA. Certain stocks or
populations of gray and beluga whales
and spotted seals are also listed under
the ESA, however, none of those stocks
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or populations occur in the proposed
activity area.
Shell’s application contains
information on the status, distribution,
seasonal distribution, and abundance of
each of the species under NMFS
jurisdiction mentioned in this
document. Please refer to the
application for that information (see
ADDRESSES). Additional information can
also be found in the NMFS Stock
Assessment Reports (SAR). The Alaska
2012 SAR is available at: https://
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/pdf/
ak2012.pdf.
Potential Effects of the Specified
Activity on Marine Mammals
Operating active acoustic sources
such as airgun arrays, pinger systems,
and vessel activities have the potential
for adverse effects on marine mammals.
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Potential Effects of Airgun Sounds on
Marine Mammals
The effects of sounds from airgun
pulses might include one or more of the
following: tolerance, masking of natural
sounds, behavioral disturbance, and
temporary or permanent hearing
impairment or non-auditory effects
(Richardson et al. 1995). As outlined in
previous NMFS documents, the effects
of noise on marine mammals are highly
variable, and can be categorized as
follows (based on Richardson et al.
1995):
(1) Behavioral Disturbance
Marine mammals may behaviorally
react to sound when exposed to
anthropogenic noise. These behavioral
reactions are often shown as: changing
durations of surfacing and dives,
number of blows per surfacing, or
moving direction and/or speed;
reduced/increased vocal activities;
changing/cessation of certain behavioral
activities (such as socializing or
feeding); visible startle response or
aggressive behavior (such as tail/fluke
slapping or jaw clapping); avoidance of
areas where noise sources are located;
and/or flight responses (e.g., pinnipeds
flushing into water from haulouts or
rookeries).
The biological significance of many of
these behavioral disturbances is difficult
to predict, especially if the detected
disturbances appear minor. However,
the consequences of behavioral
modification could be expected to be
biologically significant if the change
affects growth, survival, and
reproduction. Some of these potential
significant behavioral modifications
include:
• Drastic change in diving/surfacing
patterns (such as those thought to be
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causing beaked whale stranding due to
exposure to military mid-frequency
tactical sonar);
• Habitat abandonment due to loss of
desirable acoustic environment; and
• Cease feeding or social interaction.
For example, at the Guerreo Negro
Lagoon in Baja California, Mexico,
which is one of the important breeding
grounds for Pacific gray whales,
shipping and dredging associated with a
salt works may have induced gray
whales to abandon the area through
most of the 1960s (Bryant et al. 1984).
After these activities stopped, the
lagoon was reoccupied, first by single
whales and later by cow-calf pairs.
The onset of behavioral disturbance
from anthropogenic noise depends on
both external factors (characteristics of
noise sources and their paths) and the
receiving animals (hearing, motivation,
experience, demography) and is also
difficult to predict (Southall et al. 2007).
Currently NMFS uses 160 dB re 1 mPa
(rms) at received level for impulse
noises (such as airgun pulses) as the
threshold for the onset of marine
mammal behavioral harassment.
In addition, behavioral disturbance is
also expressed as the change in vocal
activities of animals. For example, there
is one recent summary report indicating
that calling fin whales distributed in
one part of the North Atlantic went
silent for an extended period starting
soon after the onset of a seismic survey
in the area (Clark and Gagnon 2006). It
is not clear from that preliminary paper
whether the whales ceased calling
because of masking, or whether this was
a behavioral response not directly
involving masking (i.e., important
biological signals for marine mammals
being ‘‘masked’’ by anthropogenic noise;
see below). Also, bowhead whales in the
Beaufort Sea may decrease their call
rates in response to seismic operations,
although movement out of the area
might also have contributed to the lower
call detection rate (Blackwell et al.
2009a; 2009b). Some of the changes in
marine mammal vocal communication
are thought to be used to compensate for
acoustic masking resulting from
increased anthropogenic noise (see
below). For example, blue whales are
found to increase call rates when
exposed to seismic survey noise in the
St. Lawrence Estuary (Di Iorio and Clark
2009). The North Atlantic right whales
(Eubalaena glacialis) exposed to high
shipping noise increase call frequency
(Parks et al. 2007) and intensity (Parks
et al. 2010), while some humpback
whales respond to low-frequency active
sonar playbacks by increasing song
length (Miller el al. 2000). These
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behavioral responses could also have
adverse effects on marine mammals.
Mysticete: Baleen whales generally
tend to avoid operating airguns, but
avoidance radii are quite variable.
Whales are often reported to show no
overt reactions to airgun pulses at
distances beyond a few kilometers, even
though the airgun pulses remain well
above ambient noise levels out to much
longer distances (reviewed in
Richardson et al. 1995; Gordon et al.
2004). However, studies done since the
late 1990s of migrating humpback and
migrating bowhead whales show
reactions, including avoidance, that
sometimes extend to greater distances
than documented earlier. Therefore, it
appears that behavioral disturbance can
vary greatly depending on context, and
not just received levels alone.
Avoidance distances often exceed the
distances at which boat-based observers
can see whales, so observations from the
source vessel can be biased.
Observations over broader areas may be
needed to determine the range of
potential effects of some large-source
seismic surveys where effects on
cetaceans may extend to considerable
distances (Richardson et al. 1999; Moore
and Angliss 2006). Longer-range
observations, when required, can
sometimes be obtained via systematic
aerial surveys or aircraft-based
observations of behavior (e.g.,
Richardson et al. 1986, 1999; Miller et
al. 1999, 2005; Yazvenko et al. 2007a,
2007b) or by use of observers on one or
more support vessels operating in
coordination with the seismic vessel
(e.g., Smultea et al. 2004; Johnson et al.
2007). However, the presence of other
vessels near the source vessel can, at
least at times, reduce sightability of
cetaceans from the source vessel
(Beland et al. 2009), thus complicating
interpretation of sighting data.
Some baleen whales show
considerable tolerance of seismic
pulses. However, when the pulses are
strong enough, avoidance or other
behavioral changes become evident.
Because the responses become less
obvious with diminishing received
sound level, it has been difficult to
determine the maximum distance (or
minimum received sound level) at
which reactions to seismic activity
become evident and, hence, how many
whales are affected.
Studies of gray, bowhead, and
humpback whales have determined that
received levels of pulses in the 160–170
dB re 1 mPa (rms) range seem to cause
obvious avoidance behavior in a
substantial fraction of the animals
exposed (McCauley et al. 1998, 1999,
2000). In many areas, seismic pulses
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diminish to these levels at distances
ranging from 4–15 km from the source.
A substantial proportion of the baleen
whales within such distances may show
avoidance or other strong disturbance
reactions to the operating airgun array.
Some extreme examples including
migrating bowhead whales avoiding
considerably larger distances (20–30
km) and lower received sound levels
(120–130 dB re 1 mPa (rms)) when
exposed to airguns from seismic
surveys. Also, even in cases where there
is no conspicuous avoidance or change
in activity upon exposure to sound
pulses from distant seismic operations,
there are sometimes subtle changes in
behavior (e.g., surfacing–respiration–
dive cycles) that are only evident
through detailed statistical analysis
(e.g., Richardson et al. 1986; Gailey et
al. 2007).
Data on short-term reactions by
cetaceans to impulsive noises are not
necessarily indicative of long-term or
biologically significant effects. It is not
known whether impulsive sounds affect
reproductive rate or distribution and
habitat use in subsequent days or years.
However, gray whales have continued to
migrate annually along the west coast of
North America despite intermittent
seismic exploration (and much ship
traffic) in that area for decades
(Appendix A in Malme et al. 1984;
Richardson et al. 1995), and there has
been a substantial increase in the
population over recent decades (Allen
and Angliss 2010). 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). Similarly,
bowhead whales have continued to
travel to the eastern Beaufort Sea each
summer despite seismic exploration in
their summer and autumn range for
many years (Richardson et al. 1987),
and their numbers have increased
notably (Allen and Angliss 2010).
Bowheads also have been observed over
periods of days or weeks in areas
ensonified repeatedly by seismic pulses
(Richardson et al. 1987; Harris et al.
2007). However, it is generally not
known whether the same individual
bowheads were involved in these
repeated observations (within and
between years) in strongly ensonified
areas.
Odontocete: Relatively little
systematic information is available
about reactions of toothed whales to
airgun pulses. A few studies similar to
the more extensive baleen whale/
seismic pulse work summarized above
have been reported for toothed whales.
However, there are recent systematic
data on sperm whales (e.g., Gordon et al.
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2006; Madsen et al. 2006; Winsor and
Mate 2006; Jochens et al. 2008; Miller et
al. 2009) and beluga whales (e.g., Miller
et al. 2005). There is also an increasing
amount of information about responses
of various odontocetes to seismic
surveys based on monitoring studies
(e.g., Stone 2003; Smultea et al. 2004;
Moulton and Miller 2005; 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).
Dolphins and porpoises are often seen
by observers on active seismic vessels,
occasionally at close distances (e.g., bow
riding). Marine mammal monitoring
data during seismic surveys often show
that animal detection rates drop during
the firing of seismic airguns, indicating
that animals may be avoiding the
vicinity of the seismic area (Smultea et
al. 2004; Holst et al. 2006; Hauser et al.
2008; Holst and Smultea 2008;
Richardson et al. 2009). Also, belugas
summering in the Canadian Beaufort
Sea showed larger-scale avoidance,
tending to avoid waters out to 10–20 km
from operating seismic vessels (Miller et
al. 2005). In contrast, recent studies
show little evidence of conspicuous
reactions by sperm whales to airgun
pulses, contrary to earlier indications
(e.g., Gordon et al. 2006; Stone and
Tasker 2006; Winsor and Mate 2006;
Jochens et al. 2008), except the lower
buzz (echolocation signals) rates that
were detected during exposure of airgun
pulses (Miller et al. 2009).
There are almost no specific data on
responses of beaked whales to seismic
surveys, but it is likely that most if not
all species show strong avoidance.
There is increasing evidence that some
beaked whales may strand after
exposure to strong noise from tactical
military mid-frequency sonars. Whether
they ever do so in response to seismic
survey noise is unknown. Northern
bottlenose whales seem to continue to
call when exposed to pulses from
distant seismic vessels.
For delphinids, and possibly the
Dall’s porpoise, the available data
suggest that a ≥170 dB re 1 mPa (rms)
disturbance criterion (rather than ≥160
dB) would be appropriate. With a
medium-to-large airgun array, received
levels typically diminish to 170 dB
within 1–4 km, whereas levels typically
remain above 160 dB out to 4–15 km
(e.g., Tolstoy et al. 2009). Reaction
distances for delphinids are more
consistent with the typical 170 dB re 1
mPa (rms) distances. Stone (2003) and
Stone and Tasker (2006) reported that
all small odontocetes (including killer
whales) observed during seismic
surveys in UK waters remained
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significantly further from the source
during periods of shooting on surveys
with large volume airgun arrays than
during periods without airgun shooting.
Due to their relatively higher
frequency hearing ranges when
compared to mysticetes, odontocetes
may have stronger responses to midand high-frequency sources such as subbottom profilers, side scan sonar, and
echo sounders than mysticetes
(Richardson et al. 1995; Southall et al.
2007).
Pinnipeds: Few studies of the
reactions of pinnipeds to noise from
open-water seismic exploration have
been published (for review of the early
literature, see Richardson et al. 1995).
However, pinnipeds have been observed
during a number of seismic monitoring
studies. Monitoring in the Beaufort Sea
during 1996–2002 provided a
substantial amount of information on
avoidance responses (or lack thereof)
and associated behavior. Additional
monitoring of that type has been done
in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas in
2006–2009. Pinnipeds exposed to
seismic surveys have also been observed
during seismic surveys along the U.S.
west coast. Also, there are data on the
reactions of pinnipeds to various other
related types of impulsive sounds.
Early observations provided
considerable evidence that pinnipeds
are often quite tolerant of strong pulsed
sounds. During seismic exploration off
Nova Scotia, gray seals exposed to noise
from airguns and linear explosive
charges reportedly did not react strongly
(J. Parsons in Greene et al. 1985). An
airgun caused an initial startle reaction
among South African fur seals but was
ineffective in scaring them away from
fishing gear. Pinnipeds in both water
and air sometimes tolerate strong noise
pulses from non-explosive and
explosive scaring devices, especially if
attracted to the area for feeding or
reproduction (Mate and Harvey 1987;
Reeves et al. 1996). Thus, pinnipeds are
expected to be rather tolerant of, or to
habituate to, repeated underwater
sounds from distant seismic sources, at
least when the animals are strongly
attracted to the area.
In summary, visual monitoring from
seismic vessels has shown only slight (if
any) avoidance of airguns by pinnipeds,
and only slight (if any) changes in
behavior. These studies show that many
pinnipeds do not avoid the area within
a few hundred meters of an operating
airgun array. However, based on the
studies with large sample size, or
observations from a separate monitoring
vessel, or radio telemetry, it is apparent
that some phocid seals do show
localized avoidance of operating
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airguns. The limited nature of this
tendency for avoidance is a concern. It
suggests that one cannot rely on
pinnipeds to move away, or to move
very far away, before received levels of
sound from an approaching seismic
survey vessel approach those that may
cause hearing impairment.
(2) Masking
Masking occurs when noise and
signals (that animal utilizes) overlap at
both spectral and temporal scales.
Chronic exposure to elevated sound
levels could cause masking at particular
frequencies for marine mammals, which
utilize sound for important biological
functions. Masking can interfere with
detection of acoustic signals used for
orientation, communication, finding
prey, and avoiding predators. Marine
mammals that experience severe (high
intensity and extended duration)
acoustic masking could potentially
suffer reduced fitness, which could lead
to adverse effects on survival and
reproduction.
For the airgun noise generated from
the proposed marine seismic survey,
these are low frequency (under 1 kHz)
pulses with extremely short durations
(in the scale of milliseconds). Lower
frequency man-made noises are more
likely to affect detection of
communication calls and other
potentially important natural sounds
such as surf and prey noise. There is
little concern regarding masking due to
the brief duration of these pulses and
relatively longer silence between airgun
shots (9–12 seconds) near the noise
source, however, at long distances (over
tens of kilometers away) in deep water,
due to multipath propagation and
reverberation, the durations of airgun
pulses can be ‘‘stretched’’ to seconds
with long decays (Madsen et al. 2006;
Clark and Gagnon 2006). Therefore it
could affect communication signals
used by low frequency mysticetes when
they occur near the noise band and thus
reduce the communication space of
animals (e.g., Clark et al. 2009a, 2009b)
and affect their vocal behavior (e.g.,
Foote et al. 2004; Holt et al. 2009).
Further, in areas of shallow water,
multipath propagation of airgun pulses
could be more profound, thus affecting
communication signals from marine
mammals even at close distances.
Average ambient noise in areas where
received seismic noises are heard can be
elevated. At long distances, however,
the intensity of the noise is greatly
reduced. Nevertheless, partial
informational and energetic masking of
different degrees could affect signal
receiving in some marine mammals
within the ensonified areas. Additional
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research is needed to further address
these effects.
Although masking effects of pulsed
sounds on marine mammal calls and
other natural sounds are expected to be
limited, there are few specific studies on
this. Some whales continue calling in
the presence of seismic pulses and
whale calls often can be heard between
the seismic pulses (e.g., Richardson et
al. 1986; McDonald et al. 1995; Greene
et al. 1999a, 1999b; Nieukirk et al. 2004;
Smultea et al. 2004; Holst et al. 2005a,
2005b, 2006; Dunn and Hernandez
2009).
Among the odontocetes, 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 of sperm whales found that they
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).
Madsen et al. (2006) noted that airgun
sounds would not be expected to mask
sperm whale calls given the intermittent
nature of airgun pulses. Dolphins and
porpoises are also commonly heard
calling while airguns are operating
(Gordon et al. 2004; Smultea et al. 2004;
Holst et al. 2005a, 2005b; Potter et al.
2007). Masking effects of seismic pulses
are expected to be negligible in the case
of the smaller odontocetes, given the
intermittent nature of seismic pulses
plus the fact that sounds important to
them are predominantly at much higher
frequencies than are the dominant
components of airgun sounds.
Pinnipeds have best hearing
sensitivity and/or produce most of their
sounds at frequencies higher than the
dominant components of airgun sound,
but there is some overlap in the
frequencies of the airgun pulses and the
calls. However, the intermittent nature
of airgun pulses presumably reduces the
potential for masking.
Marine mammals are thought to be
able to compensate for masking by
adjusting their acoustic behavior such as
shifting call frequencies, and increasing
call volume and vocalization rates, as
discussed earlier (e.g., Miller et al. 2000;
Parks et al. 2007; Di Iorio and Clark
2009; Parks et al. 2010); the biological
significance of these modifications is
still unknown.
(3) Hearing Impairment
Marine mammals exposed to high
intensity sound repeatedly or for
prolonged periods can experience
hearing threshold shift (TS), which is
the loss of hearing sensitivity at certain
frequency ranges (Kastak et al. 1999;
Schlundt et al. 2000; Finneran et al.
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28417
2002; 2005). TS can be permanent
(PTS), in which case the loss of hearing
sensitivity is unrecoverable, or
temporary (TTS), in which case the
animal’s hearing threshold will recover
over time (Southall et al. 2007). Marine
mammals that experience TTS or PTS
will have reduced sensitivity at the
frequency band of the TS, which may
affect their capability of
communication, orientation, or prey
detection. The degree of TS depends on
the intensity of the received levels the
animal is exposed to, and the frequency
at which TS occurs depends on the
frequency of the received noise. It has
been shown that in most cases, TS
occurs at the frequencies approximately
one-octave above that of the received
noise. Repeated noise exposure that
leads to TTS could cause PTS. For
transient sounds, the sound level
necessary to cause TTS is inversely
related to the duration of the sound.
TTS:
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.
It is a temporary phenomenon, and
(especially when mild) is not
considered to represent physical
damage or ‘‘injury’’ (Southall et al.
2007). Rather, the onset of TTS is an
indicator that, if the animal is exposed
to higher levels of that sound, physical
damage is ultimately a possibility.
The magnitude of TTS depends on the
level and duration of noise exposure,
and to some degree on frequency,
among other considerations (Kryter
1985; Richardson et al. 1995; Southall et
al. 2007). For sound exposures at or
somewhat above the TTS threshold,
hearing sensitivity recovers rapidly after
exposure to the noise ends. In terrestrial
mammals, TTS can last from minutes or
hours to (in cases of strong TTS) days.
Only a few data have been obtained on
sound levels and durations necessary to
elicit mild TTS in marine mammals
(none in mysticetes), and none of the
published data concern TTS elicited by
exposure to multiple pulses of sound
during operational seismic surveys
(Southall et al. 2007).
For toothed whales, experiments on a
bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncates)
and beluga whale showed that exposure
to a single watergun impulse at a
received level of 207 kPa (or 30 psi)
peak-to-peak (p-p), which is equivalent
to 228 dB re 1 mPa (p-p), resulted in a
7 and 6 dB TTS in the beluga whale at
0.4 and 30 kHz, respectively.
Thresholds returned to within 2 dB of
the pre-exposure level within 4 minutes
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of the exposure (Finneran et al. 2002).
No TTS was observed in the bottlenose
dolphin.
Finneran et al. (2005) further
examined the effects of tone duration on
TTS in bottlenose dolphins. Bottlenose
dolphins were exposed to 3 kHz tones
(non-impulsive) for periods of 1, 2, 4 or
8 seconds (s), with hearing tested at 4.5
kHz. For 1-s exposures, TTS occurred
with SELs of 197 dB, and for exposures
>1 s, SEL >195 dB resulted in TTS (SEL
is equivalent to energy flux, in dB re 1
mPa2-s). At an SEL of 195 dB, the mean
TTS (4 min after exposure) was 2.8 dB.
Finneran et al. (2005) suggested that an
SEL of 195 dB is the likely threshold for
the onset of TTS in dolphins and
belugas exposed to tones of durations 1–
8 s (i.e., TTS onset occurs at a nearconstant SEL, independent of exposure
duration). That implies that, at least for
non-impulsive tones, a doubling of
exposure time results in a 3 dB lower
TTS threshold.
However, the assumption that, in
marine mammals, the occurrence and
magnitude of TTS is a function of
cumulative acoustic energy (SEL) is
probably an oversimplification. Kastak
et al. (2005) reported preliminary
evidence from pinnipeds that, for
prolonged non-impulse noise, higher
SELs were required to elicit a given TTS
if exposure duration was short than if it
was longer, i.e., the results were not
fully consistent with an equal-energy
model to predict TTS onset. Mooney et
al. (2009a) showed this in a bottlenose
dolphin exposed to octave-band nonimpulse noise ranging from 4 to 8 kHz
at SPLs of 130 to 178 dB re 1 mPa for
periods of 1.88 to 30 minutes (min).
Higher SELs were required to induce a
given TTS if exposure duration was
short than if it was longer. Exposure of
the aforementioned bottlenose dolphin
to a sequence of brief sonar signals
showed that, with those brief (but nonimpulse) sounds, the received energy
(SEL) necessary to elicit TTS was higher
than was the case with exposure to the
more prolonged octave-band noise
(Mooney et al. 2009b). Those authors
concluded that, when using (nonimpulse) acoustic signals of duration
∼0.5 s, SEL must be at least 210–214 dB
re 1 mPa2-s to induce TTS in the
bottlenose dolphin. The most recent
studies conducted by Finneran et al.
also support the notion that exposure
duration has a more significant
influence compared to SPL as the
duration increases, and that TTS growth
data are better represented as functions
of SPL and duration rather than SEL
alone (Finneran et al. 2010a, 2010b). In
addition, Finneran et al. (2010b)
conclude that when animals are
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exposed to intermittent noises, there is
recovery of hearing during the quiet
intervals between exposures through the
accumulation of TTS across multiple
exposures. Such findings suggest that
when exposed to multiple seismic
pulses, partial hearing recovery also
occurs during the seismic pulse
intervals.
For baleen whales, there are no data,
direct or indirect, on levels or properties
of sound that are required to induce
TTS. The frequencies to which baleen
whales are most sensitive are lower than
those to which odontocetes are most
sensitive, and natural ambient noise
levels at those low frequencies tend to
be higher (Urick 1983). 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). From this, it is suspected
that received levels causing TTS onset
may also be higher in baleen whales.
However, no cases of TTS are expected
given the small size of the airguns
proposed to be used and the strong
likelihood that baleen whales
(especially migrating bowheads) would
avoid the approaching airguns (or
vessel) before being exposed to levels
high enough for there to be any
possibility of TTS.
In pinnipeds, TTS thresholds
associated with exposure to brief pulses
(single or multiple) of underwater sound
have not been measured. Initial
evidence from prolonged exposures
suggested that some pinnipeds may
incur TTS at somewhat lower received
levels than do small odontocetes
exposed for similar durations (Kastak et
al. 1999; 2005). However, more recent
indications are that TTS onset in the
most sensitive pinniped species studied
(harbor seal, which is closely related to
the ringed seal) may occur at a similar
SEL as in odontocetes (Kastak et al.
2004).
Most cetaceans show some degree of
avoidance of seismic vessels operating
an airgun array (see above). It is unlikely
that these 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. TTS would be more
likely in any odontocetes that bow- or
wake-ride or otherwise linger near the
airguns. However, while bow- or wakeriding, odontocetes would be at the
surface and thus not exposed to strong
sound pulses given the pressure release
and Lloyd Mirror effects at the surface.
But if bow- or wake-riding animals were
to dive intermittently near airguns, they
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would be exposed to strong sound
pulses, possibly repeatedly.
If some cetaceans did incur mild or
moderate TTS through exposure to
airgun sounds in this manner, this
would very likely be a temporary and
reversible phenomenon. However, even
a temporary reduction in hearing
sensitivity could be deleterious in the
event that, during that period of reduced
sensitivity, a marine mammal needed its
full hearing sensitivity to detect
approaching predators, or for some
other reason.
Some pinnipeds show avoidance
reactions to airguns, but their avoidance
reactions are generally not as strong or
consistent as those of cetaceans.
Pinnipeds occasionally seem to be
attracted to operating seismic vessels.
There are no specific data on TTS
thresholds of pinnipeds exposed to
single or multiple low-frequency pulses.
However, given the indirect indications
of a lower TTS threshold for the harbor
seal than for odontocetes exposed to
impulse sound (see above), it is possible
that some pinnipeds close to a large
airgun array could incur TTS.
NMFS currently typically includes
mitigation requirements to ensure that
cetaceans and pinnipeds are not
exposed to pulsed underwater noise at
received levels exceeding, respectively,
180 and 190 dB re 1 mPa (rms). The 180/
190 dB acoustic criteria were taken from
recommendations by an expert panel of
the High Energy Seismic Survey (HESS)
Team that performed an assessment on
noise impacts by seismic airguns to
marine mammals in 1997, although the
HESS Team recommended a 180-dB
limit for pinnipeds in California (HESS
1999). The 180 and 190 dB re 1 mPa
(rms) levels have not been considered to
be the levels above which TTS might
occur. Rather, they were the received
levels above which, in the view of a
panel of bioacoustics specialists
convened by NMFS before TTS
measurements for marine mammals
started to become available, one could
not be certain that there would be no
injurious effects, auditory or otherwise,
to marine mammals. As summarized
above, data that are now available imply
that TTS is unlikely to occur in various
odontocetes (and probably mysticetes as
well) unless they are exposed to a
sequence of several airgun pulses
stronger than 190 dB re 1 mPa (rms). On
the other hand, for the harbor seal,
harbor porpoise, and perhaps some
other species, TTS may occur upon
exposure to one or more airgun pulses
whose received level equals the NMFS
‘‘do not exceed’’ value of 190 dB re 1
mPa (rms). That criterion corresponds to
a single-pulse SEL of 175–180 dB re 1
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mPa2-s in typical conditions, whereas
TTS is suspected to be possible in
harbor seals and harbor porpoises with
a cumulative SEL of ∼171 and ∼164 dB
re 1 mPa2-s, respectively.
It has been shown that most large
whales and many smaller odontocetes
(especially the harbor porpoise) show at
least localized avoidance of ships and/
or seismic operations. Even when
avoidance is limited to the area within
a few hundred meters of an airgun array,
that should usually be sufficient to
avoid TTS based on what is currently
known about thresholds for TTS onset
in cetaceans. In addition, ramping up
airgun arrays, which is standard
operational protocol for many seismic
operators, may allow cetaceans near the
airguns at the time of startup (if the
sounds are aversive) to move away from
the seismic source and to avoid being
exposed to the full acoustic output of
the airgun array. Thus, most baleen
whales likely will not be exposed to
high levels of airgun sounds provided
the ramp-up procedure is applied.
Likewise, many odontocetes close to the
trackline are likely to move away before
the sounds from an approaching seismic
vessel become sufficiently strong for
there to be any potential for TTS or
other hearing impairment. Hence, there
is little potential for baleen whales or
odontocetes that show avoidance of
ships or airguns to be close enough to
an airgun array to experience TTS.
Nevertheless, even if marine mammals
were to experience TTS, the magnitude
of the TTS is expected to be mild and
brief, only in a few decibels for minutes.
PTS:
When PTS occurs, there is physical
damage to the sound receptors in the
ear. In some cases, there can be total or
partial deafness, whereas in other cases,
the animal has an impaired ability to
hear sounds in specific frequency ranges
(Kryter 1985). Physical damage to a
mammal’s hearing apparatus can occur
if it is exposed to sound impulses that
have very high peak pressures,
especially if they have very short rise
times. (Rise time is the interval required
for sound pressure to increase from the
baseline pressure to peak pressure.)
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 likelihood that some mammals
close to an airgun array might incur at
least mild TTS (see above), there has
been further speculation about the
possibility that some individuals
occurring very close to airguns might
incur PTS (e.g., Richardson et al. 1995;
Gedamke et al. 2008). Single or
occasional occurrences of mild TTS are
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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 (Southall et al.
2007). 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 higher (Southall et al. 2007). The
low-to-moderate levels of TTS that have
been induced in captive odontocetes
and pinnipeds during controlled studies
of TTS have been confirmed to be
temporary, with no measurable residual
PTS (Kastak et al. 1999; Schlundt et al.
2000; Finneran et al. 2002; 2005;
Nachtigall et al. 2003; 2004). However,
very prolonged exposure to sound
strong enough to elicit TTS, or shorterterm exposure to sound levels well
above the TTS threshold, can cause
PTS, at least in terrestrial mammals
(Kryter 1985). In terrestrial mammals,
the received sound level from a single
non-impulsive sound exposure must be
far above the TTS threshold for any risk
of permanent hearing damage (Kryter
1994; Richardson et al. 1995; Southall et
al. 2007). However, there is special
concern about strong sounds whose
pulses have very rapid rise times. In
terrestrial mammals, there are situations
when pulses with rapid rise times (e.g.,
from explosions) can result in PTS even
though their peak levels are only a few
dB higher than the level causing slight
TTS. The rise time of airgun pulses is
fast, but not as fast as that of an
explosion.
Some factors that contribute to onset
of PTS, at least in terrestrial mammals,
are as follows:
• exposure to a single very intense
sound,
• fast rise time from baseline to peak
pressure,
• repetitive exposure to intense
sounds that individually cause TTS but
not PTS, and
• recurrent ear infections or (in
captive animals) exposure to certain
drugs.
Cavanagh (2000) reviewed the
thresholds used to define TTS and PTS.
Based on this review and SACLANT
(1998), it is reasonable to assume that
PTS might occur at a received sound
level 20 dB or more above that inducing
mild TTS. However, for PTS to occur at
a received level only 20 dB above the
TTS threshold, the animal probably
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28419
would have to be exposed to a strong
sound for an extended period, or to a
strong sound with a rather rapid rise
time.
More recently, Southall et al. (2007)
estimated that received levels would
need to exceed the TTS threshold by at
least 15 dB, on an SEL basis, for there
to be risk of PTS. Thus, for cetaceans
exposed to a sequence of sound pulses,
they estimate that the PTS threshold
might be an M-weighted SEL (for the
sequence of received pulses) of ∼198 dB
re 1 mPa2-s. Additional assumptions had
to be made to derive a corresponding
estimate for pinnipeds, as the only
available data on TTS-thresholds in
pinnipeds pertained to nonimpulse
sound (see above). Southall et al. (2007)
estimated that the PTS threshold could
be a cumulative SEL of ∼186 dB re 1
mPa2-s in the case of a harbor seal
exposed to impulse sound. The PTS
threshold for the California sea lion and
northern elephant seal would probably
be higher given the higher TTS
thresholds in those species. Southall et
al. (2007) also note that, regardless of
the SEL, there is concern about the
possibility of PTS if a cetacean or
pinniped received one or more pulses
with peak pressure exceeding 230 or
218 dB re 1 mPa, respectively. Thus, PTS
might be expected upon exposure of
cetaceans to either SEL ≥198 dB re 1
mPa2-s or peak pressure ≥230 dB re 1
mPa. Corresponding proposed dual
criteria for pinnipeds (at least harbor
seals) are ≥186 dB SEL and ≥218 dB
peak pressure (Southall et al. 2007).
These estimates are all first
approximations, given the limited
underlying data, assumptions, species
differences, and evidence that the
‘‘equal energy’’ model may not be
entirely correct.
Sound impulse duration, peak
amplitude, rise time, number of pulses,
and inter-pulse interval are the main
factors thought to determine the onset
and extent of PTS. Ketten (1994) has
noted that the criteria for differentiating
the sound pressure levels that result in
PTS (or TTS) are location and species
specific. PTS effects may also be
influenced strongly by the health of the
receiver’s ear.
As described above for TTS, in
estimating the amount of sound energy
required to elicit the onset of TTS (and
PTS), it is assumed that the auditory
effect of a given cumulative SEL from a
series of pulses is the same as if that
amount of sound energy were received
as a single strong sound. There are no
data from marine mammals concerning
the occurrence or magnitude of a
potential partial recovery effect between
pulses. In deriving the estimates of PTS
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(and TTS) thresholds quoted here,
Southall et al. (2007) made the
precautionary assumption that no
recovery would occur between pulses.
It is unlikely that an odontocete
would remain close enough to a large
airgun array for sufficiently long to
incur PTS. There is some concern about
bowriding odontocetes, but for animals
at or near the surface, auditory effects
are reduced by Lloyd’s mirror and
surface release effects. The presence of
the vessel between the airgun array and
bow-riding odontocetes could also, in
some but probably not all cases, reduce
the levels received by bow-riding
animals (e.g., Gabriele and Kipple 2009).
The TTS (and thus PTS) thresholds of
baleen whales are unknown but, as an
interim measure, assumed to be no
lower than those of odontocetes. Also,
baleen whales generally avoid the
immediate area around operating
seismic vessels, so it is unlikely that a
baleen whale could incur PTS from
exposure to airgun pulses. The TTS (and
thus PTS) thresholds of some pinnipeds
(e.g., harbor seal) as well as the harbor
porpoise may be lower (Kastak et al.
2005; Southall et al. 2007; Lucke et al.
2009). If so, TTS and potentially PTS
may extend to a somewhat greater
distance for those animals. Again,
Lloyd’s mirror and surface release
effects will ameliorate the effects for
animals at or near the surface.
and mitigation measures described later
in this document.
Additional non-auditory effects
include elevated levels of stress
response (Wright et al. 2007; Wright and
Highfill 2007). Although not many
studies have been done on noiseinduced stress in marine mammals,
extrapolation of information regarding
stress responses in other species seems
applicable because the responses are
highly consistent among all species in
which they have been examined to date
(Wright et al. 2007). Therefore, it is
reasonable to conclude that noise acts as
a stressor to marine mammals.
Furthermore, given that marine
mammals will likely respond in a
manner consistent with other species
studied, repeated and prolonged
exposures to stressors (including or
induced by noise) could potentially be
problematic for marine mammals of all
ages. Wright et al. (2007) state that a
range of issues may arise from an
extended stress response including, but
not limited to, suppression of
reproduction (physiologically and
behaviorally), accelerated aging and
sickness-like symptoms. However, as
mentioned above, Shell’s proposed
activity is not expected to result in these
severe effects due to the nature of the
potential sound exposure.
(4) Non-auditory Physical Effects
Non-auditory physical effects might
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
neurological effects, bubble formation,
and other types of organ or tissue
damage. Some marine mammal species
(i.e., beaked whales) may be especially
susceptible to injury and/or stranding
when exposed to intense sounds.
However, there is no definitive evidence
that any of these effects occur even for
marine mammals in close proximity to
large arrays of airguns, and beaked
whales do not occur in the proposed
project area. In addition, marine
mammals that show behavioral
avoidance of seismic vessels, including
most baleen whales, some odontocetes
(including belugas), and some
pinnipeds, are especially unlikely to
incur non-auditory impairment or other
physical effects.
Therefore, it is unlikely that such
effects would occur during Shell’s
proposed marine surveys given the brief
duration of exposure, the small sound
sources, and the planned monitoring
Marine mammals close to underwater
detonations can be killed or severely
injured, and the auditory organs are
especially susceptible to injury (Ketten
et al. 1993; Ketten 1995). Airgun pulses
are less energetic and their peak
amplitudes have slower rise times,
while stranding and mortality events
would include other energy sources
(acoustical or shock wave) far beyond
just seismic airguns. To date, there is no
evidence that serious injury, death, or
stranding by marine mammals can occur
from exposure to airgun pulses, even in
the case of large airgun arrays.
However, in numerous past IHA
notices for seismic surveys, commenters
have referenced two stranding events
allegedly associated with seismic
activities, one off Baja California and a
second off Brazil. NMFS has addressed
this concern several times, and, without
new information, does not believe that
this issue warrants further discussion.
For information relevant to strandings of
marine mammals, readers are
encouraged to review NMFS’ response
to comments on this matter found in 69
FR 74906 (December 14, 2004), 71 FR
43112 (July 31, 2006), 71 FR 50027
(August 24, 2006), and 71 FR 49418
(August 23, 2006).
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(5) Stranding and Mortality
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It should be noted that strandings
related to sound exposure have not been
recorded for marine mammal species in
the Chukchi or Beaufort seas. NMFS
notes that in the Beaufort and Chukchi
seas, aerial surveys have been
conducted by BOEM (previously MMS)
and industry during periods of
industrial activity (and by BOEM during
times with no activity). No strandings or
marine mammals in distress have been
observed during these surveys and none
have been reported by North Slope
Borough inhabitants. In addition, there
are very few instances that seismic
surveys in general have been linked to
marine mammal strandings, other than
those mentioned above. As a result,
NMFS does not expect any marine
mammals will incur serious injury or
mortality in the Arctic Ocean or strand
as a result of the proposed marine
survey.
Potential Effects of Sonar Signals
A variety of active acoustic
instrumentation would be used during
Shell’s proposed marine surveys
program. Source characteristics and
propagation distances to 160 (rms) dB re
1 mPa by comparable instruments are
listed in Table 2. In general, the
potential effects of this equipment on
marine mammals are similar to those
from the airgun, except the magnitude
of the impacts is expected to be much
less due to the lower intensity and
higher frequencies. In some cases, due
to the fact that the operating frequencies
of some of this equipment (e.g., Multibeam bathymetric sonar: frequency at
220–240 kHz) are above the hearing
ranges of marine mammals, they are not
expected to have any impacts to marine
mammals.
Vessel Sounds
In addition to the noise generated
from seismic airguns and active sonar
systems, various types of vessels will be
used in the operations, including source
vessel and vessels used for equipment
recovery and maintenance and logistic
support. Sounds from boats and vessels
have been reported extensively (Greene
and Moore 1995; Blackwell and Greene
2002; 2005; 2006). Numerous
measurements of underwater vessel
sound have been performed in support
of recent industry activity in the
Chukchi and Beaufort Seas. Results of
these measurements were reported in
various 90-day and comprehensive
reports since 2007 (e.g., Aerts et al.
2008; Hauser et al. 2008; Brueggeman
2009; Ireland et al. 2009; O’Neill and
McCrodan 2011; Chorney et al. 2011;
McPherson and Warner 2012). For
example, Garner and Hannay (2009)
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estimated sound pressure levels of 100
dB at distances ranging from
approximately 1.5 to 2.3 mi (2.4 to 3.7
km) from various types of barges.
MacDonald et al. (2008) estimated
higher underwater SPLs from the
seismic vessel Gilavar of 120 dB at
approximately 13 mi (21 km) from the
source, although the sound level was
only 150 dB at 85 ft (26 m) from the
vessel. Compared to airgun pulses,
underwater sound from vessels is
generally at relatively low frequencies.
However, noise from the vessel during
equipment recovery and maintenance
while operating the DP system using
thrusters as well as the primary
propeller(s) could produce noise levels
higher than during normal operation of
the vessel. Measurements of a vessel in
DP mode with an active bow thruster
were made in the Chukchi Sea in 2010
(Chorney et al. 2011). The resulting
source level estimate was 175.9 dB (rms)
re 1 mPa-m. Acoustic measurements of
the Nordica in DP mode while
supporting Shell’s 2012 drilling
operation in the Chukchi Sea showed
that the 120 dB re 1 m Pa radius was at
approximately 4 km (2.5 mi) (Bisson et
al. 2013).
The primary sources of sounds from
all vessel classes are propeller
cavitation, propeller singing, and
propulsion or other machinery.
Propeller cavitation is usually the
dominant noise source for vessels (Ross
1976). Propeller cavitation and singing
are produced outside the hull, whereas
propulsion or other machinery noise
originates inside the hull. There are
additional sounds produced by vessel
activity, such as pumps, generators,
flow noise from water passing over the
hull, and bubbles breaking in the wake.
Source levels from various vessels
would be empirically measured before
the start of marine surveys, and during
equipment recovery and maintenance
while operating the DP system.
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Anticipated Effects on Habitat
The primary potential impacts to
marine mammals and other marine
species are associated with elevated
sound levels produced by airguns and
vessels operating in the area. However,
other potential impacts to the
surrounding habitat from physical
disturbance are also possible.
Potential Impacts on Prey Species
With regard to fish as a prey source
for cetaceans and pinnipeds, fish are
known to hear and react to sounds and
to use sound to communicate (Tavolga
et al. 1981) and possibly avoid predators
(Wilson and Dill 2002). Experiments
have shown that fish can sense both the
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strength and direction of sound
(Hawkins 1981). Primary factors
determining whether a fish can sense a
sound signal, and potentially react to it,
are the frequency of the signal and the
strength of the signal in relation to the
natural background noise level.
The level of sound at which a fish
will react or alter its behavior is usually
well above the detection level. Fish
have been found to react to sounds
when the sound level increased to about
20 dB above the detection level of 120
dB (Ona 1988); however, the response
threshold can depend on the time of
year and the fish’s physiological
condition (Engas et al. 1993). In general,
fish react more strongly to pulses of
sound rather than non-pulse signals
(such as noise from vessels) (Blaxter et
al. 1981), and a quicker alarm response
is elicited when the sound signal
intensity rises rapidly compared to
sound rising more slowly to the same
level.
Investigations of fish behavior in
relation to vessel noise (Olsen et al.
1983; Ona 1988; Ona and Godo 1990)
have shown that fish react when the
sound from the engines and propeller
exceeds a certain level. Avoidance
reactions have been observed in fish
such as cod and herring when vessels
approached close enough that received
sound levels are 110 dB to 130 dB
(Nakken 1992; Olsen 1979; Ona and
Godo 1990; Ona and Toresen 1988).
However, other researchers have found
that fish such as polar cod, herring, and
capeline are often attracted to vessels
(apparently by the noise) and swim
toward the vessel (Rostad et al. 2006).
Typical sound source levels of vessel
noise in the audible range for fish are
150 dB to 170 dB (Richardson et al.
1995).
Further, during the seismic survey
only a small fraction of the available
habitat would be ensonified at any given
time. Disturbance to fish species would
be short-term and fish would return to
their pre-disturbance behavior once the
seismic activity ceases (McCauley et al.
2000a, 2000b; Santulli et al. 1999;
Pearson et al. 1992). Thus, the proposed
survey would have little, if any, impact
on the abilities of marine mammals to
feed in the area where seismic work is
planned.
Some mysticetes, including bowhead
whales, feed on concentrations of
zooplankton. Some feeding bowhead
whales may occur in the Alaskan
Beaufort Sea in July and August, and
others feed intermittently during their
westward migration in September and
October (Richardson and Thomson
[eds.] 2002; Lowry et al. 2004). A
reaction by zooplankton to a seismic
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28421
impulse would only be relevant to
whales if it caused concentrations of
zooplankton to scatter. Pressure changes
of sufficient magnitude to cause that
type of reaction would probably occur
only very close to the source. Impacts
on zooplankton behavior are predicted
to be negligible, and that would
translate into negligible impacts on
feeding mysticetes. Thus, the proposed
activity is not expected to have any
habitat-related effects on prey species
that could cause significant or long-term
consequences for individual marine
mammals or their populations.
Potential Impacts on Availability of
Affected Species or Stock for Taking for
Subsistence Uses
Subsistence hunting is an essential
aspect of Inupiat Native life, especially
in rural coastal villages. The Inupiat
participate in subsistence hunting
activities in and around the Chukchi
Sea. The animals taken for subsistence
provide a significant portion of the food
that will last the community through the
year. Marine mammals represent on the
order of 60–80% of the total subsistence
harvest. Along with the nourishment
necessary for survival, the subsistence
activities strengthen bonds within the
culture, provide a means for educating
the young, provide supplies for artistic
expression, and allow for important
celebratory events.
The communities closest to the
project area are the villages of
Wainwright and Barrow. Shell’s
proposed ice gouge surveys would occur
offshore Wainwright but would be
approximately 30 km from Barrow and
48 km from Point Lay. The closest point
for Shell’s proposed site clearance and
shallow hazards surveys and equipment
recovery and maintenance activities
would be approximately 120 km to
Wainwright and 150 km to Point Lay,
and much farther away to Barrow.
Potential Impacts to Subsistence Uses
NMFS has defined ‘‘unmitigable
adverse impact’’ in 50 CFR 216.103 as:
‘‘. . . an impact resulting from the
specified activity: (1) That is likely to
reduce the availability of the species to
a level insufficient for a harvest to meet
subsistence needs by: (i) Causing the
marine mammals to abandon or avoid
hunting areas; (ii) Directly displacing
subsistence users; or (iii) Placing
physical barriers between the marine
mammals and the subsistence hunters;
and (2) That cannot be sufficiently
mitigated by other measures to increase
the availability of marine mammals to
allow subsistence needs to be met.’’
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(1) Bowhead Whales
Shell’s planned surveys would have
no or negligible effects on bowhead
whale harvest activities. Noise and
general activity associated with marine
surveys and operation of vessels has the
potential to harass bowhead whales.
However, though temporary diversions
of the swim path of migrating whales
have been documented, the whales have
generally been observed to resume their
initial migratory route. The proposed
open-water marine surveys and vessel
noise could in some circumstances
affect subsistence hunts by placing the
animals further offshore or otherwise at
a greater distance from villages thereby
increasing the difficulty of the hunt or
retrieval of the harvest, or creating a
safety risk to the whalers. Residents of
Barrow hunt bowheads during the
spring and fall migration. However,
bowhead hunts by residents of
Wainwright, Point Lay and Point Hope
take place almost exclusively in the
spring and are typically curtailed when
ice begins to break up which is prior to
the date Shell would commence the
2013 activities. From 1974 through
2009, bowhead harvests by these
Chukchi Sea villages occurred only in
the spring between early April and midJune (Suydam and George, 2012). A
Wainwright whaling crew harvested the
first fall bowhead in 90 years or more
on October 8, 2010, and again in
October of 2011. Fall whaling by
Chukchi Sea villages may occur in the
future, particularly if bowhead quotas
are not completely filled during the
spring hunt, and fall weather is
accommodating.
During the survey period most marine
mammals are expected to be dispersed
throughout the area, except during the
peak of the bowhead whale migration
through the Chukchi Seas, which occurs
from late August into October. Bowhead
whales are expected to be in the
Canadian Beaufort Sea during much of
the time, and therefore are not expected
to be affected by the proposed marine
surveys and vessel noise prior to the
start of the fall subsistence hunt. After
the conclusion of the subsistence hunt,
bowheads may travel in proximity to the
survey area and hear sounds from sonar,
high resolution profilers, and associated
vessel sounds; and may be displaced by
these activities.
(2) Beluga Whales
Belugas typically do not represent a
large proportion of the subsistence
harvests by weight in the communities
of Wainwright and Barrow, the nearest
communities to Shell’s planned 2013
activities in the Chukchi Sea. Barrow
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residents hunt beluga in the spring
normally after the bowhead hunt) in
leads between Point Barrow and Skull
Cliffs in the Chukchi Sea primarily in
April-June, and later in the summer
(July-August) on both sides of the
barrier island in Elson Lagoon/Beaufort
Sea (MMS 2008), but harvest rates
indicate the hunts are not frequent.
Wainwright residents hunt beluga in
April-June in the spring lead system, but
this hunt typically occurs only if there
are no bowheads in the area. Communal
hunts for beluga are conducted along
the coastal lagoon system later in JulyAugust.
Belugas typically represent a much
greater proportion of the subsistence
harvest in Point Lay and Point Hope.
Point Lay’s primary beluga hunt occurs
from mid-June through mid-July, but
can sometimes continue into August if
early success is not sufficient. Point
Hope residents hunt beluga primarily in
the lead system during the spring (late
March to early June) bowhead hunt, but
also in open water along the coastline in
July and August. Belugas are harvested
in coastal waters near these villages,
generally within a few miles from shore.
The southern extent of Shell’s proposed
surveys is Icy Cape which lies over 30
miles (48 km) to the north of Point Lay,
and therefore NMFS considers that the
surveys would have no or negligible
effect on beluga hunts.
The survey vessel may be resupplied
via another vessel from onshore support
facilities and may traverse areas that are
sometimes used for subsistence hunting
of belugas. Disturbance associated with
vessel and potential aircraft traffic could
therefore potentially affect beluga hunts.
However, all of the beluga hunt by
Barrow residents in the Chukchi Sea,
and much of the hunt by Wainwright
residents would likely be completed
before Shell activities would commence.
(3) Seals
Seals are an important subsistence
resource and ringed seals make up the
bulk of the seal harvest. Most ringed and
bearded seals are harvested in the
winter or in the spring before Shell’s
2013 activities would commence, but
some harvest continues during open
water and could possibly be affected by
Shell’s planned activities. Spotted seals
are also harvested during the summer.
Most seals are harvested in coastal
waters, with available maps of recent
and past subsistence use areas
indicating seal harvests have occurred
only within 30–40 mi (48–64 km) off the
coastline. Shells planned offshore
surveys, equipment recovery and
maintenance would occur outside state
waters and are not likely to have an
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impact on subsistence hunting for seals.
Resupply vessel and air traffic between
land and the operations vessels could
potentially disturb seals and, therefore,
subsistence hunts for seals, but any such
effects would be minor due to the small
number of supporting vessels and the
fact that most seal hunting is done
during the winter and spring.
As stated earlier, the proposed
seismic survey would take place
between July and October. The closest
extension of the proposed site clearance
and shallow hazards surveys located
approximately 120 km to Wainwright
and 150 km to Point Lay, and much
farther to Barrow. Potential impact from
the planned activities is expected
mainly from sounds generated by the
vessel and during active airgun
deployment. Due to the timing of the
project and the distance from the
surrounding communities, it is
anticipated to have no effects on spring
harvesting and little or no effects on the
occasional summer harvest of beluga
whale, subsistence seal hunts (ringed
and spotted seals are primarily
harvested in winter while bearded seals
are hunted during July—September in
the Beaufort Sea), or the fall bowhead
hunt.
In addition, Shell has developed and
proposes to implement a number of
mitigation measures which include a
proposed Marine Mammal Monitoring
and Mitigation Plan (4MP), employment
of subsistence advisors in the villages,
and implementation of a
Communications Plan (with operation
of Communication Centers). Shell is
also preparing a Plan of Cooperation
(POC) under 50 CFR 216.104 Article 12
of the MMPA to address potential
impacts on subsistent seal hunting
activities. Shell will meet with the
Alaska Eskimo Whaling Commission
(AEWC) and communities’ Whaling
Captains’ Associations as part of the
POC development, to establish
avoidance guidelines and other
mitigation measures to be followed
where the proposed activities may have
an impact on subsistence.
Finally, to ensure that there will be no
conflict from Shell’s proposed openwater marine surveys and equipment
recovery and maintenance to
subsistence activities, NMFS encourages
Shell to sign a Conflict Avoidance
Agreement with the local subsistence
communities. The CAA identifies what
measures have been or will be taken to
minimize adverse impacts of the
planned activities on subsistence
harvesting.
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Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an incidental take
authorization under Section 101(a)(5)(D)
of the MMPA, NMFS must 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.
For the proposed Shell open-water
marine surveys and equipment recovery
and maintenance activities in the
Chukchi Sea, Shell worked with NMFS
and proposed the following mitigation
measures to minimize the potential
impacts to marine mammals in the
project vicinity as a result of the marine
seismic survey activities. The primary
purpose of these mitigation measures is
to detect marine mammals within, or
about to enter designated exclusion
zones and to initiate immediate
shutdown or power down of the
airgun(s), therefore it’s very unlikely
potential injury or TTS to marine
mammals would occur, and Level B
behavioral of marine mammals would
be reduced to the lowest level
practicable.
(1) Establishing Exclusion and
Disturbance Zones
Under current NMFS guidelines, the
‘‘exclusion zone’’ for marine mammal
exposure to impulse sources is
customarily defined as the area within
which received sound levels are ≥180
dB (rms) re 1 mPa for cetaceans and ≥190
dB (rms) re 1 mPa for pinnipeds. These
safety criteria are based on an
assumption that SPL received at levels
lower than these will not injure these
animals or impair their hearing abilities,
but that at higher levels might have
some such effects. Disturbance or
behavioral effects to marine mammals
from underwater sound may occur after
exposure to sound at distances greater
than the exclusion zones (Richarcdson
et al. 1995). Currently, NMFS uses 160
dB (rms) re 1 mPa as the threshold for
Level B behavioral harassment from
impulses noise, and 120 dB (rms) re 1
mPa for Level B behavioral harassment
from non-impulse noise.
Exclusion and disturbance radii for
the sound levels produced by the 40 in3
array and the single mitigation airgun
(10 cubic inches) to be used during the
2013 site clearance and shallow hazards
survey activities were measured at the
Honeyguide and Burger prospect areas a
total of three separate times between
2008 and 2009. The largest radii from
these measurements will be
implemented at the commencement of
2013 airgun operations to establish
marine mammal exclusion zones used
for mitigation (Table 3). Shell will
conduct sound source measurements of
the airgun array at the beginning of
survey operations in 2013 to verify the
size of the various marine mammal
exclusion zones (see above). The
acoustic data will be analyzed as
quickly as reasonably practicable in the
field and used to verify and adjust the
marine mammal exclusion zone
distances. The mitigation measures to be
implemented at the 190 and 180 dB
(rms) sound levels will include power
downs and shut downs as described
below.
TABLE 3—DISTANCES OF THE 190 AND 180 DB (RMS) RE 1 μPA ISOLPETHS (IN M) TO BE USED FOR MITIGATION
PURPOSES AT THE BEGINNING OF 2013 AIRGUN OPERATIONS IN THE CHUKCHI SEAL UNTIL SSV RESULTS ARE AVAILABLE
Received levels (dB re 1 μPa rms)
4-Airgun array (40 in3)
190 .......................................................................................................................
180 .......................................................................................................................
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(2) Vessel and Helicopter Related
Mitigation Measures
This proposed mitigation measures
apply to all vessels that are part of the
Chukchi Sea marine surveys and
equipment recovery and maintenance
activities, including crew transfer
vessels.
• Avoid concentrations or groups of
whales by all vessels under the
direction of Shell. Operators of support
vessels should, at all times, conduct
their activities at the maximum distance
possible from such concentrations of
whales.
• Vessels in transit shall be operated
at speeds necessary to ensure no
physical contact with whales occurs. If
any vessel approaches within 1.6 km
(1 mi) of observed bowhead whales,
except when providing emergency
assistance to whalers or in other
emergency situations, the vessel
operator will take reasonable
precautions to avoid potential
interaction with the bowhead whales by
taking one or more of the following
actions, as appropriate:
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50
160
Æ Reducing vessel speed to less than
5 knots within 300 yards (900 feet or
274 m) of the whale(s);
Æ Steering around the whale(s) if
possible;
Æ Operating the vessel(s) in such a
way as to avoid separating members of
a group of whales from other members
of the group;
Æ Operating the vessel(s) to avoid
causing a whale to make multiple
changes in direction; and
Æ Checking the waters immediately
adjacent to the vessel(s) to ensure that
no whales will be injured when the
propellers are engaged.
• When weather conditions require,
such as when visibility drops, adjust
vessel speed accordingly to avoid the
likelihood of injury to whales.
• In the event that any aircraft (such
as helicopters) are used to support the
planned survey, the mitigation measures
below would apply:
Æ Under no circumstances, other than
an emergency, shall aircraft be operated
at an altitude lower than 1,000 feet
above sea level (ASL) when within 0.3
mile (0.5 km) of groups of whales.
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Single airgun (10 in3)
23
52
Æ Helicopters shall not hover or circle
above or within 0.3 mile (0.5 km) of
groups of whales.
(3) Mitigation Measures for Airgun
Operations
The primary role for airgun mitigation
during the site clearance and shallow
hazards surveys is to monitor marine
mammals near the airgun array during
all daylight airgun operations and
during any nighttime start-up of the
airguns. During the site clearance and
shallow hazards surveys PSOs will
monitor the pre-established exclusion
zones for the presence of marine
mammals. When marine mammals are
observed within, or about to enter,
designated safety zones, PSOs have the
authority to call for immediate power
down (or shutdown) of airgun
operations as required by the situation.
A summary of the procedures associated
with each mitigation measure is
provided below.
Ramp Up Procedure
A ramp up of an airgun array provides
a gradual increase in sound levels, and
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involves a step-wise increase in the
number and total volume of airguns
firing until the full volume is achieved.
The purpose of a ramp up (or ‘‘soft
start’’) is to ‘‘warn’’ cetaceans and
pinnipeds in the vicinity of the airguns
and to provide time for them to leave
the area and thus avoid any potential
injury or impairment of their hearing
abilities.
During the proposed shallow hazards
survey program, the seismic operator
will ramp up the airgun arrays slowly.
Full ramp ups (i.e., from a cold start
after a shut down, when no airguns have
been firing) will begin by firing a single
airgun in the array (i.e., the mitigation
airgun). A full ramp up, after a shut
down, will not begin until there has
been a minimum of 30 min of
observation of the safety zone by PSOs
to assure that no marine mammals are
present. The entire safety zone must be
visible during the 30-minute lead-in to
a full ramp up. If the entire safety zone
is not visible, then ramp up from a cold
start cannot begin. If a marine
mammal(s) is sighted within the safety
zone during the 30-minute watch prior
to ramp up, ramp up will be delayed
until the marine mammal(s) is sighted
outside of the safety zone or the
animal(s) is not sighted for at least 15–
30 minutes: 15 minutes for small
odontocetes (harbor porpoise) and
pinnipeds, or 30 minutes for baleen
whales and large odontocetes (including
beluga and killer whales and narwhal).
Use of a Small-Volume Airgun During
Turns and Transits
Throughout the seismic survey,
particularly during turning movements,
and short transits, Shell will employ the
use of a small-volume airgun (i.e., 10 in3
‘‘mitigation airgun’’) to deter marine
mammals from being within the
immediate area of the seismic
operations. The mitigation airgun would
be operated at approximately one shot
per minute and would not be operated
for longer than three hours in duration
(turns may last two to three hours for
the proposed project).
During turns or brief transits (e.g., less
than three hours) between seismic
tracklines, one mitigation airgun will
continue operating. The ramp-up
procedure will still be followed when
increasing the source levels from one
airgun to the full airgun array. However,
keeping one airgun firing will avoid the
prohibition of a ‘‘cold start’’ during
darkness or other periods of poor
visibility. Through use of this approach,
site clearance and shallow hazards
surveys using the full array may resume
without the 30 minute observation
period of the full exclusion zone
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required for a ‘‘cold start’’. PSOs will be
on duty whenever the airguns are firing
during daylight, during the 30 minute
periods prior to ramp-ups.
Power-down and Shut Down Procedures
A power down is the immediate
reduction in the number of operating
energy sources from all firing to some
smaller number (e.g., single mitigation
airgun). A shut down is the immediate
cessation of firing of all energy sources.
The array will be immediately powered
down whenever a marine mammal is
sighted approaching close to or within
the applicable safety zone of the full
array, but is outside the applicable
safety zone of the single mitigation
source. If a marine mammal is sighted
within or about to enter the applicable
safety zone of the single mitigation
airgun, the entire array will be shut
down (i.e., no sources firing).
Poor Visibility Conditions
Shell plans to conduct 24-hour
operations. PSOs will not be on duty
during ongoing seismic operations
during darkness, given the very limited
effectiveness of visual observation at
night (there will be no periods of
darkness in the survey area until midAugust). The proposed provisions
associated with operations at night or in
periods of poor visibility include the
following:
• If during foggy conditions, heavy
snow or rain, or darkness (which may be
encountered starting in late August), the
full 180 dB exclusion zone is not
visible, the airguns cannot commence a
ramp-up procedure from a full shutdown.
• If one or more airguns have been
operational before nightfall or before the
onset of poor visibility conditions, they
can remain operational throughout the
night or poor visibility conditions. In
this case ramp-up procedures can be
initiated, even though the exclusion
zone may not be visible, on the
assumption that marine mammals will
be alerted by the sounds from the single
airgun and have moved away.
(4) Mitigation Measures for Subsistence
Activities
Regulations at 50 CFR 216.104(a)(12)
require IHA applicants for activities that
take place in Arctic waters to provide a
Plan of Cooperation (POC) or
information that identifies what
measures have been taken and/or will
be taken to minimize adverse effects on
the availability of marine mammals for
subsistence purposes.
Shell is preparing a POC, which relies
upon the Chukchi Sea Communication
Plans to identify the measures that Shell
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has developed in consultation with
North Slope subsistence communities
and will implement during its planned
2013 activities to minimize any adverse
effects on the availability of marine
mammals for subsistence uses. In
addition, the POC will detail Shell’s
communications and consultations with
local subsistence communities
concerning its planned 2013 program,
potential conflicts with subsistence
activities, and means of resolving any
such conflicts. Shell states that it
continues to document its contacts with
the North Slope subsistence
communities, as well as the substance of
its communications with subsistence
stakeholder groups.
The POC will be, and has been in the
past, the result of numerous meetings
and consultations between Shell,
affected subsistence communities and
stakeholders, and federal agencies. The
POC identifies and documents potential
conflicts and associated measures that
will be taken to minimize any adverse
effects on the availability of marine
mammals for subsistence use. Outcomes
of POC meetings are typically included
in updates attached to the POC as
addenda and distributed to federal,
state, and local agencies as well as local
stakeholder groups that either
adjudicate or influence mitigation
approaches for Shell’s open-water
programs.
Meetings for Shell’s 2013 drilling and
open-water marine surveys programs in
the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas occurred
in Kaktovik, Nuiqsut Barrow,
Wainwright, and Point Lay, during
October of 2012. Shell met with the
marine mammal commissions and
committees including the Alaska
Eskimo Whaling Commission (AEWC),
Eskimo Walrus Commission (EWC),
Alaska Beluga Whale Committee
(ABWC), Alaska Ice Seal Committee
(AISC), and the Alaska Nanuuq
Commission (ANC) on December 17 and
18, 2012 in a co-management meeting.
In March 2013, Shell revised its 2013
program to suspend plans for drilling,
delete the proposed geotechnical
program entirely, and remove survey
activities from the Beaufort Sea. As a
result, Shell has revised the proposed
open-water marine surveys program for
2013, thereby necessitating the
additional community meetings that
must be held this spring in Chukchi Sea
villages to present changes to the 2013
season. Shell plans to conduct POC
meetings in Chukchi Sea villages May
20–23 and May 29–31, 2013, dependent
on abilities to schedule meetings around
subsistence activities. Shell will update
NMFS promptly after completing the
village POC visits.
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Following the 2013 season, Shell
intends to have a post-season comanagement meeting with the
commissioners and committee heads to
discuss results of mitigation measures
and outcomes of the preceding season.
The goal of the post-season meeting is
to build upon the knowledge base,
discuss successful or unsuccessful
outcomes of mitigation measures, and
possibly refine plans or mitigation
measures if necessary.
In addition, Shell indicated that it
will continue to attend 2013 Conflict
Avoidance Agreement (CAA)
negotiation meetings in support of its
2013 activities in the Chukchi Sea.
Mitigation Conclusions
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; 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.
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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.
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I. Proposed Monitoring Measures
The monitoring plan proposed by
Shell can be found in its Marine
Mammal Monitoring and Mitigation
Plan (4MP). The plan may be modified
or supplemented based on comments or
new information received from the
public during the public comment
period. A summary of the primary
components of the plan follows.
Monitoring will provide information
on the numbers of marine mammals
potentially affected by the exploration
operations and facilitate real time
mitigation to prevent injury of marine
mammals by industrial sounds or
activities. These goals will be
accomplished in the Chukchi Sea
during 2013 by conducting vessel-based
monitoring from all ships with sound
sources and an acoustic monitoring
program to document underwater
sounds and the vocalizations of marine
mammals in the region.
Visual monitoring by Protected
Species Observers (PSOs) during active
marine survey operations, and periods
when these surveys are not occurring,
will provide information on the
numbers of marine mammals potentially
affected by these activities and facilitate
real time mitigation to prevent impacts
to marine mammals by industrial
sounds or operations. Vessel-based
PSOs onboard the survey vessel will
record the numbers and species of
marine mammals observed in the area
and any observable reaction of marine
mammals to the survey activities in the
Chukchi Sea. Additionally, monitoring
by PSOs aboard the vessel utilized for
equipment recovery and maintenance
activities at the Burger A well site will
ensure that there are no interactions
between marine mammals and these
operations. PSOs aboard the vessel will
monitor adjacent areas while the vessel
operates from a stationary position in
DP mode.
The acoustics monitoring program
will characterize the sounds produced
by marine surveys and will document
the potential reactions of marine
mammals in the area to those sounds
and activities. Recordings of ambient
sound levels and vocalizations of
marine mammals along the Chukchi Sea
coast and offshore will also be used to
interpret potential impacts to marine
mammals around the marine survey and
equipment recovery and maintenance
activity, in addition to subsistence use
areas closer to shore. Although these
monitoring programs were designed
primarily to understand the impacts of
exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea
they will also provide valuable
information about the potential impacts
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of the 2013 marine surveys on marine
mammals in the area.
Visual-Based Protected Species
Observers (PSOs)
The visual-based marine mammal
monitoring will be implemented by a
team of experienced PSOs, including
both biologists and Inupiat personnel.
PSOs will be stationed aboard the
marine survey vessel and the vessel
used to facilitate equipment recovery
and maintenance work at the Burger A
exploratory well site through the
duration of the projects. The vesselbased marine mammal monitoring will
provide the basis for real-time
mitigation measures as discussed in the
Proposed Mitigation section. In
addition, monitoring results of the
vessel-based monitoring program will
include the estimation of the number of
‘‘takes’’ as stipulated in the IHA.
(1) Protected Species Observers
Vessel-based monitoring for marine
mammals will be done by trained PSOs
throughout the period of survey
activities. The observers will monitor
the occurrence of marine mammals near
the survey vessel during all daylight
periods during operation, and during
most daylight periods when operations
are not occurring. PSO duties will
include watching for and identifying
marine mammals; recording their
numbers, distances, and reactions to the
survey operations; and documenting
‘‘take by harassment’’.
A sufficient number of PSOs will be
required onboard the survey vessel to
meet the following criteria:
• 100% monitoring coverage during
all periods of survey operations in
daylight;
• maximum of 4 consecutive hours
on watch per PSO; and
• maximum of ∼12 hours of watch
time per day per PSO.
PSO teams will consist of Inupiat
observers and experienced field
biologists. An experienced field crew
leader will supervise the PSO team
onboard the survey vessel. The total
number of PSOs may decrease later in
the season as the duration of daylight
decreases.
(2) Observer Qualifications and
Training
Crew leaders and most PSOs will be
individuals with experience as
observers during recent seismic, site
clearance and shallow hazards, and
other monitoring projects in Alaska or
other offshore areas in recent years.
Biologist-observers will have previous
marine mammal observation experience,
and field crew leaders will be highly
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experienced with previous vessel-based
marine mammal monitoring and
mitigation projects. Resumes for those
individuals will be provided to NMFS
for review and acceptance of their
qualifications. Inupiat observers will be
experienced in the region and familiar
with the marine mammals of the area.
All observers will complete a NMFSapproved observer training course
designed to familiarize individuals with
monitoring and data collection
procedures. A marine mammal
observers’ handbook, adapted for the
specifics of the planned survey program
will be prepared and distributed
beforehand to all PSOs (see below).
PSOs will complete a two or three-day
training and refresher session on marine
mammal monitoring, to be conducted
shortly before the anticipated start of the
2013 open-water season. Any
exceptions will have or receive
equivalent experience or training. The
training session(s) will be conducted by
qualified marine mammalogists with
extensive crew-leader experience during
previous vessel-based seismic
monitoring programs.
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(3) PSO Handbook
A PSO’s Handbook will be prepared
for Shell’s 2013 vessel-based monitoring
program. Handbooks contain maps,
illustrations, and photographs, as well
as text, and are intended to provide
guidance and reference information to
trained individuals who will participate
as PSOs. The following topics will be
covered in the PSO Handbook for the
Shell project:
• summary overview descriptions of
the project, marine mammals and
underwater noise, the marine mammal
monitoring program (vessel roles,
responsibilities), and the Marine
Mammal Protection Act;
• monitoring and mitigation
objectives and procedures, including
radii for exclusion zones;
• responsibilities of staff and crew
regarding the marine mammal
monitoring plan;
• instructions for ship crew regarding
the marine mammal monitoring plan;
• data recording procedures: codes
and coding instructions, PSO coding
mistakes, electronic database;
navigational, marine physical, field data
sheet;
• list of species that might be
encountered: identification, natural
history;
• use of specialized field equipment
(reticle binoculars, NVDs, etc.);
• reticle binocular distance scale;
• table of wind speed, Beaufort wind
force, and sea state codes; and
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• data quality-assurance/qualitycontrol, delivery, storage, and backup
procedures.
Marine Mammal Observer Protocol
The PSOs will watch for marine
mammals from the best available
vantage point on the survey vessels,
typically the bridge. The PSOs will scan
systematically with the unaided eye and
7 × 50 reticle binoculars, supplemented
with 20 × 60 image-stabilized Zeiss
Binoculars or Fujinon 25 × 150 ‘‘Bigeye’’ binoculars, and night-vision
equipment when needed. Personnel on
the bridge will assist the marine
mammal observer(s) in watching for
marine mammals.
PSOs aboard the stationary vessel
used to conduct equipment recovery
and maintenance activity will focus
their attention on areas immediately
adjacent to the vessel and where active
operations are occurring to ensure these
areas are clear of marine mammals and
that there are no direct interactions
between animals and equipment or
project personnel. The observer(s)
aboard the marine survey vessel will
give particular attention to the areas
within the marine mammal exclusion
zones around the source vessel. These
zones are the maximum distances
within which received levels may
exceed 180 dB (rms) re 1 mPa (rms) for
cetaceans, or 190 dB (rms) re 1 mPa for
other marine mammals. Information to
be recorded by PSOs will include the
same types of information that were
recorded during recent monitoring
programs associated with Industry
activity in the Arctic (e.g., Ireland et al.
2009; Reiser et al. 2010, 2011). When a
mammal sighting is made, the following
information about the sighting will be
recorded:
• Species, group size, age/size/sex
categories, behavior when first sighted
and after initial sighting, heading,
bearing and distance from observer,
apparent reaction to activities (e.g.,
none, avoidance, approach, paralleling,
etc.), closest point of approach, and
pace.
• Time, location, speed, and activity
of the vessel, sea state, ice cover,
visibility, and sun glare.
• The positions of other vessel(s) in
the vicinity of the observer location.
Distances to nearby marine mammals
will be estimated with binoculars
(Fujinon 7 × 50 binoculars) containing
a reticle to measure the vertical angle of
the line of sight to the animal relative
to the horizon. Observers may use a
laser rangefinder to test and improve
their abilities for visually estimating
distances to objects in the water.
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When a marine mammal is seen
approaching or within the exclusion
zone applicable to that species, the
marine survey crew will be notified
immediately so that mitigation measures
called for in the applicable
authorization(s) can be implemented.
Night-vision equipment (Generation 3
binocular image intensifiers or
equivalent units) will be available for
use when/if needed. Past experience
with night-vision devices (NVDs) in the
Chukchi Sea and elsewhere has
indicated that NVDs are not nearly as
effective as visual observation during
daylight hours (e.g., Harris et al. 1997,
1998; Moulton and Lawson 2002).
Field Data-Recording, Verification,
Handling, and Security
PSOs will record their observations
directly into computers running a
custom designed software package.
Paper datasheets will be available as
backup if necessary. The accuracy of the
data entry will be verified in the field
by computerized validity checks as the
data are entered, and by subsequent
manual checking of the database
printouts. These procedures will allow
initial summaries of data to be prepared
during and shortly after the field season,
and will facilitate transfer of the data to
statistical, graphical or other programs
for further processing. Quality control of
the data will be facilitated by (1) The
start-of-season training session, (2)
subsequent supervision by the onboard
field crew leader, and (3) ongoing data
checks during the field season.
The data will be sent off of the ship
to Anchorage each day (if possible) and
backed up regularly onto CDs and/or
USB disks, and stored at separate
locations on the vessel. If possible, data
sheets will be photocopied daily during
the field season. Data will be secured
further by having data sheets and
backup data CDs carried back to the
Anchorage office during crew rotations.
Passive Acoustic Monitoring
(1) Sound Source Measurements
The objectives of the sound source
measurements planned for 2013 will be
(1) to measure the distances at which
broadband received levels reach 190,
180, 170, 160, and 120 dB (rms) re 1 mPa
during marine surveys and equipment
recovery and maintenance activity at the
Burger A exploratory well site, and from
vessels used during these activities. The
measurements of airguns and other
marine survey equipment will be made
by an acoustics contractor at the
beginning of the surveys. Data from
survey equipment will be previewed in
the field immediately after download
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from the hydrophone instruments. An
initial sound source analysis will be
supplied to NMFS and the vessel within
120 hours of completion of the
measurements, if possible. The report
will indicate the distances to sound
levels based on fits of empirical
transmission loss formulae to data in the
endfire and broadside directions. A
more detailed report will be provided to
NMFS as part of the 90-day report
following completion of the acoustic
program.
(2) Long-term Acoustic Monitoring
Acoustic studies that were undertaken
from 2006 through 2012 in the Chukchi
Sea as part of the Joint Monitoring
Program will be continued by Shell
during its proposed open-water marine
survey and equipment recovery and
maintenance activity in 2013. The
acoustic ‘‘net’’ array used during the
2006–2012 field seasons in the Chukchi
Sea was designed to accomplish two
main objectives. The first was to collect
information on the occurrence and
distribution of marine mammals
(including beluga whale, bowhead
whale, walrus and other species) that
may be available to subsistence hunters
near villages located on the Chukchi Sea
coast and to document their relative
abundance, habitat use, and migratory
patterns. The second objective was to
measure the ambient soundscape
throughout the eastern Chukchi Sea and
to record received levels of sounds from
industry and other activities further
offshore in the Chukchi Sea.
The basic components of this effort
consist of autonomous acoustic
recorders deployed widely across the
US Chukchi Sea through the open water
season and then the winter season.
These precisely calibrated systems will
sample at 16 kHz with 24-bit resolution,
and are capable of recording marine
mammal sounds and making
anthropogenic noise measurements. The
net array configuration will include a
regional array of 24 Autonomous
Multichannel Acoustic Recorders
(AMAR) deployed July–October off the
four main transect locations: Cape
Lisburne, Point Hope, Wainwright and
Barrow. These will be augmented by six
AMARs deployed August 2013–August
2014 at Hanna Shoal. Six additional
AMAR recorders will be deployed in a
hexagonal geometry at 16 km from the
nominal Burger A exploratory well
location to monitor directional
variations of equipment recovery/
maintenance and support vessel sounds
in addition to examining marine
mammal vocalization patterns in the
vicinity of these activities. One new
recorder will be placed 32 km northwest
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of the Burger A well site to monitor for
sound propagation toward the south
side of Hanna Shoal, which acoustic
and satellite tag monitoring has
identified as frequented by walrus in
August. Marine survey activities will
occur in areas within the coverage of the
net array. All of these offshore systems
will capture marine survey and
equipment recovery/maintenance
sounds, where present, over large
distances to help characterize the sound
transmission properties in the Chukchi
Sea. They will continue to provide a
large amount of information related to
marine mammal distributions in the
Chukchi Sea.
In early October, all of the regional
recorders will be retrieved except for the
six Hanna Shoal recorders, which will
continue to record on a duty cycle until
August 2014. An additional set of nine
Aural winter recorders will be deployed
at the same time at the same locations
that were instrumented in winter 2012–
2013. These recorders will sample at 16
kHz on a 17% duty cycle (40 minutes
every 4 hours). The winter recorders
deployed in previous years have
provided important information about
bowhead, beluga, walrus and several
seal species migrations in fall and
spring.
Monitoring Plan Peer Review
The MMPA requires that monitoring
plans be independently peer reviewed
‘‘where the proposed activity may affect
the availability of a species or stock for
taking for subsistence uses’’ (16 U.S.C.
1371(a)(5)(D)(ii)(III)). Regarding this
requirement, NMFS’ implementing
regulations state, ‘‘Upon receipt of a
complete monitoring plan, and at its
discretion, [NMFS] will either submit
the plan to members of a peer review
panel for review or within 60 days of
receipt of the proposed monitoring plan,
schedule a workshop to review the
plan’’ (50 CFR 216.108(d)).
NMFS convened an independent peer
review panel to review Shell’s
mitigation and monitoring plan in its
IHA application for taking marine
mammals incidental to the proposed
open-water marine surveys and
equipment recovery and maintenance in
the Chukchi Sea during 2013. The panel
met on January 8 and 9, 2013, and
provided their final report to NMFS on
March 5, 2013. The full panel report can
be viewed at: https://
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/
incidental.htm#applications.
NMFS provided the panel with
Shell’s monitoring and mitigation plan
and asked the panel to address the
following questions and issues for
Shell’s plan:
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28427
• Will the applicant’s stated
objectives effectively further the
understanding of the impacts of their
activities on marine mammals and
otherwise accomplish the goals stated
below? If not, how should the objectives
be modified to better accomplish the
goals above?
• Can the applicant achieve the stated
objectives based on the methods
described in the plan?
• Are there technical modifications to
the proposed monitoring techniques and
methodologies proposed by the
applicant that should be considered to
better accomplish their stated
objectives?
• Are there techniques not proposed
by the applicant (i.e., additional
monitoring techniques or
methodologies) that should be
considered for inclusion in the
applicant’s monitoring program to better
accomplish their stated objectives?
• What is the best way for an
applicant to present their data and
results (formatting, metrics, graphics,
etc.) in the required reports that are to
be submitted to NMFS (i.e., 90-day
report and comprehensive report)?
The peer review panel report contains
recommendations that the panel
members felt were applicable to the
Shell’s monitoring plans. Overall the
panel feels that the proposed methods
for visual monitoring are adequate and
appropriate as the primary means of
assessing the acute near-field impacts of
the proposed marine surveys. The panel
also cautions that there should be
realistic expectations regarding the
limitations of these surveys to provide
scientific-level measurements of
distribution and density, but in terms of
meeting the monitoring requirements,
the panel finds the proposed methods
adequate and appreciate the
improvements and modifications (e.g.,
in terms of PSO training, field data
collection methods) made over the past
few years. Nevertheless, the panel also
provides several recommendations
concerning improving night-time
monitoring, passive acoustic
monitoring, and data analysis and
presentation.
NMFS has reviewed the report and
evaluated all recommendations made by
the panel. NMFS has determined that
there are several measures that Shell can
incorporate into its 2013 open-water
marine surveys and equipment recovery
and maintenance program.
Additionally, there are other
recommendations that NMFS has
determined would also result in better
data collection, and could potentially be
implemented by oil and gas industry
applicants, but which likely could not
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be implemented for the 2013 open-water
season due to time constrains for this
season. While it may not be possible to
implement those changes this year,
NMFS believes that they are worthwhile
and appropriate suggestions that may
require a bit more time to implement,
and Shell should consider incorporating
them into future monitoring plans
should Shell decide to apply for IHAs
in the future.
The following subsections lay out
measures that NMFS recommends for
implementation as part of the 2013
open-water marine surveys and
equipment recovery and maintenance
program by Shell and those that are
recommended for future programs.
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Recommendations for Inclusion in the
2013 Monitoring Plan
The peer review panel’s report
contains several recommendations
regarding visual monitoring during lowvisibility and presentation of data in
reports, which NMFS agrees that Shell
should incorporate:
(1) Visual monitoring during lowvisibility
• Shell should use the best available
technology to improve detection
capability during periods of fog and
other types of inclement weather. Such
technology might include night-vision
goggles or binoculars as well as other
instruments that incorporate infrared
technology; presently the efficacy of
these technologies appears limited but
the panel and NMFS encourage
continued consideration of their
applicability as it continues to evolve.
(2) Data analysis and presentation
• Shell should apply appropriate
statistical procedures for probability
estimation of marine mammals missed,
based on observational data acquired
during some period of time before and
after night or fog events.
• Shell should provide useful
summaries and interpretations of results
of the various elements of the
monitoring results. A clear timeline and
spatial (map) representation/summary
of operations and important
observations should be given. Any and
all mitigation measures (e.g., vessel
course deviations for animal avoidance,
operational shut down) should be
summarized. Additionally, an
assessment of the efficacy of monitoring
methods should be provided.
In addition to these
recommendations, Shell also agrees to
produce a weekly GIS application that
would be available on the web for
regulators to view for every observation
and mitigation measure implemented.
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Recommendations to be Partially
Implemented or Considered for Future
Monitoring Plans
In addition, the panelists recommended
that
• Shell should integrate the acoustic
information from the net array to the
greatest extent possible to assess the
aggregate known activities, at least those
from Shell operations but more broadly
as possible, to assess patterns of marine
mammal vocal activities and how that
might be used to investigate potentially
broader impacts from overlapping/
interacting activities.
• Shell should consider integration of
visual and acoustic data from the
Chukchi monitoring program and the
Joint Monitoring Program to produce
estimates of bowhead, beluga, and
walrus density using methods
developed in the Density Estimation for
Cetacean from Passive Acoustic Fixed
Sensors (DECAF) project by the Center
for Research into Ecological and
Environmental Modeling (CREEM) at
the University of St. Andrews in
Scotland.
After discussion with Shell, NMFS
decided not to implement these two
recommendations in full during Shell’s
2013 open-water marine surveys and
equipment recovery and maintenance
program because the systematic and
comprehensive analyses of these
acoustic datasets would require far more
time and effort than what would be
needed to assess marine mammal takes
under the MMPA. However, Shell
agrees that it will provide data from net
arrays supported in part, or in whole, by
Shell and will participate in the
integration of acoustic arrays to assess
the sound field of the lease areas in the
Chukchi and Beaufort seas for the
purposes of assessing patterns of marine
mammal distribution and behavior and
for assessing the impacts of multiple
activities/factors. In addition, Shell will
evaluate the potential of the DECAF
project and efforts will be made to
assess the applicability of the data
collection infrastructure established in
the Shell monitoring program to these
and similar studies.
II. Reporting Measures
Sound Source Verification Reports
A report on the preliminary results of
the sound source verification
measurements, including the measured
190, 180, 160, and 120 dB (rms) radii of
the airgun sources, would be submitted
within 14 days after collection of those
measurements at the start of the field
season. This report will specify the
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distances of the exclusion zones that
were adopted for the survey.
Field Reports
Throughout the survey program, PSOs
will prepare a report each day or at such
other intervals, summarizing the recent
results of the monitoring program. The
reports will summarize the species and
numbers of marine mammals sighted.
These reports will be provided to NMFS
and to the survey operators.
Technical Reports
The results of Shell’s 2013 vesselbased monitoring, including estimates
of ‘‘take’’ by harassment, would be
presented in the ‘‘90-day’’ and Final
Technical reports, if the IHA is issued
and the proposed open-water marine
surveys and equipment recovery and
maintenance program is conducted. The
Technical Reports should be submitted
to NMFS within 90 days after the end
of the seismic survey. The Technical
Reports will include:
(a) Summaries of monitoring effort
(e.g., total hours, total distances, and
marine mammal distribution through
the study period, accounting for sea
state and other factors affecting
visibility and detectability of marine
mammals);
(b) analyses of the effects of various
factors influencing detectability of
marine mammals (e.g., sea state, number
of observers, and fog/glare);
(c) species composition, occurrence,
and distribution of marine mammal
sightings, including date, water depth,
numbers, age/size/gender categories (if
determinable), group sizes, and ice
cover;
(d) To better assess impacts to marine
mammals, data analysis should be
separated into periods when a seismic
airgun array (or a single mitigation
airgun) is operating and when it is not.
Final and comprehensive reports to
NMFS should summarize and plot:
• Data for periods when a seismic
array is active and when it is not; and
• The respective predicted received
sound conditions over fairly large areas
(tens of km) around operations;
(e) sighting rates of marine mammals
during periods with and without airgun
activities (and other variables that could
affect detectability), such as:
• initial sighting distances versus
airgun activity state;
• closest point of approach versus
airgun activity state;
• observed behaviors and types of
movements versus airgun activity state;
• numbers of sightings/individuals
seen versus airgun activity state;
• distribution around the survey
vessel versus airgun activity state; and
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• estimates of take by harassment;
(f) Reported results from all
hypothesis tests should include
estimates of the associated statistical
power when practicable;
(g) Estimate and report uncertainty in
all take estimates. Uncertainty could be
expressed by the presentation of
confidence limits, a minimummaximum, posterior probability
distribution, etc.; the exact approach
would be selected based on the
sampling method and data available;
(h) The report should clearly compare
authorized takes to the level of actual
estimated takes; and
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Notification of Injured or Dead Marine
Mammals
In addition, NMFS would require
Shell to notify NMFS’ Office of
Protected Resources and NMFS’
Stranding Network within 48 hours of
sighting an injured or dead marine
mammal in the vicinity of marine
survey operations. Shell shall provide
NMFS with the species or description of
the animal(s), the condition of the
animal(s) (including carcass condition if
the animal is dead), location, time of
first discovery, observed behaviors (if
alive), and photo or video (if available).
In the event that an injured or dead
marine mammal is found by Shell that
is not in the vicinity of the proposed
open-water marine survey program,
Shell would report the same
information as listed above as soon as
operationally feasible to NMFS.
Estimated Take by Incidental
Harassment
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]. Only take by Level B
behavioral harassment is anticipated as
a result of the proposed open water
marine survey program. Anticipated
impacts to marine mammals are
associated with noise propagation from
the survey airgun(s) used in the shallow
hazards survey.
The full suite of potential impacts to
marine mammals was described in
detail in the ‘‘Potential Effects of the
Specified Activity on Marine Mammals’’
section found earlier in this document.
The potential effects of sound from the
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proposed open water marine survey
programs might include one or more of
the following: masking of natural
sounds; behavioral disturbance; nonauditory physical effects; and, at least in
theory, temporary or permanent hearing
impairment (Richardson et al. 1995). As
discussed earlier in this document, the
most common impact will likely be
from behavioral disturbance, including
avoidance of the ensonified area or
changes in speed, direction, and/or
diving profile of the animal. For reasons
discussed previously in this document,
hearing impairment (TTS and PTS) is
highly unlikely to occur based on the
proposed mitigation and monitoring
measures that would preclude marine
mammals from being exposed to noise
levels high enough to cause hearing
impairment.
For impulse sounds, such as those
produced by airgun(s) used in the site
clearance and shallow hazards surveys,
NMFS uses the 160 dB (rms) re 1 mPa
isopleth to indicate the onset of Level B
harassment. For non-impulse sounds,
such as those produced by vessel’s DP
thrusters during the proposed
equipment recovery and maintenance
program, NMFS uses the 120 dB (rms)
re 1 mPa isopleth to indicate the onset
of Level B harassment. Shell provided
calculations for both the 160– and 120–
dB isopleths produced by these
activities and then used those isopleths
to estimate takes by harassment. NMFS
used the calculations to make the
necessary MMPA preliminary findings.
Shell provided a full description of the
methodology used to estimate takes by
harassment in its IHA application,
which is also provided in the following
sections.
Basis for Estimating ‘‘Take by
Harassment’’
The estimated takes by harassment is
calculated in this section by multiplying
the expected densities of marine
mammals that may occur near the
planned activities by the area of water
likely to be exposed to impulse sound
levels of ≥160 dB (rms) re 1 mPa and
non-impulse sound levels ≥120 dB (rms)
re 1 mPa.
Marine mammal occurrence near the
operation is likely to vary by season and
habitat, mostly related to the presence
or absence of sea ice. Although current
NMFS’ noise exposure standards state
that Level B harassment occurs at
exposure levels ≥160 dB (rms) re 1 mPa
by impulse sources and exposure levels
≥120 dB (rms) re 1 mPa by non-impulse
sources, there is no evidence that
avoidance at these received sound levels
would have significant biological effects
on individual animals. Any changes in
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28429
behavior caused by sounds at or near
the specified received levels would
likely fall within the normal variation in
such activities that would occur in the
absence of the planned operations.
However, these received levels are
currently used to set the threshold for
Level B behavioral harassment.
Marine Mammal Density Estimates
Marine mammal density estimates in
the Chukchi Sea have been derived for
two time periods, the summer period
covering July and August, and the fall
period including September and
October. Animal densities encountered
in the Chukchi Sea during both of these
time periods will further depend on the
habitat zone within which the
operations are occurring: open water or
ice margin. Vessel and equipment
limitations will result in very little
activity occurring in or near sea ice;
however, if ice is present near the areas
of activity some sounds produced by the
activities may remain above disturbance
threshold levels in ice margin habitats.
Therefore, open water densities have
been used to estimate potential ‘‘take by
harassment’’ in 90 percent of the area
expected to be ensonified above
disturbance thresholds while ice margin
densities have been used in the
remaining 10 percent of the ensonified
area.
For a few marine mammal species,
several density estimates were available.
In those cases, the mean and maximum
estimates were determined from the
reported densities or survey data. In
other cases, no applicable estimate was
available, so correction factors were
used to arrive density estimates. These
are described in detail in the following
sections.
Detectability bias, quantified in part
by f(0), is associated with diminishing
sightability with increasing lateral
distance from the survey trackline.
Availability bias, g(0), refers to the fact
that there is <100 percent probability of
sighting an animal that is present along
the survey trackline.
Nine cetacean and four pinniped
species under NMFS jurisdiction are
known to occur in the planned project
area in the Chukchi Sea. Five of them
(bowhead, fin, and humpback whales,
and ringed and bearded seals) are listed
as ‘‘endangered’’ or ‘‘threatened’’ under
the ESA.
(1) Beluga Whale
Summer densities of belugas in
offshore waters are expected to be low,
with somewhat higher densities in icemargin and nearshore areas. Aerial
surveys have recorded few belugas in
the offshore Chukchi Sea during the
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summer months (Moore et al. 2000).
Aerial surveys of the Chukchi Sea in
2008–2009 flown by the National
Marine Mammal Laboratory (NMML) as
part of the Chukchi Offshore Monitoring
in Drilling Area (COMIDA) project have
only reported 5 beluga sightings during
>8,700 mi (>14,000 km) of on-transect
effort, only 2 of which were offshore
(COMIDA 2009). One of the three
nearshore sightings was of a large group
(∼275 individuals on July 12, 2009) of
migrating belugas along the coastline
just north of Peard Bay. Additionally,
only one beluga sighting was recorded
during >49,710 mi (>80,000 km) of
visual effort during good visibility
conditions from industry vessels
operating in the Chukchi Sea in
September–October of 2006–2010
(Hartin et al. 2011). If belugas are
present during the summer, they are
more likely to occur in or near the ice
edge or close to shore during their
northward migration. Expected
densities have previously been
calculated from data in Moore et al.
(2000). However, more recent data from
COMIDA aerial surveys during 2008–
2010 are now available (Clarke and
Ferguson in prep.). Effort and sightings
reported by Clarke and Ferguson (in
prep.) were used to calculate the average
open-water density estimate. Clarke and
Ferguson (in prep) reported two ontransect beluga sightings (5 individuals)
during 11,985 km of on-transect effort in
waters 36–50 m deep in the Chukchi
Sea during July and August. The mean
group size of these two sightings is 2.5.
A f(0) value of 2.841 and g(0) value of
0.58 from Harwood et al. (1996) were
also used in the density calculation.
Specific data on the relative abundance
of beluga in open-water versus icemargin habitat during the summer in the
Chukchi Sea is not available. However,
belugas are commonly associated with
ice, so an inflation factor of 4 was used
to estimate the average ice-margin
density from the open-water density.
Very low densities observed from
vessels operating in the Chukchi Sea
during non-seismic periods and
locations in July–August of 2006–2010
(0.0–0.0003/mi2, 0.0–0.0001/km2;
Hartin et al. 2011), also suggest the
number of beluga whales likely to be
present near the planned activities will
not be large.
In the fall, beluga whale densities
offshore in the Chukchi Sea are
expected to be somewhat higher than in
the summer because individuals of the
eastern Chukchi Sea stock and the
Beaufort Sea stock will be migrating
south to their wintering grounds in the
Bering Sea (Allen and Angliss 2012).
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Densities derived from survey results in
the northern Chukchi Sea in Clarke and
Ferguson (in prep) were used as the
average density for open-water fall
season estimates. Clarke and Ferguson
(in prep) reported 3 beluga sightings (6
individuals) during 10,036 km of ontransect effort in water depths 36–50 m.
The mean group size of those three
sightings is 2. A f(0) value of 2.841 and
g(0) value of 0.58 from Harwood et al.
(1996) were used in the calculation.
Moore et al. (2000) reported lower than
expected beluga sighting rates in openwater during fall surveys in the Beaufort
and Chukchi seas, so an inflation value
of 4 was used to estimate the average
ice-margin density from the open-water
density. Based on the few beluga
sightings from vessels operating in the
Chukchi Sea during non-seismic periods
and locations in September–November
of 2006–2010 (Hartin et al. 2011), the
relatively low densities are consistent
with what is likely to be observed form
vessels during the planned operations.
(2) Bowhead Whale
By July, most bowhead whales are
northeast of the Chukchi Sea, within or
migrating toward their summer feeding
grounds in the eastern Beaufort Sea. No
bowheads were reported during 6,640
mi (10,686 km) of on-transect effort in
the Chukchi Sea by Moore et al. (2000).
Aerial surveys in 2008–2010 by the
NMML as part of the COMIDA project
reported only 6 sightings during
>16,020 mi (>25,781 km) of on-transect
effort (Clarke and Ferguson in prep).
Two of the six sightings were in waters
≤35 m deep and the remaining four
sightings were in waters 51–200 m deep.
Bowhead whales were also rarely
sighted in July–August of 2006–2010
during aerial surveys of the Chukchi Sea
coast (Thomas et al. 2011). This is
consistent with movements of tagged
whales, all of which moved through the
Chukchi Sea by early May 2009, and
tended to travel relatively close to shore,
especially in the northern Chukchi Sea.
The estimate of bowhead whale density
in the Chukchi Sea was calculated by
assuming there was one bowhead
sighting during the 7,447 mi (11,985
km) of survey effort in waters 36–50 m
deep in the Chukchi Sea during July–
August reported in Clarke and Ferguson
(in prep), although no bowheads were
actually observed during those surveys.
The mean group size from September–
October sightings reported in Clarke and
Ferguson (in prep) is 1.1, and this was
also used in the calculation of summer
densities. The group size value, along
with a f(0) value of 2 and a g(0) value
of 0.07, both from Thomas et al. (2002)
were used to estimate a summer density
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of bowhead whales. Bowheads are not
expected to be encountered in higher
densities near ice in the summer (Moore
et al. 2000), so the same density
estimates are used for open-water and
ice-margin habitats. Densities from
vessel based surveys in the Chukchi Sea
during non-seismic periods and
locations in July–August of 2006–2010
(Hartin et al. 2011) ranged from 0.0005–
0.0021/mi2 (0.0002–0.0008/km2).
During the fall, bowhead whales that
summered in the Beaufort Sea and
Amundsen Gulf migrate west and south
to their wintering grounds in the Bering
Sea making it more likely that bowheads
will be encountered in the Chukchi Sea
at this time of year. Moore et al. (2000)
reported 34 bowhead sightings during
27,560 mi (44,354 km) of on-transect
survey effort in the Chukchi Sea during
September–October. Thomas et al.
(2011) also reported increased sightings
on coastal surveys of the Chukchi Sea
during October and November of 2006–
2010. GPS tagging of bowheads appear
to show that migration routes through
Chukchi Sea are more variable than
through the Beaufort Sea (Quakenbush
et al. 2010). Some of the routes taken by
bowheads remain well north of the
planned marine survey activities while
others have passed near to or through
the area. Kernel densities estimated
from GPS locations of whales suggest
that bowheads do not spend much time
(e.g., feeding or resting) in the northcentral Chukchi Sea near the area of
planned activities (Quakenbush et al.
2010). Clarke and Ferguson (in prep)
reported 14 sightings (15 individuals)
during 10,036 km of on transect aerial
survey effort in 2008–2010. The mean
group size of those sightings is 1.1. The
same f(0) and g(0) values that were used
for the summer estimates above were
used for the fall estimates. Moore et al.
(2000) found that bowheads were
detected more often than expected in
association with ice in the Chukchi Sea
in September–October, so a density of
twice the average open-water density
was used as the average ice-margin
density. Densities from vessel based
surveys in the Chukchi Sea during nonseismic periods and locations in
September–November of 2006–2010
(Hartin et al. 2011) ranged from 0.0008
to 0.0135/mi2 (0.0003–0.0052/km2).
This suggests the densities used in the
calculations are somewhat higher than
are likely to be observed from vessels
near the areas of planned operations.
(3) Gray Whale
Gray whale densities are expected to
be much higher in the summer months
than during the fall. Moore et al. (2000)
found the distribution of gray whales in
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the planned operational area was
scattered and limited to nearshore areas
where most whales were observed in
water less than 114 ft (35 m) deep.
Thomas et al. (2011) also reported
substantial declines in the sighting rates
of gray whales in the fall. The average
open-water summer density was
calculated from 2008–2010 aerial survey
effort and sightings in Clarke and
Ferguson (in prep) for water depths
118–164 ft (36–50 m) including 54
sightings (73 individuals) during 7,447
mi (11,985 km) of on-transect effort. The
average group size of those sightings is
1.35. Correction factors f(0) = 2.49
(Forney and Barlow 1998) and g(0) =
0.30 (Forney and Barlow 1998, Mallonee
1991) were also used in the density
calculation. Gray whales are not
commonly associated with sea ice, but
may be present near it, so the same
densities were used for ice-margin
habitat as were derived for open-water
habitat during both seasons. Densities
from vessel based surveys in the
Chukchi Sea during non-seismic periods
and locations in July–August of 2006–
2010 (Hartin et al. 2011) ranged from
0.0021/mi2 to 0.0221/mi2 (0.0008/km2
to 0.0085/km2).
In the fall, gray whales may be
dispersed more widely through the
northern Chukchi Sea (Moore et al.
2000), but overall densities are likely to
be decreasing as the whales begin
migrating south. A density calculated
from effort and sightings (15 sightings
[19 individuals] during 6,236 mi (10,036
km) of on-transect effort) in water 118–
164 ft (36–50 m) deep during
September–October reported by Clarke
and Ferguson (in prep) was used as the
average estimate for the Chukchi Sea
during the fall period. The
corresponding group size value of 1.26,
along with the same f(0) and g(0) values
described above were used in the
calculation. Densities from vessel based
surveys in the Chukchi Sea during nonseismic periods and locations in
September–November of 2006–2010
(Hartin et al. 2011) ranged from 0.0/mi2
to 0.0114/mi2 (0.0/km2 to 0.0044/km2).
(4) Harbor Porpoise
Harbor Porpoise densities were
estimated from industry data collected
during 2006–2010 activities in the
Chukchi Sea. Prior to 2006, no reliable
estimates were available for the Chukchi
Sea and harbor porpoise presence was
expected to be very low and limited to
nearshore regions. Observers on
industry vessels in 2006–2010, however,
recorded sightings throughout the
Chukchi Sea during the summer and
early fall months. Density estimates
from 2006–2010 observations during
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non-seismic periods and locations in
July–August ranged from 0.0034/mi2 to
0.0075/mi2 (0.0013/km2 to 0.0029/km2)
(Hartin et al. 2011). The average density
from the summer season of those three
years (0.0057/mi2, 0.0022/km2) was
used as the average open-water density
estimate. Harbor porpoise are not
expected to be present in higher
numbers near ice, so the open-water
densities were used for ice-margin
habitat in both seasons. Harbor porpoise
densities recorded during industry
operations in the fall months of 2006–
2010 were slightly lower and ranged
from 0.0/mi2 to 0.0114/mi2 (0.0/km2 to
0.0044/km2). The average of those years
(0.0055/mi2, 0.0021/km2) was again
used as the average density estimate.
(5) Other Cetaceans
The remaining five cetacean species
that could be encountered in the
Chukchi Sea during Shell’s planned
marine survey program include the
humpback whale, killer whale, minke
whale, fin whale, and narwhal.
Although there is evidence of the
occasional occurrence of these animals
in the Chukchi Sea, it is unlikely that
more than a few individuals will be
encountered during the planned marine
survey activities. Clarke et al. (2011b)
and Hartin et al. (2011) reported
humpback whale sightings; George and
Suydam (1998) reported killer whales;
Brueggeman et al. (1990), Hartin et al.
(2011) and COMIDA (2011) reported
minke whales; and Clarke et al. (2011b)
and Hartin et al. (2011) reported fin
whales. Narwhal sightings in the
Chukchi Sea have not been reported in
recent literature, but subsistence
hunters occasionally report observations
near Barrow, and Reeves et al. (2002)
indicated a small number of extralimital
sightings in the Chukchi Sea.
(6) Ringed and Bearded Seals
Ringed seal and bearded seals
summer ice-margin densities were
available in Bengtson et al. (2005) from
spring surveys in the offshore pack ice
zone of the northern Chukchi Sea.
However, corrections for bearded seal
availability, g(0), based on haulout and
diving patterns were not available.
Densities of ringed and bearded seals in
open water are expected to be somewhat
lower in the summer when preferred
pack ice habitat may still be present in
the Chukchi Sea. Average and
maximum open-water densities have
been estimated at 3⁄4 of the ice margin
densities during both seasons for both
species. The fall density of ringed seals
in the offshore Chukchi Sea has been
estimated as 2⁄3 the summer densities
because ringed seals begin to reoccupy
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nearshore fast ice areas as it forms in the
fall. Bearded seals may also begin to
leave the Chukchi Sea in the fall, but
less is known about their movement
patterns so fall densities were left
unchanged from summer densities. For
comparison, the ringed seal density
estimates calculated from data collected
during summer 2006–2010 industry
operations ranged from 0.0359/mi2 to
0.1206/mi2 (0.0138/km2 to 0.0464/km2)
(Hartin et al. 2011). These estimates are
lower than those made by Bengtson et
al. (2005) which is not surprising given
the different survey methods and
timing.
(7) Spotted Seal
Little information on spotted seal
densities in offshore areas of the
Chukchi Sea is available. Spotted seal
densities in the summer were estimated
by multiplying the ringed seal densities
by 0.02. This was based on the ratio of
the estimated Chukchi populations of
the two species. Chukchi Sea spotted
seal abundance was estimated by
assuming that 8 percent of the Alaskan
population of spotted seals is present in
the Chukchi Sea during the summer and
fall (Rugh et al. 1997), the Alaskan
population of spotted seals is 59,214
(Allen and Angliss 2012), and that the
population of ringed seals in the
Alaskan Chukchi Sea is ∼208,000
animals (Bengtson et al. 2005). In the
fall, spotted seals show increased use of
coastal haulouts so densities were
estimated to be 2⁄3 of the summer
densities.
(8) Ribbon Seals
Four ribbon seal sightings were
reported during industry vessel
operations in the Chukchi Sea in 2006–
2010 (Hartin et al. 2011). The resulting
density estimate of 0.0013/mi2 (0.0007/
km2) was used for both seasons and
habitat zones.
Area Potentially Exposed to Sound
Levels above 160 dB during Site
Clearance and Shallow Hazards Surveys
As described earlier, Shell’s proposed
site clearance and shallow hazards
surveys would occur in three survey
areas of the Chukchi Sea Lease Area.
These three survey areas are the Burger
prospect (Survey Area 2), Crackerjack
prospect (Survey Area 1), and an area
northeast of Burger (Survey Area 3;
Figure 1–2 of the IHA application). The
precise survey sites within the survey
areas at these prospects have not yet
been determined, but there are five
notional locations at Burger, three at
Crackerjack, and one northeast of
Burger. The five potential survey sites at
Burger range in size from 23 km2 to 40
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km2 (9 mi2 to 15 mi2) while the three
potential sites at Crackerjack range from
35 km2 to 119 km2 (14 mi2 to 46 mi2).
The single site northeast of Burger may
be ∼119 km2 (46 mi2).
Shell plans to use the same 4 x 10 in3
airgun configuration that was used
during site clearance and shallow
hazards surveys in the Chukchi Sea in
2008 and 2009. Measurements during
these two years occurred at three
locations: Honeyguide (west of the
Crackerjack prospect), Crackerjack, and
Burger. The measurements showed that
the Burger site had the largest radius
from the source to the 160 dB (rms) re
1 mPa isopleths at 1,800 m. As a
cautionary approach, the Burger site
distance (1,800 m from the source) plus
a 25 percent inflation factor (equaling
2,250 m) was used to estimate the total
area that may be ensonified to 160 dB
(rms) re 1 mPa by seismic sounds at all
of the potential survey sites at any given
time, which equals to 15.9 km2.
Shell’s operations plan calls for site
clearance and shallow hazards surveys
to begin at the Burger prospect. Adding
the 2.25 km 160 dB (rms) radius to the
perimeter of all five of the notional
survey grids at that site results in a total
area at Burger of 477 km2 being exposed
to seismic sound ≥160 dB (rms). This is
approximately 40 percent of the total
area that may be exposed to seismic
sounds during the survey activities and
it has been attributed to the July–August
period. Adding the 2.25 km 160 dB
(rms) radius to the perimeter of the three
notional survey areas at Crackerjack and
the one northeast of Burger results in a
total area of 826 km2 being potentially
exposed to pulsed seismic sounds ≥160
dB (rms). Since these areas would likely
be surveyed after the Burger sites are
completed they have been attributed to
the September–October period. The
total area potentially exposed is then
1,303 km2 (477 km2 + 826 km2).
Area Potentially Exposed to Sound
Levels Above 120 dB During Equipment
Recovery and Maintenance Program
As described earlier, Shell’s proposed
equipment recovery and maintenance at
the Burger A well site where drilling
took place in 2012 would involve a
vessel engaging with DP thrusters while
remotely operated vehicles or divers are
used to perform the required work.
Sounds produced by the vessel while in
dynamic positioning mode will be nonimpulse in nature and are thus
evaluated at the ≥120 dB (rms) level.
The vessel from which equipment
recovery and maintenance will be
conducted has not yet been determined.
Various sound measurements were
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conducted from vessels during DP
operations and during drilling activities
(which may include DP operations) in
the Chukchi Sea in the past two years.
Under most circumstances, sounds from
dynamic positioning thrusters are
expected to be well below 120 dB (rms)
at distances greater than 10 km (6 mi).
Among those measurements, the drilling
activities conducted by the Tor Viking II
at the Burger A well site in 2012 may
have included dynamic positioning, and
its distance of 13 km (8 mi) was selected
to model the 120 dB (rms) re 1 mPa
isopleths for Shell’s proposed 2013
equipment recovery and maintenance
program. This yields to a 120 dB (rms)
re 1 mPa ensonified zone of
approximately 531 km2 (205 mi2).
The equipment recovery and
maintenance work at the well site may
occur during either or both of the
seasonal periods and may take place
over as many as 28 days. Therefore, the
entire area potentially exposed to
continuous sounds ≥120 dB (rms) from
dynamic positioning thrusters has been
applied to densities of marine mammals
during both seasonal periods.
Potential Number of ‘‘Take by
Harassment’’
As stated earlier, the estimates of
potential Level B takes of marine
mammals by noise exposure are based
on a consideration of the number of
marine mammals that might be present
during operations in the Chukchi Sea
and the anticipated area exposed to
those sound pressure levels (SPLs)
above 160 dB re 1 mPa for impulse
sources (seismic aregun during site
clearance and shallow hazards surveys)
and SPLs above 120 dB re 1 mPa for nonimpulse sources (vessel’s DP operation
during equipment recovery and
maintenance program).
The number of individuals of each
species potentially exposed to received
levels was estimated by multiplying the
anticipated area to be ensonified to the
specified SPLs in each season (summer
and fall) and habitat zone (open water
and ice margin) to which a density
applies, by the expected species density.
The numbers of individuals potentially
exposed were then summed for each
species across the two seasons and
habitat zones.
An additional calculation was made
that assumes the entire population of
marine mammals within the 531 km2
(205 mi2) area exposed to non-pulsed
sounds ≥120 dB (rms) re 1 mPa during
the equipment recovery and
maintenance activity is different every
day during that 28 day period. To do
this, the 28 days were split evenly
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between the July–August and
September–October periods (14 days in
each period). The area ensonified by
continuous sounds on each day was
then multiplied by 14 before being
multiplied by the appropriate species
density within each season.
Some of the animals estimated to be
exposed, particularly migrating
bowhead whales, might show avoidance
reactions before being exposed to
sounds at the specified threshold levels.
Thus, these calculations actually
estimate the number of individuals
potentially exposed to the specified
sounds levels that would occur if there
were no avoidance of the area
ensonified to that level.
As described above, vessel and
equipment limitations will result in
very little activity occurring in or near
sea ice; however, if ice is present near
the areas of activity, some sounds
produced by the activities may remain
above disturbance threshold levels in
ice margin habitats. Therefore, open
water densities have been used to
estimate potential ‘‘take by harassment’’
in 90 percent of the area expected to be
ensonified above disturbance thresholds
while ice margin densities have been
used in the remaining 10 percent of the
ensonified area. Species with an
estimated average number of
individuals exposed equal to zero are
included below for completeness, but
are not likely to be encountered.
Numbers of marine mammals that
might be present and potentially taken
are summarized in Table 4 based on
calculation described above.
Some of the animals estimated to be
exposed, particularly migrating
bowhead whales, might show avoidance
reactions before being exposed to ≥160
dB (rms) re 1 mPa. Thus, these
calculations actually estimate the
number of individuals potentially
exposed to specific SPLs, i.e., ≥160 dB
(rms) re 1 mPa for impulse noise and
≥120 dB (rms) re 1 mPa for non-impulse
noise, that would occur if there were no
avoidance of the area ensonified to that
level.
Because beluga whales may form
groups, additional takes were added on
top of the density-based take calculation
in the event a large group is
encountered during the survey. For
marine mammal species that are rare
and for which no density estimates are
available in the vicinity of the proposed
project area (such as humpback, fin,
minke, and killer whales and narwhal),
a small number of takes have been
requested in case they are encountered
(Table 4).
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28433
TABLE 4—ESTIMATES OF THE POSSIBLE MAXIMUM NUMBERS OF MARINE MAMMALS TAKEN BY LEVEL B HARASSMENT (EXPOSED TO ≥160 DB FROM AIRGUN SOUND AND ≥120 DB FROM DYNAMIC POSITIONING OPERATIONS) DURING
SHELL’S PROPOSED MARINE SURVEY AND EQUIPMENT RECOVERY AND MAINTENANCE ACTIVITY IN THE CHUKCHI SEA,
JULY–OCTOBER 2013, INCLUDING A DAILY MULTIPLIER FOR THE ENTIRE 28 DAYS OPERATIONAL PERIOD AT THE
BURGER A WELL SITE
Species
Level B takes
Bowhead whale .......................................................................................................................
Gray whale ...............................................................................................................................
Fin whale .................................................................................................................................
Humpback whale .....................................................................................................................
Minke whale .............................................................................................................................
Beluga whale* ..........................................................................................................................
Narwhal ....................................................................................................................................
Killer whale ..............................................................................................................................
Harbor porpoise .......................................................................................................................
Ringed seal ..............................................................................................................................
Bearded seal ............................................................................................................................
Spotted seal .............................................................................................................................
Ribbon seal ..............................................................................................................................
Percent population
209
270
10
10
10
53
4
10
35
5,096
178
102
12
1.98
1.41
0.18
1.07
1.23
1.43
NA
3.18
0.07
2.44
0.07
0.17
0.02
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* Additional takes were added in the event that a large group of Beluga whales is encountered.
Estimated Take Conclusions
Effects on marine mammals are
generally expected to be restricted to
avoidance of the area around the
planned activities and short-term
changes in behavior, falling within the
MMPA definition of ‘‘Level B
harassment’’.
Cetaceans—The average estimates
without a daily multiplier for the
stationary operations suggest a total of
209 bowhead whales may be exposed to
sounds at or above the specified levels.
This number is approximately 1.98% of
the BCB population of 10,545 assessed
in 2001 (Allen and Angliss 2011) and is
assuming to be increasing at an annual
growth rate of 3.4% (Zeh and Punt
2005), which is supported by a 2004
population estimate of 12,631 by Koski
et al. (2010). Including a daily
multiplier brings the average estimate
up to 209 individual bowhead whales
with the daily multiplier (Table 4). The
total estimated number of gray whales
that may be exposed to sounds from the
activities ranges up to 270 with the
daily multiplier (Table 4). Fewer beluga
whales and harbor porpoises are likely
to be exposed to sounds during the
activities. The small numbers of other
whale species that may occur in the
Chukchi Sea are unlikely to be present
around the planned operations but
chance encounters may occur. The few
individuals would represent a very
small proportion of their respective
populations.
Pinnipeds—Ringed seal is by far the
most abundant species expected to be
encountered during the planned
operations. The best estimate of the
numbers of ringed seals exposed to
sounds at the specified received levels
during the planned activities is 727 not
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including a daily multiplier, and 5,096
if a daily multiplier is included. Both of
these numbers represent <3 percent of
the estimated Alaska population. Fewer
individuals of other pinniped species
are estimated to be exposed to sounds
at the specified received levels, also
representing small proportions of their
populations. Pinnipeds are unlikely to
react to non-impulse sounds until
received levels are much stronger than
120 dB (rms), so it is probable that a
smaller number of these animals would
actually be appreciably disturbed.
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 takes occur.
No injuries or mortalities are
anticipated to occur as a result of Shell’s
proposed 2013 marine surveys and
equipment recovery and maintenance
program in the Chukchi Sea, and none
are proposed to be authorized. The
proposed site clearance and shallow
hazards surveys would use a very small
40 in3 airgun array, which have much
less acoustic power outputs compared
to conventional airgun arrays with
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displacement volume in the range of
thousands of cubic inches. The modeled
isopleths at 180 dB, based on prior
measurements for the same airgun array
in the vicinity of the 2013 survey sites,
is expected to be 160 m from the source
at maximum. Source levels from vessel’s
DP thrusters during Shell’s proposed
equipment recovery and maintenance
program are below 180 dB re 1 mPa.
In addition, animals in the area are
not expected to incur hearing
impairment (i.e., TTS or PTS) or nonauditory physiological effects. The
modeled isopleths at 160 dB and 120
dB, based on prior measurements, are
expected to be approximately 1.8 km
and 13km from the airgun array and DPoperating vessel, respectively. Takes
will be limited to Level B behavioral
harassment. Although it is possible that
some individuals of marine mammals
may be exposed to sounds from the
proposed site clearance and shallow
hazard surveys and equipment recovery
and maintenance activities more than
once, the expanse of these multiexposures are expected to be less
extensive since either the animals or the
vessels conducting the marine surveys
will be moving constantly in and out of
the survey areas.
Most of the bowhead whales
encountered will likely show overt
disturbance (avoidance) only if they
receive airgun sounds with levels ≥ 160
dB re 1 mPa. Odontocete reactions to
seismic airgun pulses are usually
assumed to be limited to shorter
distances from the airgun(s) than are
those of mysticetes, probably in part
because odontocete low-frequency
hearing is assumed to be less sensitive
than that of mysticetes. However, at
least when in the Canadian Beaufort Sea
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in summer, belugas appear to be fairly
responsive to seismic energy, with few
being sighted within 6–12 mi (10–20
km) of seismic vessels during aerial
surveys (Miller et al. 2005). Belugas will
likely occur in small numbers in the
Chukchi Sea during the survey period
and few will likely be affected by the
survey activity.
Although the stationary nature of the
vessel that conducts equipment
recovery and maintenance could affect
different individuals of marine
mammals during the operations, the
relatively short period (28 days) of this
activity precludes the take of large
numbers of marine mammals. In
addition, the noise levels generated
from DP thrusters are much lower than
the levels from the airgun array, and the
modeled 120 dB isopleths is expected to
be 13 km at the maximum, resulting an
ensonified area of 531 km2.
Taking into account the mitigation
measures that are planned, effects on
marine mammals are generally expected
to be restricted to avoidance of a limited
area around Shell’s proposed openwater activities and short-term changes
in behavior, falling within the MMPA
definition of ‘‘Level B harassment’’. The
many reported cases of apparent
tolerance by cetaceans of seismic
exploration, vessel traffic, and some
other human activities show that coexistence is possible. Mitigation
measures such as controlled vessel
speed, dedicated marine mammal
observers, non-pursuit, and shut downs
or power downs when marine mammals
are seen within defined ranges will
further reduce short-term reactions and
minimize any effects on hearing
sensitivity. In all cases, the effects are
expected to be short-term, with no
lasting biological consequence.
Of the thirteen marine mammal
species likely to occur in the proposed
marine survey area, bowhead, fin, and
humpback whales and ringed and
bearded seals are listed as endangered
or threatened under the ESA. These
species are also designated as
‘‘depleted’’ under the MMPA. Despite
these designations, the Bering-ChukchiBeaufort stock of bowheads has been
increasing at a rate of 3.4 percent
annually for nearly a decade (Allen and
Angliss 2010). Additionally, during the
2001 census, 121 calves were counted,
which was the highest yet recorded. The
calf count provides corroborating
evidence for a healthy and increasing
population (Allen and Angliss 2010).
The occurrence of fin and humpback
whales in the proposed marine survey
areas is considered very rare. There is
no critical habitat designated in the U.S.
Arctic for the bowhead, fin, and
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humpback whales. The Alaska stock of
bearded seals, part of the Beringia
distinct population segment (DPS), and
the Arctic stock of ringed seals, have
recently been listed by NMFS as
threatened under the ESA. None of the
other species that may occur in the
project area are listed as threatened or
endangered under the ESA or
designated as depleted under the
MMPA.
Potential impacts to marine mammal
habitat were discussed previously in
this document (see the ‘‘Anticipated
Effects on Habitat’’ section). Although
some disturbance is possible to food
sources of marine mammals, the
impacts are anticipated to be minor
enough as to not affect rates of
recruitment or survival of marine
mammals in the area. Based on the vast
size of the Arctic Ocean where feeding
by marine mammals occurs versus the
localized area of the marine survey
activities, any missed feeding
opportunities in the direct project area
would be minor based on the fact that
other feeding areas exist elsewhere.
The estimated takes proposed to be
authorized represent 1.43% of the
Eastern Chukchi Sea population of
approximately 3,710 beluga whales,
3.18% of Aleutian Island and Bering Sea
stock of approximately 314 killer
whales, 0.07% of Bering Sea stock of
approximately 48,215 harbor porpoises,
1.41% of the Eastern North Pacific stock
of approximately 19,126 gray whales,
1.98% of the Bering-Chukchi-Beaufort
population of 10,545 bowhead whales,
1.07% of the Western North Pacific
stock of approximately 938 humpback
whales, 0.18% of the Northeast Pacific
stock of approximately 5,700 fin whales,
and 1.43% of the Alaska stock of
approximately 810 minke whales. The
take estimates presented for ringed,
bearded, spotted, and ribbon seals
represent 2.44, 0.07, 0.17, and 0.02% of
U.S. Arctic stocks of each species,
respectively. The percentage of Level B
behavioral take of 4 individual narwhals
among its percentage is unknown as
narwhal are not regularly sighted in the
U.S. Chukchi Sea. Nevertheless, it is
reasonable to believe that the number of
narwhal estimated to be taken is very
low among its population. The
mitigation and monitoring measures
(described previously in this document)
proposed for inclusion in the IHA (if
issued) are expected to reduce even
further any potential disturbance to
marine mammals.
In addition, no important feeding and
reproductive areas are known in the
vicinity of the Shell’s proposed marine
surveys at the time the proposed
surveys are to take place. No critical
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habitat of ESA-listed marine mammal
species occurs in the Chukchi Sea.
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 Shell’s
proposed 2013 open-water marine
surveys in the Chukchi Sea may result
in the incidental take of small numbers
of marine mammals, by Level B
harassment only, and that the total
taking from the marine surveys will
have a negligible impact on the affected
species or stocks.
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis
and Preliminary Determination
NMFS has preliminarily determined
that Shell’s proposed 2013 open-water
marine surveys in the Chukchi Sea will
not have an unmitigable adverse impact
on the availability of species or stocks
for taking for subsistence uses. This
preliminary determination is supported
by information contained in this
document and Shell’s draft POC. Shell
has adopted a spatial and temporal
strategy for its Chukchi Sea open-water
marine surveys that should minimize
impacts to subsistence hunters. Due to
the timing of the project and the
distance from the surrounding
communities (the proposed site
clearance and shallow hazards surveys
and equipment recovery and
maintenance activities would be
approximately 120 km to Wainwright
and 150 km to Point Lay), it is
anticipated to have no effects on spring
harvesting and little or no effects on the
occasional summer harvest of beluga
whale, subsistence seal hunts (ringed
and spotted seals are primarily
harvested in winter while bearded seals
are hunted during July-September in the
Beaufort Sea), or the fall bowhead hunt.
In addition, based on the measures
described in Shell’s Draft POC, the
proposed mitigation and monitoring
measures (described earlier in this
document), and the project design itself,
NMFS has determined preliminarily
that there will not be an unmitigable
adverse impact on subsistence uses from
Shell’s 2013 open-water marine surveys
in the Chukchi Sea.
Proposed Incidental Harassment
Authorization
This section contains a draft of the
IHA itself. The wording contained in
this section is proposed for inclusion in
the IHA (if issued).
(1) This Authorization is valid from
July 1, 2013, through October 30, 2013.
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(2) This Authorization is valid only
for activities associated with open-water
marine surveys and related activities in
the Chukchi Sea. The specific areas
where Shell’s surveys will be conducted
are within the Chukchi Sea, Alaska, as
shown in Figures 1–1, 1–2, and 1–3 of
Shell’s IHA application.
(3)(a) The species authorized for
incidental harassment takings, Level B
harassment only, are: beluga whales
(Delphinapterus leucas); Narwhals
(Monodon monoceros); harbor porpoises
(Phocoena phocoena); killer whales
(Orcinus orca); bowhead whales
(Balaena mysticetus); gray whales
(Eschrichtius robustus); humpback
whales (Megaptera novaeangliae); fin
whales (Balaenoptera physalus); minke
whales (B. acutorostrata); bearded seals
(Erignathus barbatus); spotted seals
(Phoca largha); ringed seals (P. hispida);
and ribbon seals (P. fasciata).
(3)(b) The authorization for taking by
harassment is limited to the following
acoustic sources and from the following
activities:
(i) 40 in3 airgun arrays and other
acoustic sources for site clearance and
shallow hazards surveys;
(ii) Non-airgun active acoustic sources
for ice gouge surveys;
(iii) Vessel activities related to openwater marine surveys listed in (i) and
(ii); and
(iv) Vessel activities related to
equipment recovery and maintenance at
Burger A well site.
(3)(c) The taking of any marine
mammal in a manner prohibited under
this Authorization must be reported
within 24 hours of the taking to the
Alaska Regional Administrator (907–
586–7221) or his designee in Anchorage
(907–271–3023), National Marine
Fisheries Service (NMFS) and the Chief
of the Permits and Conservation
Division, Office of Protected Resources,
NMFS, at (301) 427–8401, or his
designee (301–427–8418).
(4) The holder of this Authorization
must notify the Chief of the Permits and
Conservation Division, Office of
Protected Resources, at least 48 hours
prior to the start of collecting seismic
data (unless constrained by the date of
issuance of this Authorization in which
case notification shall be made as soon
as possible).
(5) Prohibitions
(a) The taking, by incidental
harassment only, is limited to the
species listed under condition 3(a)
above and by the numbers listed in
Table 1 (attached). The taking by Level
A harassment, injury or death of these
species or the taking by harassment,
injury or death of any other species of
marine mammal is prohibited and may
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result in the modification, suspension,
or revocation of this Authorization.
(b) The taking of any marine mammal
is prohibited whenever the required
source vessel protected species
observers (PSOs), required by condition
7(a)(i), are not onboard in conformance
with condition 7(a)(i) of this
Authorization.
(6) Mitigation
(a) Establishing Exclusion and
Disturbance Zones
(i) Establish and monitor with trained
PSOs a preliminary exclusion zone for
cetaceans surrounding the airgun array
on the source vessel where the received
level would be 180 dB (rms) re 1 mPa.
For purposes of the field verification
test, described in condition 7(e)(i), this
radius is estimated to be 160 m from the
seismic source for the 40 in3 airgun
arrays and 52 m for a single 10 in3
airgun for site clearance and shallow
hazards surveys.
(ii) Establish and monitor with trained
PSOs a preliminary exclusion zone for
pinnipeds surrounding the airgun array
on the source vessel where the received
level would be 190 dB (rms) re 1 mPa.
For purposes of the field verification
test described in condition 7(e)(i), this
radius is estimated to be 50 m from the
seismic source for the 640 in3 airgun
arrays and 23 m for the single 10 in3
airgun for site clearance and shallow
hazards surveys.
(iii) Establish a zone of influence
(ZOI) for cetaceans and pinnipeds
surrounding the airgun array on the
source vessel where the received level
would be 160 dB (rms) re 1 mPa. For
purposes of the field verification test
described in condition 7(e)(i), this
radius is estimated to be 1,800 m from
the seismic source for the 40 in3 airgun
arrays and 569 m for the single 10 in3
airgun for site clearance and shallow
hazards surveys.
(iv) Establish a ZOI for cetaceans and
pinnipeds surrounding the vessel while
operating dynamic positioning (DP)
thruster where the received level would
be 120 dB (rms) re 1 mPa. For purposes
of the field verification test described in
condition 7(b)(i), this radius is
estimated to be 13 km from the DP
thruster source for equipment recovery
and maintenance operations.
(v) Immediately upon completion of
data analysis of the field verification
measurements required under condition
7(e)(i) below, the new 120-dB, 160-dB,
180-dB, and 190-dB marine mammal
ZOIs and exclusion zones shall be
established based on the sound source
verification.
(b) Vessel and Helicopter Movement
Mitigation:
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28435
(i) Avoid concentrations or groups of
whales by all vessels under the
direction of Shell. Operators of support
vessels should, at all times, conduct
their activities at the maximum distance
possible from such concentrations of
whales.
(ii) Vessels in transit shall be operated
at speeds necessary to ensure no
physical contact with whales occurs. If
any vessel approaches within 1.6 km (1
mi) of observed bowhead whales, except
when providing emergency assistance to
whalers or in other emergency
situations, the vessel operator will take
reasonable precautions to avoid
potential interaction with the bowhead
whales by taking one or more of the
following actions, as appropriate:
(A) Reducing vessel speed to less than
5 knots within 300 yards (900 feet or
274 m) of the whale(s);
(B) Steering around the whale(s) if
possible;
(C) Operating the vessel(s) in such a
way as to avoid separating members of
a group of whales from other members
of the group;
(D) Operating the vessel(s) to avoid
causing a whale to make multiple
changes in direction; and
(E) Checking the waters immediately
adjacent to the vessel(s) to ensure that
no whales will be injured when the
propellers are engaged.
(iii) When weather conditions require,
such as when visibility drops, adjust
vessel speed accordingly to avoid the
likelihood of injury to whales.
(iv) In the event that any aircraft (such
as helicopters) are used to support the
planned survey, the mitigation measures
below would apply:
(A) Under no circumstances, other
than an emergency, shall aircraft be
operated at an altitude lower than 1,000
feet above sea level (ASL) when within
0.3 mile (0.5 km) of groups of whales.
(B) Helicopters shall not hover or
circle above or within 0.3 mile (0.5 km)
of groups of whales.
(c) Mitigation Measures for Airgun
Operations
(i) Ramp-up:
(A) A ramp up, following a cold start,
can be applied if the exclusion zone has
been free of marine mammals for a
consecutive 30-minute period. The
entire exclusion zone must have been
visible during these 30 minutes. If the
entire exclusion zone is not visible, then
ramp up from a cold start cannot begin.
(B) If a marine mammal(s) is sighted
within the exclusion zone during the
30-minute watch prior to ramp up, ramp
up will be delayed until the marine
mammal(s) is sighted outside of the
exclusion zone or the animal(s) is not
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sighted for at least 15–30 minutes: 15
minutes for small odontocetes (harbor
porpoise) and pinnipeds, or 30 minutes
for baleen whales and large odontocetes
(including beluga and killer whales and
narwhal).
(C) If, for any reason, electrical power
to the airgun array has been
discontinued for a period of 10 minutes
or more, ramp-up procedures shall be
implemented. Only if the PSO watch
has been suspended, a 30-minute
clearance of the exclusion zone is
required prior to commencing ramp-up.
Discontinuation of airgun activity for
less than 10 minutes does not require a
ramp-up.
(D) The seismic operator and PSOs
shall maintain records of the times
when ramp-ups start and when the
airgun arrays reach full power.
(ii) Power-down/Shutdown:
(A) The airgun array shall be
immediately powered down whenever a
marine mammal is sighted approaching
close to or within the applicable
exclusion zone of the full array, but is
outside the applicable exclusion zone of
the single mitigation airgun.
(B) If a marine mammal is already
within the exclusion zone when first
detected, the airguns shall be powered
down immediately.
(C) Following a power-down, firing of
the full airgun array shall not resume
until the marine mammal has cleared
the exclusion. The animal will be
considered to have cleared the
exclusion zone if it is visually observed
to have left the exclusion zone of the
full array, or has not been seen within
the zone for 15 minutes (pinnipeds or
small toothed whales) or 30 minutes
(baleen whales or large toothed whales).
(D) If a marine mammal is sighted
within or about to enter the 190 or 180
dB (rms) applicable exclusion zone of
the single mitigation airgun, the airgun
array shall be shutdown.
(E) Firing of the full airgun array or
the mitigation gun shall not resume
until the marine mammal has cleared
the exclusion zone of the full array or
mitigation gun, respectively. The animal
will be considered to have cleared the
exclusion zone as described above
under ramp up procedures.
(iii) Poor Visibility Conditions:
(A) If during foggy conditions, heavy
snow or rain, or darkness, the full 180
dB exclusion zone is not visible, the
airguns cannot commence a ramp-up
procedure from a full shut-down.
(B) If one or more airguns have been
operational before nightfall or before the
onset of poor visibility conditions, they
can remain operational throughout the
night or poor visibility conditions. In
this case ramp-up procedures can be
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initiated, even though the exclusion
zone may not be visible, on the
assumption that marine mammals will
be alerted by the sounds from the single
airgun and have moved away.
(iv) Use of a Small-Volume Airgun
During Turns and Transits
(A) Throughout the seismic survey,
particularly during turning movements,
and short transits, Shell will employ the
use of a small-volume airgun (i.e., 10 in3
‘‘mitigation airgun’’) to deter marine
mammals from being within the
immediate area of the seismic
operations. The mitigation airgun would
be operated at approximately one shot
per minute and would not be operated
for longer than three hours in duration
(turns may last two to three hours for
the proposed project).
(B) During turns or brief transits (e.g.,
less than three hours) between seismic
tracklines, one mitigation airgun will
continue operating. The ramp-up
procedure will still be followed when
increasing the source levels from one
airgun to the full airgun array. However,
keeping one airgun firing will avoid the
prohibition of a ‘‘cold start’’ during
darkness or other periods of poor
visibility. Through use of this approach,
site clearance and shallow hazards
surveys using the full array may resume
without the 30 minute observation
period of the full exclusion zone
required for a ‘‘cold start’’. PSOs will be
on duty whenever the airguns are firing
during daylight, during the 30 minute
periods prior to ramp-ups.
(d) Mitigation Measures for
Subsistence Activities:
(i) For the purposes of reducing or
eliminating conflicts between
subsistence whaling activities and
Shell’s survey program, the holder of
this Authorization will participate with
other operators in the Communication
and Call Centers (Com-Center) Program.
The Com-Centers will be operated 24
hours/day during the 2013 fall
subsistence bowhead whale hunt.
(ii) The appropriate Com-Center shall
be notified if there is any significant
change in plans.
(iii) Upon notification by a ComCenter operator of an at-sea emergency,
the holder of this Authorization shall
provide such assistance as necessary to
prevent the loss of life, if conditions
allow the holder of this Authorization to
safely do so.
(7) Monitoring
(a) Vessel-based Visual Monitoring:
(i) Vessel-based visual monitoring for
marine mammals shall be conducted by
NMFS-approved protected species
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observers (PSOs) throughout the period
of survey activities.
(ii) PSOs shall be stationed aboard the
marine survey vessel and the vessel
used to facilitate equipment recovery
and maintenance work at the Burger A
exploratory well site through the
duration of the projects.
(iii) A sufficient number of PSOs shall
be onboard the survey vessel to meet the
following criteria:
(A) 100% monitoring coverage during
all periods of survey operations in
daylight;
(B) maximum of 4 consecutive hours
on watch per PSO; and
(C) maximum of 12 hours of watch
time per day per PSO.
(iv) The vessel-based marine mammal
monitoring shall provide the basis for
real-time mitigation measures as
described in (6)(c) above.
(v) Results of the vessel-based marine
mammal monitoring shall be used to
calculate the estimation of the number
of ‘‘takes’’ from the marine surveys and
equipment recovery and maintenance
program.
(b) Protected Species Observers and
Training
(i) PSO teams shall consist of Inupiat
observers and NMFS-approved field
biologists.
(ii) Experienced field crew leaders
shall supervise the PSO teams in the
field. New PSOs shall be paired with
experienced observers to avoid
situations where lack of experience
impairs the quality of observations.
(iii) Crew leaders and most other
biologists serving as observers in 2013
shall be individuals with experience as
observers during recent seismic or
shallow hazards monitoring projects in
Alaska, the Canadian Beaufort, or other
offshore areas in recent years.
(iv) Resumes for PSO candidates shall
be provided to NMFS for review and
acceptance of their qualifications.
Inupiat observers shall be experienced
in the region and familiar with the
marine mammals of the area.
(v) All observers shall complete a
NMFS-approved observer training
course designed to familiarize
individuals with monitoring and data
collection procedures. The training
course shall be completed before the
anticipated start of the 2013 open-water
season. The training session(s) shall be
conducted by qualified marine
mammalogists with extensive crewleader experience during previous
vessel-based monitoring programs. A
marine mammal observers’ handbook,
adapted for the specifics of the planned
survey program will be reviewed as part
of the training.
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(vi) Training for both Alaska native
PSOs and biologist PSOs shall be
conducted at the same time in the same
room. There shall not be separate
training courses for the different PSOs.
(vii) Crew members should not be
used as primary PSOs because they have
other duties and generally do not have
the same level of expertise, experience,
or training as PSOs, but they could be
stationed on the fantail of the vessel to
observe the near field, especially the
area around the airgun array and
implement a rampdown or shutdown if
a marine mammal enters the safety zone
(or exclusion zone).
(viii) If crew members are to be used
as PSOs, they shall go through some
basic training consistent with the
functions they will be asked to perform.
The best approach would be for crew
members and PSOs to go through the
same training together.
(ix) PSOs shall be trained using visual
aids (e.g., videos, photos), to help them
identify the species that they are likely
to encounter in the conditions under
which the animals will likely be seen.
(x) Shell shall train its PSOs to follow
a scanning schedule that consistently
distributes scanning effort according to
the purpose and need for observations.
All PSOs should follow the same
schedule to ensure consistency in their
scanning efforts.
(xi) PSOs shall be trained in
documenting the behaviors of marine
mammals. PSOs should simply record
the primary behavioral state (i.e.,
traveling, socializing, feeding, resting,
approaching or moving away from
vessels) and relative location of the
observed marine mammals.
(c) PSO Handbook: A PSO’s
Handbook shall be prepared for Shell’s
2013 vessel-based monitoring program.
Handbooks contain maps, illustrations,
and photographs, as well as text, and are
intended to provide guidance and
reference information to trained
individuals who will participate as
PSOs. The following topics shall be
covered in the PSO Handbook for the
Shell project:
(i) summary overview descriptions of
the project, marine mammals and
underwater noise, the marine mammal
monitoring program (vessel roles,
responsibilities), and the Marine
Mammal Protection Act;
(ii) monitoring and mitigation
objectives and procedures, including
radii for exclusion zones and zones of
influence (ZOIs);
(iii) responsibilities of staff and crew
regarding the marine mammal
monitoring plan;
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(iv) instructions for ship crew
regarding the marine mammal
monitoring plan;
(v) data recording procedures: codes
and coding instructions, PSO coding
mistakes, electronic database;
navigational, marine physical, field data
sheet;
(vi) list of species that might be
encountered: identification, natural
history;
(vii) use of specialized field
equipment (reticle binoculars, nigh
vision devices, etc.);
(viii) table of wind speed, Beaufort
wind force, and sea state codes; and
(ix) data quality-assurance/qualitycontrol, delivery, storage, and backup
procedures.
(d) Marine Mammal Observation
Protocol
(i) PSOs shall watch for marine
mammals from the best available
vantage point on the survey vessels,
typically the bridge.
(ii) Observations by the PSOs on
marine mammal presence and activity
shall begin a minimum of 30 minutes
prior to the estimated time that the
seismic source is to be turned on and/
or ramped-up.
(iii) PSOs shall scan systematically
with the unaided eye and 7 x 50 reticle
binoculars, supplemented with 20 x 60
image-stabilized Zeiss Binoculars or
Fujinon 25 x 150 ‘‘Big-eye’’ binoculars,
and night-vision equipment when
needed.
(iv) Personnel on the bridge shall
assist the marine mammal observer(s) in
watching for marine mammals.
(v) PSOs aboard the marine survey
vessel shall give particular attention to
the areas within the marine mammal
exclusion zones around the source
vessel, as noted in (6)(a)(i) and (ii). They
shall avoid the tendency to spend too
much time evaluating animal behavior
or entering data on forms, both of which
detract from their primary purpose of
monitoring the exclusion zone.
(vi) Monitoring shall consist of
recording of the following information:
(A) the species, group size, age/size/
sex categories (if determinable), the
general behavioral activity, heading (if
consistent), bearing and distance from
seismic vessel, sighting cue, behavioral
pace, and apparent reaction of all
marine mammals seen near the seismic
vessel and/or its airgun array (e.g., none,
avoidance, approach, paralleling, etc);
(B) the time, location, heading, speed,
and activity of the vessel (shooting or
not), along with sea state, visibility,
cloud cover and sun glare at (I) any time
a marine mammal is sighted (including
pinnipeds hauled out on barrier
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28437
islands), (II) at the start and end of each
watch, and (III) during a watch
(whenever there is a change in one or
more variable);
(C) the identification of all vessels
that are visible within 5 km of the
seismic vessel whenever a marine
mammal is sighted and the time
observed;
(D) any identifiable marine mammal
behavioral response (sighting data
should be collected in a manner that
will not detract from the PSO’s ability
to detect marine mammals);
(E) any adjustments made to operating
procedures; and
(F) visibility during observation
periods so that total estimates of take
can be corrected accordingly.
(vii) Distances to nearby marine
mammals will be estimated with
binoculars (Fujinon 7 x 50 binoculars)
containing a reticle to measure the
vertical angle of the line of sight to the
animal relative to the horizon.
Observers may use a laser rangefinder to
test and improve their abilities for
visually estimating distances to objects
in the water.
(viii) PSOs shall understand the
importance of classifying marine
mammals as ‘‘unknown’’ or
‘‘unidentified’’ if they cannot identify
the animals to species with confidence.
In those cases, they shall note any
information that might aid in the
identification of the marine mammal
sighted. For example, for an
unidentified mysticete whale, the
observers should record whether the
animal had a dorsal fin.
(ix) Additional details about
unidentified marine mammal sightings,
such as ‘‘blow only’’, mysticete with (or
without) a dorsal fin, ‘‘seal splash’’, etc.,
shall be recorded.
(x) When a marine mammal is seen
approaching or within the exclusion
zone applicable to that species, the
marine survey crew shall be notified
immediately so that mitigation measures
described in (6) can be promptly
implemented.
(xi) Shell shall use of the best
available technology to improve
detection capability during periods of
fog and other types of inclement
weather. Such technology might include
night-vision goggles or binoculars as
well as other instruments that
incorporate infrared technology.
(d) Field Data-Recording, Verification,
Handling, and Security
(i) PSOs shall record their
observations directly into computers
running a custom designed software
package. Paper datasheets shall be
available as backup if necessary.
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(ii) The accuracy of the data entry
shall be verified in the field by
computerized validity checks as the
data are entered, and by subsequent
manual checking of the database
printouts.
(iii) Quality Control of the Data Shall B
Facilitated by
(A) the start-of-season training
session,
(B) subsequent supervision by the
onboard field crew leader, and
(C) ongoing data checks during the
field season.
(iv) Data will be sent off of the ship
to Anchorage each day and backed up
regularly onto CDs and/or USB disks,
and stored at separate locations on the
vessel. Data shall be secured further by
having data sheets and backup data CDs
carried back to the Anchorage office
during crew rotations.
(e) Passive Acoustic Monitoring
(i) Sound Source Measurements:
Using a hydrophone system, the holder
of this Authorization is required to
conduct sound source verification tests
for seismic airgun array(s) and other
marine survey equipment that are
involved in the open-water marine
surveys.
(A) Sound source verification shall
consist of distances where broadside
and endfire directions at which
broadband received levels reach 190,
180, 170, 160, and 120 dB re 1 mPa (rms)
for the airgun array(s). The
configurations of airgun arrays shall
include at least the full array and the
operation of a single source that will be
used during power downs.
(B) The test results shall be reported
to NMFS within 5 days of completing
the test.
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(ii) Long-Term Acoustic Monitoring
(A) Shell will use an acoustic net
array to (I) collect information on the
occurrence and distribution of marine
mammals (including beluga whale,
bowhead whale, walrus and other
species) that may be available to
subsistence hunters near villages
located on the Chukchi Sea coast and to
document their relative abundance,
habitat use, and migratory patterns; and
(II) measure the ambient soundscape
throughout the eastern Chukchi Sea and
to record received levels of sounds from
industry and other activities further
offshore in the Chukchi Sea.
(8) Data Analysis and Presentation in
Reports
(a) Estimation of potential takes or
exposures shall be improved for times
with low visibility (such as during fog
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or darkness) through interpolation or
possibly using a probability approach.
Those data could be used to interpolate
possible takes during periods of
restricted visibility.
(b) To better assess impacts to marine
mammals, data analysis shall be
separated into periods when a seismic
airgun array (or a single mitigation
airgun) is operating and when it is not.
Final and report to NMFS should
summarize and plot:
(i) Data for periods when a seismic
array is active and when it is not; and
(ii) The respective predicted received
sound conditions over fairly large areas
(tens of km) around operations.
(c) To help evaluate the effectiveness
of PSOs and more effectively estimate
take, if appropriate data are available,
Shell shall perform analysis of
sightability curves (detection functions)
for distance-based analyses.
(d) To better understand the potential
effects of oil and gas activities on
marine mammals and to facilitate
integration among companies and other
researchers, the following data should
be obtained and provided electronically
in the 90-day report:
(i) the location and time of each
vessel-based sighting or acoustic
detection;
(ii) position of the sighting or acoustic
detection relative to ongoing operations
(i.e., distance from sightings to seismic
operation, DP operation, etc.), if known;
(iii) the nature of activities at the time
(e.g., seismic on/off);
(iv) any identifiable marine mammal
behavioral response (sighting data
should be collected in a manner that
will not detract from the PSO’s ability
to detect marine mammals); and
(v) adjustments made to operating
procedures.
(e) Shell shall provide useful
summaries and interpretations of results
of the various elements of the
monitoring results, which shall include
a clear timeline and spatial (map)
representation/summary of operations
and important observations. Any and all
mitigation measures (e.g., vessel course
deviations for animal avoidance,
operational shut down) should be
summarized. Additionally, an
assessment of the efficacy of monitoring
methods should be provided.
(f) Shell shall provide data from net
arrays supported in part, or in whole, by
Shell and will participate in the
integration of acoustic arrays to assess
the sound field of the lease areas in the
Chukchi and Beaufort seas for the
purposes of assessing patterns of marine
mammal distribution and behavior and
for assessing the impacts of multiple
activities/factors.
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(9) Reporting:
(a) Sound Source Verification Report:
A report on the preliminary results of
the sound source verification
measurements, including the measured
190, 180, 160, and 120 dB (rms) radii of
the airgun sources and other acoustic
survey equipment, shall be submitted
within 14 days after collection of those
measurements at the start of the field
season. This report will specify the
distances of the exclusion zones that
were adopted for the survey.
(b) Shell shall produce a weekly GIS
application that would be available on
the web for regulators to view for every
observation and mitigation measure
implemented.
(c) Seismic Vessel Monitoring
Program: A draft report will be
submitted to the Director, Office of
Protected Resources, NMFS, within 90
days after the end of Shell’s 2013 openwater marine surveys in the Chukchi
Seas. The report will describe in detail:
(i) summaries of monitoring effort
(e.g., total hours, total distances, and
marine mammal distribution through
the study period, accounting for sea
state and other factors affecting
visibility and detectability of marine
mammals);
(ii) analyses of the effects of various
factors influencing detectability of
marine mammals (e.g., sea state, number
of observers, and fog/glare);
(iii) species composition, occurrence,
and distribution of marine mammal
sightings, including date, water depth,
numbers, age/size/gender categories (if
determinable), group sizes, and ice
cover;
(iv) to better assess impacts to marine
mammals, data analysis should be
separated into periods when an airgun
array (or a single airgun) is operating
and when it is not. Final and
comprehensive reports to NMFS should
summarize and plot: (A) Data for
periods when a seismic array is active
and when it is not; and (B) The
respective predicted received sound
conditions over fairly large areas (tens of
km) around operations.
(v) sighting rates of marine mammals
during periods with and without airgun
activities (and other variables that could
affect detectability), such as: (A) initial
sighting distances versus airgun activity
state; (B) closest point of approach
versus airgun activity state; (C) observed
behaviors and types of movements
versus airgun activity state; (D) numbers
of sightings/individuals seen versus
airgun activity state; (E) distribution
around the survey vessel versus airgun
activity state; and (F) estimates of take
by harassment.
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(vi) reported results from all
hypothesis tests should include
estimates of the associated statistical
power when practicable.
(vii) estimate and report uncertainty
in all take estimates. Uncertainty could
be expressed by the presentation of
confidence limits, a minimummaximum, posterior probability
distribution, etc.; the exact approach
would be selected based on the
sampling method and data available.
(viii) The report should clearly
compare authorized takes to the level of
actual estimated takes.
(d) The draft report will be subject to
review and comment by NMFS. Any
recommendations made by NMFS must
be addressed in the final report prior to
acceptance by NMFS. The draft report
will be considered the final report for
this activity under this Authorization if
NMFS has not provided comments and
recommendations within 90 days of
receipt of the draft report.
(10)(a) In the unanticipated event that
survey operations clearly cause the take
of a marine mammal in a manner
prohibited by this Authorization, such
as an injury (Level A harassment),
serious injury or mortality (e.g., shipstrike, gear interaction, and/or
entanglement), Shell shall immediately
cease survey operations and
immediately report the incident to the
Supervisor of the Incidental Take
Program, Permits and Conservation
Division, Office of Protected Resources,
NMFS, at 301–427–8401 and/or by
email to Jolie.Harrison@noaa.gov and
Shane.Guan@noaa.gov and the Alaska
Regional Stranding Coordinators
(Aleria.Jensen@noaa.gov and
Barbara.Mahoney@noaa.gov). The
report must include the following
information:
(i) time, date, and location (latitude/
longitude) of the incident;
(ii) the name and type of vessel
involved;
(iii) the vessel’s speed during and
leading up to the incident;
(iv) description of the incident;
(v) status of all sound source use in
the 24 hours preceding the incident;
(vi) water depth;
(vii) environmental conditions (e.g.,
wind speed and direction, Beaufort sea
state, cloud cover, and visibility);
(viii) description of marine mammal
observations in the 24 hours preceding
the incident;
(ix) species identification or
description of the animal(s) involved;
(x) the fate of the animal(s); and
(xi) photographs or video footage of
the animal (if equipment is available).
Activities shall not resume until
NMFS is able to review the
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circumstances of the prohibited take.
NMFS shall work with Shell to
determine what is necessary to
minimize the likelihood of further
prohibited take and ensure MMPA
compliance. Shell may not resume their
activities until notified by NMFS via
letter, email, or telephone.
(b) In the event that Shell discovers an
injured or dead marine mammal, and
the lead PSO determines that the cause
of the injury or death is unknown and
the death is relatively recent (i.e., in less
than a moderate state of decomposition
as described in the next paragraph),
Shell will immediately report the
incident to the Supervisor of the
Incidental Take Program, Permits and
Conservation Division, Office of
Protected Resources, NMFS, at 301–
427–8401, and/or by email to
Jolie.Harrison@noaa.gov and
Shane.Guan@noaa.gov and the NMFS
Alaska Stranding Hotline (1–877–925–
7773) and/or by email to the Alaska
Regional Stranding Coordinators
(Aleria.Jensen@noaa.gov and
Barabara.Mahoney@noaa.gov). The
report must include the same
information identified in Condition
10(a) above. Activities may continue
while NMFS reviews the circumstances
of the incident. NMFS will work with
Shell to determine whether
modifications in the activities are
appropriate.
(c). In the event that Shell discovers
an injured or dead marine mammal, and
the lead PSO determines that the injury
or death is not associated with or related
to the activities authorized in Condition
3 of this Authorization (e.g., previously
wounded animal, carcass with moderate
to advanced decomposition, or
scavenger damage), Shell shall report
the incident to the Supervisor of the
Incidental Take Program, Permits and
Conservation Division, Office of
Protected Resources, NMFS, at 301–
427–8401, and/or by email to
Jolie.Harrison@noaa.gov and
Shane.Guan@noaa.gov and the NMFS
Alaska Stranding Hotline (1–877–925–
7773) and/or by email to the Alaska
Regional Stranding Coordinators
(Aleria.Jensen@noaa.gov and
Barbara.Mahoney@noaa.gov), within 24
hours of the discovery. Shell shall
provide photographs or video footage (if
available) or other documentation of the
stranded animal sighting to NMFS and
the Marine Mammal Stranding Network.
Shell can continue its operations under
such a case.
(11) Activities related to the
monitoring described in this
Authorization do not require a separate
scientific research permit issued under
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4703
28439
section 104 of the Marine Mammal
Protection Act.
(12) The Plan of Cooperation
outlining the steps that will be taken to
cooperate and communicate with the
native communities to ensure the
availability of marine mammals for
subsistence uses, must be implemented.
(13) This Authorization may be
modified, suspended or withdrawn if
the holder fails to abide by the
conditions prescribed herein or if the
authorized taking is having more than a
negligible impact on the species or stock
of affected marine mammals, or if there
is an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of such species or stocks for
subsistence uses.
(14) A copy of this Authorization and
the Incidental Take Statement must be
in the possession of each seismic vessel
operator taking marine mammals under
the authority of this Incidental
Harassment Authorization.
(15) Shell is required to comply with
the Terms and Conditions of the
Incidental Take Statement
corresponding to NMFS’ Biological
Opinion.
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
The bowhead, fin, and humpback
whales and ringed and bearded seals are
the only marine mammal species
currently listed as endangered or
threatened under the ESA that could
occur during Shell’s proposed marine
surveys during the Arctic open-water
season. NMFS’ Permits and
Conservation Division has initiated
consultation with NMFS’ Protected
Resources Division under section 7 of
the ESA on the issuance of an IHA to
Shell under section 101(a)(5)(D) of the
MMPA for this activity. Consultation
will be concluded prior to a
determination on the issuance of an
IHA.
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA)
NMFS is currently preparing an
Environmental Assessment, pursuant to
NEPA, to determine whether or not this
proposed activity may have a significant
effect on the human environment. This
analysis will be completed prior to the
issuance or denial of the IHA.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary
determinations, NMFS proposes to
authorize the take of marine mammals
incidental to Shell’s 2013 open-water
marine surveys in the Alaskan Chukchi
Sea, provided the previously mentioned
mitigation, monitoring, and reporting
requirements are incorporated.
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 93 / Tuesday, May 14, 2013 / Notices
Dated: May 8, 2013.
Perry F. Gayaldo,
Acting Deputy Director, Office of Protected
Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 93 (Tuesday, May 14, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 28411-28440]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-11406]
[[Page 28411]]
Vol. 78
Tuesday,
No. 93
May 14, 2013
Part III
Department of Commerce
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National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
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Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking
Marine Mammals Incidental to Marine Seismic Survey in the Chukchi Sea,
Alaska; Notice
Federal Register / Vol. 78 , No. 93 / Tuesday, May 14, 2013 /
Notices
[[Page 28412]]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XC562
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities;
Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to Marine Seismic Survey in the
Chukchi Sea, Alaska
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental harassment authorization; request
for comments.
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SUMMARY: NMFS received an application from Shell Gulf of Mexico Inc.
(Shell) for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) to take marine
mammals, by harassment only, incidental to a marine surveys program in
the Chukchi Sea, Alaska, during the open water season of 2013. Pursuant
to the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS is requesting comments
on its proposal to issue an IHA to Shell to take, by Level B
harassment, 13 species of marine mammals during the specified activity.
DATES: Comments and information must be received no later than June 13,
2013.
ADDRESSES: Comments on the application should be addressed to P.
Michael Payne, Chief, Permits and Conservation Division, Office of
Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service, 1315 East-West
Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910. The mailbox address for providing
email comments is ITP.guan@noaa.gov. NMFS is not responsible for email
comments sent to addresses other than the one provided here. Comments
sent via email, 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#applications 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.
The application used in this document may be obtained by visiting
the internet at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm#applications. Documents cited in this notice may also be
viewed, by appointment, during regular business hours, at the
aforementioned address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Shane Guan, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427-8401.
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 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 January 2, 2013, from Shell for the
taking, by harassment, of marine mammals incidental to a marine surveys
program in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, Alaska, during the open-water
season of 2013. Subsequently, Shell revised its proposed marine surveys
program and limited its proposed activities to the Chukchi Sea, and
resubmitted an IHA application on March 25, 2013. Based on NMFS
comments, Shell further revised its IHA application and submitted its
final IHA application on April 2, 2013. Shell's proposed activities
discussed here are based on its April 2, 2013, IHA application.
Description of the Specified Activity
Shell plans to complete a marine surveys program and conduct its
equipment recovery and maintenance activity, during the 2013 open-water
season in the Chukchi Sea. A total of three vessels would be utilized
for the proposed open-water activities: the proposed marine surveys
would be conducted from a single vessel, a second vessel would be used
for equipment recovery and maintenance activity at Burger A, and a
third vessel may be used to provide logistical support to either and/or
both operations. Overall, Shell's proposed 2013 open-water marine
surveys program includes the following three components:
Chukchi Sea Offshore Ice Gouge Surveys;
Chukchi Sea Offshore Site Clearance and Shallow Hazards
Survey; and
Equipment Recovery and Maintenance
Detailed locations of these activities are shown in Figures 1-1
through 1-3 of Shell's IHA application.
Ice and weather conditions will influence when and where the open-
water marine surveys will be conducted. For initial planning purposes,
Shell states that the offshore marine surveys and equipment recovery
and maintenance would be conducted within the time frame of July
through October 2013.
Chukchi Sea Offshore Ice Gouge Surveys
Ice gouge information is required for the design of potential
pipelines and pipeline trenching and installation equipment. Ice gouges
are created by ice keels that project from the bottom of ice, and gouge
the seafloor sediment as the ice moves with the wind or currents. Ice
gouge features can be mapped and surveyed, and by surveying the same
[[Page 28413]]
locations from year to year, new gouges can be identified and the rate
of ice gouging can be estimated. The resulting ice gouge information
would assist Shell in predicting the probability, frequency,
orientation, and depth of future ice gouges.
Shell plans to conduct ice gouge surveys along approximately 621 mi
(1,000 km) of tracklines in the Chukchi Sea in 2013, within the area
denoted in Figure 1-1 of the IHA application. These surveys will: (a)
resurvey selected tracklines for ice gouge features to determine the
rate or frequency of new ice gouges; and (b) map seafloor topography
and characterize the upper 34 ft (10 m) of the seabed (seafloor and
sub-seafloor) using acoustic methods. The ice gouge surveys will be
conducted using the conventional survey method where the acoustic
instrumentation will be towed behind the survey vessel. These acoustic
instrumentation includes dual-frequency side scan sonar, single-beam
bathymetric sonar, multi-beam bathymetric sonar, shallow sub-bottom
profiler, and magnetometer.
Due to the low intensity and high frequency acoustic sources being
used for the proposed ice gouge surveys (see below), this activity is
not expected to result in takes of marine mammals.
Chukchi Sea Site Clearance and Shallow Hazards Surveys
The proposed site clearance and shallow hazards surveys are to
gather data on: (1) Bathymetry, (2) seabed topography and other seabed
characteristics (e.g., ice gouges), (3) potential shallow geohazards
(e.g., shallow faults and shallow gas zones), and (4) the presence of
any possible archeological features (prehistoric or historic, e.g.,
middens, shipwrecks). Marine surveys for site clearance and shallow
hazard surveys can be accomplished by one vessel with acoustic sources.
Shell plans to conduct site clearance and shallow hazards surveys
along approximately 3,200 kilometers (km) of tracklines in the Chukchi
Sea in 2013 (see Figure 1-2 of the IHA application). These surveys
would characterize the upper 1,000 meters (m) (3,128 feet [ft]) of the
seabed and sub seafloor topography and measure water depths of
potential exploratory drilling locations using acoustic methods. The
site clearance and shallow hazard surveys would be conducted using the
conventional survey method where the acoustic instrumentation will be
towed behind the survey vessel. The acoustic instrumentation used in
site clearance and shallow hazards surveys is largely the same as those
for the offshore ice gouge surveys, but also includes a 4 x 10 cubic
inch (in\3\) airgun array.
Equipment Recovery and Maintenance
Shell's proposed equipment recovery and maintenance activities
would occur at the Burger A well site in the Chukchi Sea (see Figure 1-
3 of the IHA application). The equipment recovery and maintenance
activity would be accomplished by one vessel operating in dynamic
positioning (DP) mode for an extended period over the drilling site.
The vessel may be resupplied during the activity by vessel or aircraft.
Work would be conducted subsea within the mudline cellar (MLC; ~ 20
ft wide by 40 ft. deep excavation dug for the Burger A wellhead during
2012 drilling at this well site) with a suite of Remotely Operated
Vehicles (ROV) and divers that would recover equipment left sub-mudline
on the well head during the 2012 open water drilling season. The survey
vessel would be dynamically positioned at the well site for up to ~28
days while subsurface equipment recovery and maintenance occurs,
however Shell anticipates this work being accomplished in less than 28
days. During this planned work scope the state and integrity of the
well would not be changed since no form of entry will be made into the
well.
Acoustic Equipment and Vessels Planned to be Used
For the proposed site clearance and shallow hazards surveys, Shell
plans to use the same 4 x 10 in\3\ airgun array configuration that was
used during site clearance and shallow hazards surveys in the Chukchi
Sea in 2008 and 2009. Measurements during these two years occurred at
three locations: Honeyguide (west of the Crackerjack prospect),
Crackerjack, and Burger. The distances to various threshold radii from
those measurements are shown in Table 1. The 160 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa
radius that was measured at the Burger location was the largest of the
three sites.
Table 1--Measured Distances in (Meters) To Received Sound Levels From a 4 x 10\3\ Airgun Array at Three
Locations in the Alaskan Chukchi Sea
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Received Sound Level (dB re 1 [mu]Pa rms)
Location ---------------------------------------------------------------
190 180 160 120
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Honeyguide...................................... 41 100 600 22,000
Crackerjack..................................... 50 160 1,400 24,000
Burger.......................................... 39 150 1,800 31,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sound source characteristics that would be used during the site
clearance and shallow hazard surveys and ice gouge surveys include
single-beam bathymetric sonar, multi-beam bathymetric sonar, dual
frequency side-scan sonar, shallow sub-bottom profiler, and an ultra-
short baseline acoustic positioning system. Representative source
characteristics of these acoustic instrumentation were measured during
Statoil's 2011 marine survey program in the Chukchi Sea (Warner and
McCrodan 2011), and are listed in Table 2.
Table 2--Source Characteristics and Distances to 160 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa Sound Levels From Acoustic Instrumentation Measured in the Chukchi Sea
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nominal source Out-of-beam
Instrument type Model Center frequency Frequency range Beam width level (dB re 1 In-beam 160 dB 160 dB
[mu]Pa rms) distance distance
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Single-beam sonar.............. Simrad EA502..... 12 kHz........... 8-20 kHz......... <10[deg] 218.0 40 m 40 m
[[Page 28414]]
Multi-beam bathymetric sonar... Kongsberg EM2040. 220 kHz.......... 200-240 kHz...... <2[deg] 187.4 0 m 0 m
Side-scan sonar................ GeoAcoustics 159D 110 kHz.......... 100-120 kHz...... <2[deg] 211.5 230 m NA
Sub-bottom profiler............ Kongsberg SBP300. 3-7 kHz.......... 3-7 kHz.......... 15[deg] 195.9 30 m 3 m
Ultra-short baseline acoustic SonarDyne Ranger 27 kHz........... 20-30 kHz........ NA 215.1 47 m 8 m
positioning system. Pro.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For Shell's proposed equipment recovery and maintenance at the
Burger A well site where drilling took place in 2012, a vessel would be
deployed at or near the well site using dynamic positioning thrusters
while remotely operated vehicles or divers are used to perform the
required activities. Sounds produced by the vessel while in dynamic
positioning mode would be non-impulsive in nature and are thus
evaluated at the >=120 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa.
In 2011, Statoil conducted geotechnical coring operations in the
Chukchi Sea using the vessel Fugro Synergy. Measurements were taken
using bottom founded recorders at 50 m (164 ft), 100 m (328 ft), and 1
km (0.6 mi) away from the borehole while the vessel was in dynamic
positioning mode (Warner and McCrodan 2011). Sound levels measured at
the recorder 1 km (0.6 mi) away ranged from 119 dB (rms) to 129 dB
(rms) re 1 [mu]Pa. A propagation curve fit to the data and encompassing
90 percent of all measured values during the period of strongest sound
emissions estimated sound levels would drop below 120 dB (rms) re 1
[mu]Pa at 2.3 km (1.4 mi).
Acoustic measurements of the Nordica in dynamic positioning mode
while supporting Shell's 2012 drilling operation in the Chukchi Sea
were made from multiple recorders deployed to monitor sounds from the
overall drilling operation. Distances to these recorders ranged from
1.3 km (0.8 mi) to 7.9 km (4.9 mi) and maximum sound pressure levels
ranged from 112.7 dB (rms) to 129.9 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa. Preliminary
analyses of these data indicate the maximum 120 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa
distance was approximately 4 km (2.5 mi) from the vessel. These same
recorders measured sounds produced by the Tor Viking II while it
operated near the Discoverer drill rig in 2012. The nature of the
operations conducted by the Tor Viking II during the reported
measurement periods varied and included activities such as anchor
handling, circling, and possibly holding position using dynamic
positioning thrusters. Distances to the 120 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa level
were estimated at 10 km (6 mi), 13 km (8 mi), and 25 km (15.5 mi)
during these various measurement periods.
The vessel from which equipment recovery and maintenance would be
conducted has not yet been determined. Under most circumstances, sounds
from dynamic positioning thrusters are expected to be well below 120 dB
(rms) re 1 [mu]Pa at distances greater than 10 km (6 mi). However,
since some of the activities conducted by the Tor Viking II at the
Burger A well site in 2012 may have included dynamic positioning, the
13 km (8 mi) distance has been selected as the estimated >=120 dB (rms)
re 1 [mu]Pa distance used in the calculations of potential Level B
harassment below. A circle with a radius of 13 km (8 mi) results in an
estimated area of 531 km\2\ (205 mi\2\) that may be exposed to
continuous sounds >=120 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa.
Dates, Duration and Action Area
The schedule for the activities in the Chukchi Sea will depend on
ice conditions and other factors. The vessels will sail from south of
the Chukchi Sea and transit through the Bering Strait into the Chukchi
Sea on or after 1 July or later depending on ice conditions. The July
entry is responsive to concerns voiced by the local communities of
Wainwright and Point Lay; these communities have requested that entry
into the Chukchi Sea be delayed until after the walrus and beluga whale
hunts.
Given that access to the proposed areas where Shell plans to
conduct activities is dependent on ice, weather, and coordinated
avoidance of potential impacts to subsistence activities, Shell has
estimated a broader range of time to conduct these activities than if
the activities were not constrained. For example, without any of the
above constraints to conducting the proposed activities, the duration
of time necessary to complete offshore ice gouge surveys could be as
few as 13 days in the Chukchi Sea. Likewise, the duration of time
necessary to complete site clearance and shallow hazard surveys in the
Chukchi Sea could be on the order of over 50 days. However, these time
estimates do not include transit between survey locations, potential
stand-by time due to ice and/or weather, or crew changes and re-supply.
Therefore, Shell requests an IHA to cover its incidental take between
July 1 and October 31, 2013.
Description of Marine Mammals in the Area of the Specified Activity
The marine mammal species under NMFS jurisdiction most likely to
occur in the seismic survey area include nine cetacean species, beluga
whale (Delphinapterus leucas), harbor porpoise (Phocoena phocoena),
killer whale (Orcinus orca), narwhal (Monodon monoceros), bowhead whale
(Balaena mysticetus), gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus), minke whale
(Balaenoptera acutorostrata), fin whale (B. physalus), and humpback
whale (Megaptera novaeangliae), and four pinniped species, ringed
(Phoca hispida), spotted (P. largha), bearded (Erignathus barbatus),
and ribbon seals (Histriophoca fasciata).
The bowhead, fin, and humpback whales are listed as ``endangered'',
and the ringed and bearded seals are listed as ``threatened'' under the
Endangered Species Act (ESA) and as depleted under the MMPA. Certain
stocks or populations of gray and beluga whales and spotted seals are
also listed under the ESA, however, none of those stocks
[[Page 28415]]
or populations occur in the proposed activity area.
Shell's application contains information on the status,
distribution, seasonal distribution, and abundance of each of the
species under NMFS jurisdiction mentioned in this document. Please
refer to the application for that information (see ADDRESSES).
Additional information can also be found in the NMFS Stock Assessment
Reports (SAR). The Alaska 2012 SAR is available at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/pdf/ak2012.pdf.
Potential Effects of the Specified Activity on Marine Mammals
Operating active acoustic sources such as airgun arrays, pinger
systems, and vessel activities have the potential for adverse effects
on marine mammals.
Potential Effects of Airgun Sounds on Marine Mammals
The effects of sounds from airgun pulses might include one or more
of the following: tolerance, masking of natural sounds, behavioral
disturbance, and temporary or permanent hearing impairment or non-
auditory effects (Richardson et al. 1995). As outlined in previous NMFS
documents, the effects of noise on marine mammals are highly variable,
and can be categorized as follows (based on Richardson et al. 1995):
(1) Behavioral Disturbance
Marine mammals may behaviorally react to sound when exposed to
anthropogenic noise. These behavioral reactions are often shown as:
changing durations of surfacing and dives, number of blows per
surfacing, or moving direction and/or speed; reduced/increased vocal
activities; changing/cessation of certain behavioral activities (such
as socializing or feeding); visible startle response or aggressive
behavior (such as tail/fluke slapping or jaw clapping); avoidance of
areas where noise sources are located; and/or flight responses (e.g.,
pinnipeds flushing into water from haulouts or rookeries).
The biological significance of many of these behavioral
disturbances is difficult to predict, especially if the detected
disturbances appear minor. However, the consequences of behavioral
modification could be expected to be biologically significant if the
change affects growth, survival, and reproduction. Some of these
potential significant behavioral modifications include:
Drastic change in diving/surfacing patterns (such as those
thought to be causing beaked whale stranding due to exposure to
military mid-frequency tactical sonar);
Habitat abandonment due to loss of desirable acoustic
environment; and
Cease feeding or social interaction.
For example, at the Guerreo Negro Lagoon in Baja California,
Mexico, which is one of the important breeding grounds for Pacific gray
whales, shipping and dredging associated with a salt works may have
induced gray whales to abandon the area through most of the 1960s
(Bryant et al. 1984). After these activities stopped, the lagoon was
reoccupied, first by single whales and later by cow-calf pairs.
The onset of behavioral disturbance from anthropogenic noise
depends on both external factors (characteristics of noise sources and
their paths) and the receiving animals (hearing, motivation,
experience, demography) and is also difficult to predict (Southall et
al. 2007).
Currently NMFS uses 160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) at received level for
impulse noises (such as airgun pulses) as the threshold for the onset
of marine mammal behavioral harassment.
In addition, behavioral disturbance is also expressed as the change
in vocal activities of animals. For example, there is one recent
summary report indicating that calling fin whales distributed in one
part of the North Atlantic went silent for an extended period starting
soon after the onset of a seismic survey in the area (Clark and Gagnon
2006). It is not clear from that preliminary paper whether the whales
ceased calling because of masking, or whether this was a behavioral
response not directly involving masking (i.e., important biological
signals for marine mammals being ``masked'' by anthropogenic noise; see
below). Also, bowhead whales in the Beaufort Sea may decrease their
call rates in response to seismic operations, although movement out of
the area might also have contributed to the lower call detection rate
(Blackwell et al. 2009a; 2009b). Some of the changes in marine mammal
vocal communication are thought to be used to compensate for acoustic
masking resulting from increased anthropogenic noise (see below). For
example, blue whales are found to increase call rates when exposed to
seismic survey noise in the St. Lawrence Estuary (Di Iorio and Clark
2009). The North Atlantic right whales (Eubalaena glacialis) exposed to
high shipping noise increase call frequency (Parks et al. 2007) and
intensity (Parks et al. 2010), while some humpback whales respond to
low-frequency active sonar playbacks by increasing song length (Miller
el al. 2000). These behavioral responses could also have adverse
effects on marine mammals.
Mysticete: Baleen whales generally tend to avoid operating airguns,
but avoidance radii are quite variable. Whales are often reported to
show no overt reactions to airgun pulses at distances beyond a few
kilometers, even though the airgun pulses remain well above ambient
noise levels out to much longer distances (reviewed in Richardson et
al. 1995; Gordon et al. 2004). However, studies done since the late
1990s of migrating humpback and migrating bowhead whales show
reactions, including avoidance, that sometimes extend to greater
distances than documented earlier. Therefore, it appears that
behavioral disturbance can vary greatly depending on context, and not
just received levels alone. Avoidance distances often exceed the
distances at which boat-based observers can see whales, so observations
from the source vessel can be biased. Observations over broader areas
may be needed to determine the range of potential effects of some
large-source seismic surveys where effects on cetaceans may extend to
considerable distances (Richardson et al. 1999; Moore and Angliss
2006). Longer-range observations, when required, can sometimes be
obtained via systematic aerial surveys or aircraft-based observations
of behavior (e.g., Richardson et al. 1986, 1999; Miller et al. 1999,
2005; Yazvenko et al. 2007a, 2007b) or by use of observers on one or
more support vessels operating in coordination with the seismic vessel
(e.g., Smultea et al. 2004; Johnson et al. 2007). However, the presence
of other vessels near the source vessel can, at least at times, reduce
sightability of cetaceans from the source vessel (Beland et al. 2009),
thus complicating interpretation of sighting data.
Some baleen whales show considerable tolerance of seismic pulses.
However, when the pulses are strong enough, avoidance or other
behavioral changes become evident. Because the responses become less
obvious with diminishing received sound level, it has been difficult to
determine the maximum distance (or minimum received sound level) at
which reactions to seismic activity become evident and, hence, how many
whales are affected.
Studies of gray, bowhead, and humpback whales have determined that
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 (McCauley et al. 1998, 1999, 2000). In many areas,
seismic pulses
[[Page 28416]]
diminish to these levels at distances ranging from 4-15 km from the
source. A substantial proportion of the baleen whales within such
distances may show avoidance or other strong disturbance reactions to
the operating airgun array. Some extreme examples including migrating
bowhead whales avoiding considerably larger distances (20-30 km) and
lower received sound levels (120-130 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms)) when exposed
to airguns from seismic surveys. Also, even in cases where there is no
conspicuous avoidance or change in activity upon exposure to sound
pulses from distant seismic operations, there are sometimes subtle
changes in behavior (e.g., surfacing-respiration-dive cycles) that are
only evident through detailed statistical analysis (e.g., Richardson et
al. 1986; Gailey et al. 2007).
Data on short-term reactions by cetaceans to impulsive noises are
not necessarily indicative of long-term or biologically significant
effects. It is not known whether impulsive sounds affect reproductive
rate or distribution and habitat use in subsequent days or years.
However, gray whales have continued to migrate annually along the west
coast of North America despite intermittent seismic exploration (and
much ship traffic) in that area for decades (Appendix A in Malme et al.
1984; Richardson et al. 1995), and there has been a substantial
increase in the population over recent decades (Allen and Angliss
2010). 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). Similarly, bowhead whales have continued to travel to the
eastern Beaufort Sea each summer despite seismic exploration in their
summer and autumn range for many years (Richardson et al. 1987), and
their numbers have increased notably (Allen and Angliss 2010). Bowheads
also have been observed over periods of days or weeks in areas
ensonified repeatedly by seismic pulses (Richardson et al. 1987; Harris
et al. 2007). However, it is generally not known whether the same
individual bowheads were involved in these repeated observations
(within and between years) in strongly ensonified areas.
Odontocete: Relatively little systematic information is available
about reactions of toothed whales to airgun pulses. A few studies
similar to the more extensive baleen whale/seismic pulse work
summarized above have been reported for toothed whales. However, there
are recent systematic data on sperm whales (e.g., Gordon et al. 2006;
Madsen et al. 2006; Winsor and Mate 2006; Jochens et al. 2008; Miller
et al. 2009) and beluga whales (e.g., Miller et al. 2005). There is
also an increasing amount of information about responses of various
odontocetes to seismic surveys based on monitoring studies (e.g., Stone
2003; Smultea et al. 2004; Moulton and Miller 2005; 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).
Dolphins and porpoises are often seen by observers on active
seismic vessels, occasionally at close distances (e.g., bow riding).
Marine mammal monitoring data during seismic surveys often show that
animal detection rates drop during the firing of seismic airguns,
indicating that animals may be avoiding the vicinity of the seismic
area (Smultea et al. 2004; Holst et al. 2006; Hauser et al. 2008; Holst
and Smultea 2008; Richardson et al. 2009). Also, belugas summering in
the Canadian Beaufort Sea showed larger-scale avoidance, tending to
avoid waters out to 10-20 km from operating seismic vessels (Miller et
al. 2005). In contrast, recent studies show little evidence of
conspicuous reactions by sperm whales to airgun pulses, contrary to
earlier indications (e.g., Gordon et al. 2006; Stone and Tasker 2006;
Winsor and Mate 2006; Jochens et al. 2008), except the lower buzz
(echolocation signals) rates that were detected during exposure of
airgun pulses (Miller et al. 2009).
There are almost no specific data on responses of beaked whales to
seismic surveys, but it is likely that most if not all species show
strong avoidance. There is increasing evidence that some beaked whales
may strand after exposure to strong noise from tactical military mid-
frequency sonars. Whether they ever do so in response to seismic survey
noise is unknown. Northern bottlenose whales seem to continue to call
when exposed to pulses from distant seismic vessels.
For delphinids, and possibly the Dall's porpoise, the available
data suggest that a >=170 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) disturbance criterion
(rather than >=160 dB) would be appropriate. With a medium-to-large
airgun array, received levels typically diminish to 170 dB within 1-4
km, whereas levels typically remain above 160 dB out to 4-15 km (e.g.,
Tolstoy et al. 2009). Reaction distances for delphinids are more
consistent with the typical 170 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) distances. Stone
(2003) and Stone and Tasker (2006) reported that all small odontocetes
(including killer whales) observed during seismic surveys in UK waters
remained significantly further from the source during periods of
shooting on surveys with large volume airgun arrays than during periods
without airgun shooting.
Due to their relatively higher frequency hearing ranges when
compared to mysticetes, odontocetes may have stronger responses to mid-
and high-frequency sources such as sub-bottom profilers, side scan
sonar, and echo sounders than mysticetes (Richardson et al. 1995;
Southall et al. 2007).
Pinnipeds: Few studies of the reactions of pinnipeds to noise from
open-water seismic exploration have been published (for review of the
early literature, see Richardson et al. 1995). However, pinnipeds have
been observed during a number of seismic monitoring studies. Monitoring
in the Beaufort Sea during 1996-2002 provided a substantial amount of
information on avoidance responses (or lack thereof) and associated
behavior. Additional monitoring of that type has been done in the
Beaufort and Chukchi Seas in 2006-2009. Pinnipeds exposed to seismic
surveys have also been observed during seismic surveys along the U.S.
west coast. Also, there are data on the reactions of pinnipeds to
various other related types of impulsive sounds.
Early observations provided considerable evidence that pinnipeds
are often quite tolerant of strong pulsed sounds. During seismic
exploration off Nova Scotia, gray seals exposed to noise from airguns
and linear explosive charges reportedly did not react strongly (J.
Parsons in Greene et al. 1985). An airgun caused an initial startle
reaction among South African fur seals but was ineffective in scaring
them away from fishing gear. Pinnipeds in both water and air sometimes
tolerate strong noise pulses from non-explosive and explosive scaring
devices, especially if attracted to the area for feeding or
reproduction (Mate and Harvey 1987; Reeves et al. 1996). Thus,
pinnipeds are expected to be rather tolerant of, or to habituate to,
repeated underwater sounds from distant seismic sources, at least when
the animals are strongly attracted to the area.
In summary, visual monitoring from seismic vessels has shown only
slight (if any) avoidance of airguns by pinnipeds, and only slight (if
any) changes in behavior. These studies show that many pinnipeds do not
avoid the area within a few hundred meters of an operating airgun
array. However, based on the studies with large sample size, or
observations from a separate monitoring vessel, or radio telemetry, it
is apparent that some phocid seals do show localized avoidance of
operating
[[Page 28417]]
airguns. The limited nature of this tendency for avoidance is a
concern. It suggests that one cannot rely on pinnipeds to move away, or
to move very far away, before received levels of sound from an
approaching seismic survey vessel approach those that may cause hearing
impairment.
(2) Masking
Masking occurs when noise and signals (that animal utilizes)
overlap at both spectral and temporal scales. Chronic exposure to
elevated sound levels could cause masking at particular frequencies for
marine mammals, which utilize sound for important biological functions.
Masking can interfere with detection of acoustic signals used for
orientation, communication, finding prey, and avoiding predators.
Marine mammals that experience severe (high intensity and extended
duration) acoustic masking could potentially suffer reduced fitness,
which could lead to adverse effects on survival and reproduction.
For the airgun noise generated from the proposed marine seismic
survey, these are low frequency (under 1 kHz) pulses with extremely
short durations (in the scale of milliseconds). Lower frequency man-
made noises are more likely to affect detection of communication calls
and other potentially important natural sounds such as surf and prey
noise. There is little concern regarding masking due to the brief
duration of these pulses and relatively longer silence between airgun
shots (9-12 seconds) near the noise source, however, at long distances
(over tens of kilometers away) in deep water, due to multipath
propagation and reverberation, the durations of airgun pulses can be
``stretched'' to seconds with long decays (Madsen et al. 2006; Clark
and Gagnon 2006). Therefore it could affect communication signals used
by low frequency mysticetes when they occur near the noise band and
thus reduce the communication space of animals (e.g., Clark et al.
2009a, 2009b) and affect their vocal behavior (e.g., Foote et al. 2004;
Holt et al. 2009). Further, in areas of shallow water, multipath
propagation of airgun pulses could be more profound, thus affecting
communication signals from marine mammals even at close distances.
Average ambient noise in areas where received seismic noises are heard
can be elevated. At long distances, however, the intensity of the noise
is greatly reduced. Nevertheless, partial informational and energetic
masking of different degrees could affect signal receiving in some
marine mammals within the ensonified areas. Additional research is
needed to further address these effects.
Although masking effects of pulsed sounds on marine mammal calls
and other natural sounds are expected to be limited, there are few
specific studies on this. Some whales continue calling in the presence
of seismic pulses and whale calls often can be heard between the
seismic pulses (e.g., Richardson et al. 1986; McDonald et al. 1995;
Greene et al. 1999a, 1999b; Nieukirk et al. 2004; Smultea et al. 2004;
Holst et al. 2005a, 2005b, 2006; Dunn and Hernandez 2009).
Among the odontocetes, 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 of sperm whales
found that they 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). Madsen et al. (2006) noted that airgun
sounds would not be expected to mask sperm whale calls given the
intermittent nature of airgun pulses. Dolphins and porpoises are also
commonly heard calling while airguns are operating (Gordon et al. 2004;
Smultea et al. 2004; Holst et al. 2005a, 2005b; Potter et al. 2007).
Masking effects of seismic pulses are expected to be negligible in the
case of the smaller odontocetes, given the intermittent nature of
seismic pulses plus the fact that sounds important to them are
predominantly at much higher frequencies than are the dominant
components of airgun sounds.
Pinnipeds have best hearing sensitivity and/or produce most of
their sounds at frequencies higher than the dominant components of
airgun sound, but there is some overlap in the frequencies of the
airgun pulses and the calls. However, the intermittent nature of airgun
pulses presumably reduces the potential for masking.
Marine mammals are thought to be able to compensate for masking by
adjusting their acoustic behavior such as shifting call frequencies,
and increasing call volume and vocalization rates, as discussed earlier
(e.g., Miller et al. 2000; Parks et al. 2007; Di Iorio and Clark 2009;
Parks et al. 2010); the biological significance of these modifications
is still unknown.
(3) Hearing Impairment
Marine mammals exposed to high intensity sound repeatedly or for
prolonged periods can experience hearing threshold shift (TS), which is
the loss of hearing sensitivity at certain frequency ranges (Kastak et
al. 1999; Schlundt et al. 2000; Finneran et al. 2002; 2005). TS can be
permanent (PTS), in which case the loss of hearing sensitivity is
unrecoverable, or temporary (TTS), in which case the animal's hearing
threshold will recover over time (Southall et al. 2007). Marine mammals
that experience TTS or PTS will have reduced sensitivity at the
frequency band of the TS, which may affect their capability of
communication, orientation, or prey detection. The degree of TS depends
on the intensity of the received levels the animal is exposed to, and
the frequency at which TS occurs depends on the frequency of the
received noise. It has been shown that in most cases, TS occurs at the
frequencies approximately one-octave above that of the received noise.
Repeated noise exposure that leads to TTS could cause PTS. For
transient sounds, the sound level necessary to cause TTS is inversely
related to the duration of the sound.
TTS:
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. It is a temporary phenomenon, and (especially when mild) is not
considered to represent physical damage or ``injury'' (Southall et al.
2007). Rather, the onset of TTS is an indicator that, if the animal is
exposed to higher levels of that sound, physical damage is ultimately a
possibility.
The magnitude of TTS depends on the level and duration of noise
exposure, and to some degree on frequency, among other considerations
(Kryter 1985; Richardson et al. 1995; Southall et al. 2007). For sound
exposures at or somewhat above the TTS threshold, hearing sensitivity
recovers rapidly after exposure to the noise ends. In terrestrial
mammals, TTS can last from minutes or hours to (in cases of strong TTS)
days. Only a few data have been obtained on sound levels and durations
necessary to elicit mild TTS in marine mammals (none in mysticetes),
and none of the published data concern TTS elicited by exposure to
multiple pulses of sound during operational seismic surveys (Southall
et al. 2007).
For toothed whales, experiments on a bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops
truncates) and beluga whale showed that exposure to a single watergun
impulse at a received level of 207 kPa (or 30 psi) peak-to-peak (p-p),
which is equivalent to 228 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (p-p), resulted in a 7 and 6
dB TTS in the beluga whale at 0.4 and 30 kHz, respectively. Thresholds
returned to within 2 dB of the pre-exposure level within 4 minutes
[[Page 28418]]
of the exposure (Finneran et al. 2002). No TTS was observed in the
bottlenose dolphin.
Finneran et al. (2005) further examined the effects of tone
duration on TTS in bottlenose dolphins. Bottlenose dolphins were
exposed to 3 kHz tones (non-impulsive) for periods of 1, 2, 4 or 8
seconds (s), with hearing tested at 4.5 kHz. For 1-s exposures, TTS
occurred with SELs of 197 dB, and for exposures >1 s, SEL >195 dB
resulted in TTS (SEL is equivalent to energy flux, in dB re 1
[mu]Pa\2\-s). At an SEL of 195 dB, the mean TTS (4 min after exposure)
was 2.8 dB. Finneran et al. (2005) suggested that an SEL of 195 dB is
the likely threshold for the onset of TTS in dolphins and belugas
exposed to tones of durations 1-8 s (i.e., TTS onset occurs at a near-
constant SEL, independent of exposure duration). That implies that, at
least for non-impulsive tones, a doubling of exposure time results in a
3 dB lower TTS threshold.
However, the assumption that, in marine mammals, the occurrence and
magnitude of TTS is a function of cumulative acoustic energy (SEL) is
probably an oversimplification. Kastak et al. (2005) reported
preliminary evidence from pinnipeds that, for prolonged non-impulse
noise, higher SELs were required to elicit a given TTS if exposure
duration was short than if it was longer, i.e., the results were not
fully consistent with an equal-energy model to predict TTS onset.
Mooney et al. (2009a) showed this in a bottlenose dolphin exposed to
octave-band non-impulse noise ranging from 4 to 8 kHz at SPLs of 130 to
178 dB re 1 [mu]Pa for periods of 1.88 to 30 minutes (min). Higher SELs
were required to induce a given TTS if exposure duration was short than
if it was longer. Exposure of the aforementioned bottlenose dolphin to
a sequence of brief sonar signals showed that, with those brief (but
non-impulse) sounds, the received energy (SEL) necessary to elicit TTS
was higher than was the case with exposure to the more prolonged
octave-band noise (Mooney et al. 2009b). Those authors concluded that,
when using (non-impulse) acoustic signals of duration ~0.5 s, SEL must
be at least 210-214 dB re 1 [mu]Pa\2\-s to induce TTS in the bottlenose
dolphin. The most recent studies conducted by Finneran et al. also
support the notion that exposure duration has a more significant
influence compared to SPL as the duration increases, and that TTS
growth data are better represented as functions of SPL and duration
rather than SEL alone (Finneran et al. 2010a, 2010b). In addition,
Finneran et al. (2010b) conclude that when animals are exposed to
intermittent noises, there is recovery of hearing during the quiet
intervals between exposures through the accumulation of TTS across
multiple exposures. Such findings suggest that when exposed to multiple
seismic pulses, partial hearing recovery also occurs during the seismic
pulse intervals.
For baleen whales, there are no data, direct or indirect, on levels
or properties of sound that are required to induce TTS. The frequencies
to which baleen whales are most sensitive are lower than those to which
odontocetes are most sensitive, and natural ambient noise levels at
those low frequencies tend to be higher (Urick 1983). 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). From
this, it is suspected that received levels causing TTS onset may also
be higher in baleen whales. However, no cases of TTS are expected given
the small size of the airguns proposed to be used and the strong
likelihood that baleen whales (especially migrating bowheads) would
avoid the approaching airguns (or vessel) before being exposed to
levels high enough for there to be any possibility of TTS.
In pinnipeds, TTS thresholds associated with exposure to brief
pulses (single or multiple) of underwater sound have not been measured.
Initial evidence from prolonged exposures suggested that some pinnipeds
may incur TTS at somewhat lower received levels than do small
odontocetes exposed for similar durations (Kastak et al. 1999; 2005).
However, more recent indications are that TTS onset in the most
sensitive pinniped species studied (harbor seal, which is closely
related to the ringed seal) may occur at a similar SEL as in
odontocetes (Kastak et al. 2004).
Most cetaceans show some degree of avoidance of seismic vessels
operating an airgun array (see above). It is unlikely that these
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. TTS would be
more likely in any odontocetes that bow- or wake-ride or otherwise
linger near the airguns. However, while bow- or wake-riding,
odontocetes would be at the surface and thus not exposed to strong
sound pulses given the pressure release and Lloyd Mirror effects at the
surface. But if bow- or wake-riding animals were to dive intermittently
near airguns, they would be exposed to strong sound pulses, possibly
repeatedly.
If some cetaceans did incur mild or moderate TTS through exposure
to airgun sounds in this manner, this would very likely be a temporary
and reversible phenomenon. However, even a temporary reduction in
hearing sensitivity could be deleterious in the event that, during that
period of reduced sensitivity, a marine mammal needed its full hearing
sensitivity to detect approaching predators, or for some other reason.
Some pinnipeds show avoidance reactions to airguns, but their
avoidance reactions are generally not as strong or consistent as those
of cetaceans. Pinnipeds occasionally seem to be attracted to operating
seismic vessels. There are no specific data on TTS thresholds of
pinnipeds exposed to single or multiple low-frequency pulses. However,
given the indirect indications of a lower TTS threshold for the harbor
seal than for odontocetes exposed to impulse sound (see above), it is
possible that some pinnipeds close to a large airgun array could incur
TTS.
NMFS currently typically includes mitigation requirements to ensure
that cetaceans and pinnipeds are not exposed to pulsed underwater noise
at received levels exceeding, respectively, 180 and 190 dB re 1
[micro]Pa (rms). The 180/190 dB acoustic criteria were taken from
recommendations by an expert panel of the High Energy Seismic Survey
(HESS) Team that performed an assessment on noise impacts by seismic
airguns to marine mammals in 1997, although the HESS Team recommended a
180-dB limit for pinnipeds in California (HESS 1999). The 180 and 190
dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) levels have not been considered to be the levels
above which TTS might occur. Rather, they were the received levels
above which, in the view of a panel of bioacoustics specialists
convened by NMFS before TTS measurements for marine mammals started to
become available, one could not be certain that there would be no
injurious effects, auditory or otherwise, to marine mammals. As
summarized above, data that are now available imply that TTS is
unlikely to occur in various odontocetes (and probably mysticetes as
well) unless they are exposed to a sequence of several airgun pulses
stronger than 190 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms). On the other hand, for the
harbor seal, harbor porpoise, and perhaps some other species, TTS may
occur upon exposure to one or more airgun pulses whose received level
equals the NMFS ``do not exceed'' value of 190 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms).
That criterion corresponds to a single-pulse SEL of 175-180 dB re 1
[[Page 28419]]
[mu]Pa\2\-s in typical conditions, whereas TTS is suspected to be
possible in harbor seals and harbor porpoises with a cumulative SEL of
~171 and ~164 dB re 1 [mu]Pa\2\-s, respectively.
It has been shown that most large whales and many smaller
odontocetes (especially the harbor porpoise) show at least localized
avoidance of ships and/or seismic operations. Even when avoidance is
limited to the area within a few hundred meters of an airgun array,
that should usually be sufficient to avoid TTS based on what is
currently known about thresholds for TTS onset in cetaceans. In
addition, ramping up airgun arrays, which is standard operational
protocol for many seismic operators, may allow cetaceans near the
airguns at the time of startup (if the sounds are aversive) to move
away from the seismic source and to avoid being exposed to the full
acoustic output of the airgun array. Thus, most baleen whales likely
will not be exposed to high levels of airgun sounds provided the ramp-
up procedure is applied. Likewise, many odontocetes close to the
trackline are likely to move away before the sounds from an approaching
seismic vessel become sufficiently strong for there to be any potential
for TTS or other hearing impairment. Hence, there is little potential
for baleen whales or odontocetes that show avoidance of ships or
airguns to be close enough to an airgun array to experience TTS.
Nevertheless, even if marine mammals were to experience TTS, the
magnitude of the TTS is expected to be mild and brief, only in a few
decibels for minutes.
PTS:
When PTS occurs, there is physical damage to the sound receptors in
the ear. In some cases, there can be total or partial deafness, whereas
in other cases, the animal has an impaired ability to hear sounds in
specific frequency ranges (Kryter 1985). Physical damage to a mammal's
hearing apparatus can occur if it is exposed to sound impulses that
have very high peak pressures, especially if they have very short rise
times. (Rise time is the interval required for sound pressure to
increase from the baseline pressure to peak pressure.)
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 likelihood that some mammals close to an
airgun array might incur at least mild TTS (see above), there has been
further speculation about the possibility that some individuals
occurring very close to airguns might incur PTS (e.g., 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 (Southall et al. 2007). 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 higher (Southall et al. 2007).
The low-to-moderate levels of TTS that have been induced in captive
odontocetes and pinnipeds during controlled studies of TTS have been
confirmed to be temporary, with no measurable residual PTS (Kastak et
al. 1999; Schlundt et al. 2000; Finneran et al. 2002; 2005; Nachtigall
et al. 2003; 2004). However, very prolonged exposure to sound strong
enough to elicit TTS, or shorter-term exposure to sound levels well
above the TTS threshold, can cause PTS, at least in terrestrial mammals
(Kryter 1985). In terrestrial mammals, the received sound level from a
single non-impulsive sound exposure must be far above the TTS threshold
for any risk of permanent hearing damage (Kryter 1994; Richardson et
al. 1995; Southall et al. 2007). However, there is special concern
about strong sounds whose pulses have very rapid rise times. In
terrestrial mammals, there are situations when pulses with rapid rise
times (e.g., from explosions) can result in PTS even though their peak
levels are only a few dB higher than the level causing slight TTS. The
rise time of airgun pulses is fast, but not as fast as that of an
explosion.
Some factors that contribute to onset of PTS, at least in
terrestrial mammals, are as follows:
exposure to a single very intense sound,
fast rise time from baseline to peak pressure,
repetitive exposure to intense sounds that individually
cause TTS but not PTS, and
recurrent ear infections or (in captive animals) exposure
to certain drugs.
Cavanagh (2000) reviewed the thresholds used to define TTS and PTS.
Based on this review and SACLANT (1998), it is reasonable to assume
that PTS might occur at a received sound level 20 dB or more above that
inducing mild TTS. However, for PTS to occur at a received level only
20 dB above the TTS threshold, the animal probably would have to be
exposed to a strong sound for an extended period, or to a strong sound
with a rather rapid rise time.
More recently, Southall et al. (2007) estimated that received
levels would need to exceed the TTS threshold by at least 15 dB, on an
SEL basis, for there to be risk of PTS. Thus, for cetaceans exposed to
a sequence of sound pulses, they estimate that the PTS threshold might
be an M-weighted SEL (for the sequence of received pulses) of ~198 dB
re 1 [mu]Pa\2\-s. Additional assumptions had to be made to derive a
corresponding estimate for pinnipeds, as the only available data on
TTS-thresholds in pinnipeds pertained to nonimpulse sound (see above).
Southall et al. (2007) estimated that the PTS threshold could be a
cumulative SEL of ~186 dB re 1 [mu]Pa\2\-s in the case of a harbor seal
exposed to impulse sound. The PTS threshold for the California sea lion
and northern elephant seal would probably be higher given the higher
TTS thresholds in those species. Southall et al. (2007) also note that,
regardless of the SEL, there is concern about the possibility of PTS if
a cetacean or pinniped received one or more pulses with peak pressure
exceeding 230 or 218 dB re 1 [mu]Pa, respectively. Thus, PTS might be
expected upon exposure of cetaceans to either SEL >=198 dB re 1
[mu]Pa\2\-s or peak pressure >=230 dB re 1 [mu]Pa. Corresponding
proposed dual criteria for pinnipeds (at least harbor seals) are >=186
dB SEL and >=218 dB peak pressure (Southall et al. 2007). These
estimates are all first approximations, given the limited underlying
data, assumptions, species differences, and evidence that the ``equal
energy'' model may not be entirely correct.
Sound impulse duration, peak amplitude, rise time, number of
pulses, and inter-pulse interval are the main factors thought to
determine the onset and extent of PTS. Ketten (1994) has noted that the
criteria for differentiating the sound pressure levels that result in
PTS (or TTS) are location and species specific. PTS effects may also be
influenced strongly by the health of the receiver's ear.
As described above for TTS, in estimating the amount of sound
energy required to elicit the onset of TTS (and PTS), it is assumed
that the auditory effect of a given cumulative SEL from a series of
pulses is the same as if that amount of sound energy were received as a
single strong sound. There are no data from marine mammals concerning
the occurrence or magnitude of a potential partial recovery effect
between pulses. In deriving the estimates of PTS
[[Page 28420]]
(and TTS) thresholds quoted here, Southall et al. (2007) made the
precautionary assumption that no recovery would occur between pulses.
It is unlikely that an odontocete would remain close enough to a
large airgun array for sufficiently long to incur PTS. There is some
concern about bowriding odontocetes, but for animals at or near the
surface, auditory effects are reduced by Lloyd's mirror and surface
release effects. The presence of the vessel between the airgun array
and bow-riding odontocetes could also, in some but probably not all
cases, reduce the levels received by bow-riding animals (e.g., Gabriele
and Kipple 2009). The TTS (and thus PTS) thresholds of baleen whales
are unknown but, as an interim measure, assumed to be no lower than
those of odontocetes. Also, baleen whales generally avoid the immediate
area around operating seismic vessels, so it is unlikely that a baleen
whale could incur PTS from exposure to airgun pulses. The TTS (and thus
PTS) thresholds of some pinnipeds (e.g., harbor seal) as well as the
harbor porpoise may be lower (Kastak et al. 2005; Southall et al. 2007;
Lucke et al. 2009). If so, TTS and potentially PTS may extend to a
somewhat greater distance for those animals. Again, Lloyd's mirror and
surface release effects will ameliorate the effects for animals at or
near the surface.
(4) Non-auditory Physical Effects
Non-auditory physical effects might 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 neurological effects,
bubble formation, and other types of organ or tissue damage. Some
marine mammal species (i.e., beaked whales) may be especially
susceptible to injury and/or stranding when exposed to intense sounds.
However, there is no definitive evidence that any of these effects
occur even for marine mammals in close proximity to large arrays of
airguns, and beaked whales do not occur in the proposed project area.
In addition, marine mammals that show behavioral avoidance of seismic
vessels, including most baleen whales, some odontocetes (including
belugas), and some pinnipeds, are especially unlikely to incur non-
auditory impairment or other physical effects.
Therefore, it is unlikely that such effects would occur during
Shell's proposed marine surveys given the brief duration of exposure,
the small sound sources, and the planned monitoring and mitigation
measures described later in this document.
Additional non-auditory effects include elevated levels of stress
response (Wright et al. 2007; Wright and Highfill 2007). Although not
many studies have been done on noise-induced stress in marine mammals,
extrapolation of information regarding stress responses in other
species seems applicable because the responses are highly consistent
among all species in which they have been examined to date (Wright et
al. 2007). Therefore, it is reasonable to conclude that noise acts as a
stressor to marine mammals. Furthermore, given that marine mammals will
likely respond in a manner consistent with other species studied,
repeated and prolonged exposures to stressors (including or induced by
noise) could potentially be problematic for marine mammals of all ages.
Wright et al. (2007) state that a range of issues may arise from an
extended stress response including, but not limited to, suppression of
reproduction (physiologically and behaviorally), accelerated aging and
sickness-like symptoms. However, as mentioned above, Shell's proposed
activity is not expected to result in these severe effects due to the
nature of the potential sound exposure.
(5) Stranding and Mortality
Marine mammals close to underwater detonations can be killed or
severely injured, and the auditory organs are especially susceptible to
injury (Ketten et al. 1993; Ketten 1995). Airgun pulses are less
energetic and their peak amplitudes have slower rise times, while
stranding and mortality events would include other energy sources
(acoustical or shock wave) far beyond just seismic airguns. To date,
there is no evidence that serious injury, death, or stranding by marine
mammals can occur from exposure to airgun pulses, even in the case of
large airgun arrays.
However, in numerous past IHA notices for seismic surveys,
commenters have referenced two stranding events allegedly associated
with seismic activities, one off Baja California and a second off
Brazil. NMFS has addressed this concern several times, and, without new
information, does not believe that this issue warrants further
discussion. For information relevant to strandings of marine mammals,
readers are encouraged to review NMFS' response to comments on this
matter found in 69 FR 74906 (December 14, 2004), 71 FR 43112 (July 31,
2006), 71 FR 50027 (August 24, 2006), and 71 FR 49418 (August 23,
2006).
It should be noted that strandings related to sound exposure have
not been recorded for marine mammal species in the Chukchi or Beaufort
seas. NMFS notes that in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, aerial surveys
have been conducted by BOEM (previously MMS) and industry during
periods of industrial activity (and by BOEM during times with no
activity). No strandings or marine mammals in distress have been
observed during these surveys and none have been reported by North
Slope Borough inhabitants. In addition, there are very few instances
that seismic surveys in general have been linked to marine mammal
strandings, other than those mentioned above. As a result, NMFS does
not expect any marine mammals will incur serious injury or mortality in
the Arctic Ocean or strand as a result of the proposed marine survey.
Potential Effects of Sonar Signals
A variety of active acoustic instrumentation would be used during
Shell's proposed marine surveys program. Source characteristics and
propagation distances to 160 (rms) dB re 1 [micro]Pa by comparable
instruments are listed in Table 2. In general, the potential effects of
this equipment on marine mammals are similar to those from the airgun,
except the magnitude of the impacts is expected to be much less due to
the lower intensity and higher frequencies. In some cases, due to the
fact that the operating frequencies of some of this equipment (e.g.,
Multi-beam bathymetric sonar: frequency at 220-240 kHz) are above the
hearing ranges of marine mammals, they are not expected to have any
impacts to marine mammals.
Vessel Sounds
In addition to the noise generated from seismic airguns and active
sonar systems, various types of vessels will be used in the operations,
including source vessel and vessels used for equipment recovery and
maintenance and logistic support. Sounds from boats and vessels have
been reported extensively (Greene and Moore 1995; Blackwell and Greene
2002; 2005; 2006). Numerous measurements of underwater vessel sound
have been performed in support of recent industry activity in the
Chukchi and Beaufort Seas. Results of these measurements were reported
in various 90-day and comprehensive reports since 2007 (e.g., Aerts et
al. 2008; Hauser et al. 2008; Brueggeman 2009; Ireland et al. 2009;
O'Neill and McCrodan 2011; Chorney et al. 2011; McPherson and Warner
2012). For example, Garner and Hannay (2009)
[[Page 28421]]
estimated sound pressure levels of 100 dB at distances ranging from
approximately 1.5 to 2.3 mi (2.4 to 3.7 km) from various types of
barges. MacDonald et al. (2008) estimated higher underwater SPLs from
the seismic vessel Gilavar of 120 dB at approximately 13 mi (21 km)
from the source, although the sound level was only 150 dB at 85 ft (26
m) from the vessel. Compared to airgun pulses, underwater sound from
vessels is generally at relatively low frequencies. However, noise from
the vessel during equipment recovery and maintenance while operating
the DP system using thrusters as well as the primary propeller(s) could
produce noise levels higher than during normal operation of the vessel.
Measurements of a vessel in DP mode with an active bow thruster were
made in the Chukchi Sea in 2010 (Chorney et al. 2011). The resulting
source level estimate was 175.9 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa-m. Acoustic
measurements of the Nordica in DP mode while supporting Shell's 2012
drilling operation in the Chukchi Sea showed that the 120 dB re 1
[micro] Pa radius was at approximately 4 km (2.5 mi) (Bisson et al.
2013).
The primary sources of sounds from all vessel classes are propeller
cavitation, propeller singing, and propulsion or other machinery.
Propeller cavitation is usually the dominant noise source for vessels
(Ross 1976). Propeller cavitation and singing are produced outside the
hull, whereas propulsion or other machinery noise originates inside the
hull. There are additional sounds produced by vessel activity, such as
pumps, generators, flow noise from water passing over the hull, and
bubbles breaking in the wake. Source levels from various vessels would
be empirically measured before the start of marine surveys, and during
equipment recovery and maintenance while operating the DP system.
Anticipated Effects on Habitat
The primary potential impacts to marine mammals and other marine
species are associated with elevated sound levels produced by airguns
and vessels operating in the area. However, other potential impacts to
the surrounding habitat from physical disturbance are also possible.
Potential Impacts on Prey Species
With regard to fish as a prey source for cetaceans and pinnipeds,
fish are known to hear and react to sounds and to use sound to
communicate (Tavolga et al. 1981) and possibly avoid predators (Wilson
and Dill 2002). Experiments have shown that fish can sense both the
strength and direction of sound (Hawkins 1981). Primary factors
determining whether a fish can sense a sound signal, and potentially
react to it, are the frequency of the signal and the strength of the
signal in relation to the natural background noise level.
The level of sound at which a fish will react or alter its behavior
is usually well above the detection level. Fish have been found to
react to sounds when the sound level increased to about 20 dB above the
detection level of 120 dB (Ona 1988); however, the response threshold
can depend on the time of year and the fish's physiological condition
(Engas et al. 1993). In general, fish react more strongly to pulses of
sound rather than non-pulse signals (such as noise from vessels)
(Blaxter et al. 1981), and a quicker alarm response is elicited when
the sound signal intensity rises rapidly compared to sound rising more
slowly to the same level.
Investigations of fish behavior in relation to vessel noise (Olsen
et al. 1983; Ona 1988; Ona and Godo 1990) have shown that fish react
when the sound from the engines and propeller exceeds a certain level.
Avoidance reactions have been observed in fish such as cod and herring
when vessels approached close enough that received sound levels are 110
dB to 130 dB (Nakken 1992; Olsen 1979; Ona and Godo 1990; Ona and
Toresen 1988). However, other researchers have found that fish such as
polar cod, herring, and capeline are often attracted to vessels
(apparently by the noise) and swim toward the vessel (Rostad et al.
2006). Typical sound source levels of vessel noise in the audible range
for fish are 150 dB to 170 dB (Richardson et al. 1995).
Further, during the seismic survey only a small fraction of the
available habitat would be ensonified at any given time. Disturbance to
fish species would be short-term and fish would return to their pre-
disturbance behavior once the seismic activity ceases (McCauley et al.
2000a, 2000b; Santulli et al. 1999; Pearson et al. 1992). Thus, the
proposed survey would have little, if any, impact on the abilities of
marine mammals to feed in the area where seismic work is planned.
Some mysticetes, including bowhead whales, feed on concentrations
of zooplankton. Some feeding bowhead whales may occur in the Alaskan
Beaufort Sea in July and August, and others feed intermittently during
their westward migration in September and October (Richardson and
Thomson [eds.] 2002; Lowry et al. 2004). A reaction by zooplankton to a
seismic impulse would only be relevant to whales if it caused
concentrations of zooplankton to scatter. Pressure changes of
sufficient magnitude to cause that type of reaction would probably
occur only very close to the source. Impacts on zooplankton behavior
are predicted to be negligible, and that would translate into
negligible impacts on feeding mysticetes. Thus, the proposed activity
is not expected to have any habitat-related effects on prey species
that could cause significant or long-term consequences for individual
marine mammals or their populations.
Potential Impacts on Availability of Affected Species or Stock for
Taking for Subsistence Uses
Subsistence hunting is an essential aspect of Inupiat Native life,
especially in rural coastal villages. The Inupiat participate in
subsistence hunting activities in and around the Chukchi Sea. The
animals taken for subsistence provide a significant portion of the food
that will last the community through the year. Marine mammals represent
on the order of 60-80% of the total subsistence harvest. Along with the
nourishment necessary for survival, the subsistence activities
strengthen bonds within the culture, provide a means for educating the
young, provide supplies for artistic expression, and allow for
important celebratory events.
The communities closest to the project area are the villages of
Wainwright and Barrow. Shell's proposed ice gouge surveys would occur
offshore Wainwright but would be approximately 30 km from Barrow and 48
km from Point Lay. The closest point for Shell's proposed site
clearance and shallow hazards surveys and equipment recovery and
maintenance activities would be approximately 120 km to Wainwright and
150 km to Point Lay, and much farther away to Barrow.
Potential Impacts to Subsistence Uses
NMFS has defined ``unmitigable adverse impact'' in 50 CFR 216.103
as: ``. . . an impact resulting from the specified activity: (1) That
is likely to reduce the availability of the species to a level
insufficient for a harvest to meet subsistence needs by: (i) Causing
the marine mammals to abandon or avoid hunting areas; (ii) Directly
displacing subsistence users; or (iii) Placing physical barriers
between the marine mammals and the subsistence hunters; and (2) That
cannot be sufficiently mitigated by other measures to increase the
availability of marine mammals to allow subsistence needs to be met.''
[[Page 28422]]
(1) Bowhead Whales
Shell's planned surveys would have no or negligible effects on
bowhead whale harvest activities. Noise and general activity associated
with marine surveys and operation of vessels has the potential to
harass bowhead whales. However, though temporary diversions of the swim
path of migrating whales have been documented, the whales have
generally been observed to resume their initial migratory route. The
proposed open-water marine surveys and vessel noise could in some
circumstances affect subsistence hunts by placing the animals further
offshore or otherwise at a greater distance from villages thereby
increasing the difficulty of the hunt or retrieval of the harvest, or
creating a safety risk to the whalers. Residents of Barrow hunt
bowheads during the spring and fall migration. However, bowhead hunts
by residents of Wainwright, Point Lay and Point Hope take place almost
exclusively in the spring and are typically curtailed when ice begins
to break up which is prior to the date Shell would commence the 2013
activities. From 1974 through 2009, bowhead harvests by these Chukchi
Sea villages occurred only in the spring between early April and mid-
June (Suydam and George, 2012). A Wainwright whaling crew harvested the
first fall bowhead in 90 years or more on October 8, 2010, and again in
October of 2011. Fall whaling by Chukchi Sea villages may occur in the
future, particularly if bowhead quotas are not completely filled during
the spring hunt, and fall weather is accommodating.
During the survey period most marine mammals are expected to be
dispersed throughout the area, except during the peak of the bowhead
whale migration through the Chukchi Seas, which occurs from late August
into October. Bowhead whales are expected to be in the Canadian
Beaufort Sea during much of the time, and therefore are not expected to
be affected by the proposed marine surveys and vessel noise prior to
the start of the fall subsistence hunt. After the conclusion of the
subsistence hunt, bowheads may travel in proximity to the survey area
and hear sounds from sonar, high resolution profilers, and associated
vessel sounds; and may be displaced by these activities.
(2) Beluga Whales
Belugas typically do not represent a large proportion of the
subsistence harvests by weight in the communities of Wainwright and
Barrow, the nearest communities to Shell's planned 2013 activities in
the Chukchi Sea. Barrow residents hunt beluga in the spring normally
after the bowhead hunt) in leads between Point Barrow and Skull Cliffs
in the Chukchi Sea primarily in April-June, and later in the summer
(July-August) on both sides of the barrier island in Elson Lagoon/
Beaufort Sea (MMS 2008), but harvest rates indicate the hunts are not
frequent. Wainwright residents hunt beluga in April-June in the spring
lead system, but this hunt typically occurs only if there are no
bowheads in the area. Communal hunts for beluga are conducted along the
coastal lagoon system later in July-August.
Belugas typically represent a much greater proportion of the
subsistence harvest in Point Lay and Point Hope. Point Lay's primary
beluga hunt occurs from mid-June through mid-July, but can sometimes
continue into August if early success is not sufficient. Point Hope
residents hunt beluga primarily in the lead system during the spring
(late March to early June) bowhead hunt, but also in open water along
the coastline in July and August. Belugas are harvested in coastal
waters near these villages, generally within a few miles from shore.
The southern extent of Shell's proposed surveys is Icy Cape which lies
over 30 miles (48 km) to the north of Point Lay, and therefore NMFS
considers that the surveys would have no or negligible effect on beluga
hunts.
The survey vessel may be resupplied via another vessel from onshore
support facilities and may traverse areas that are sometimes used for
subsistence hunting of belugas. Disturbance associated with vessel and
potential aircraft traffic could therefore potentially affect beluga
hunts. However, all of the beluga hunt by Barrow residents in the
Chukchi Sea, and much of the hunt by Wainwright residents would likely
be completed before Shell activities would commence.
(3) Seals
Seals are an important subsistence resource and ringed seals make
up the bulk of the seal harvest. Most ringed and bearded seals are
harvested in the winter or in the spring before Shell's 2013 activities
would commence, but some harvest continues during open water and could
possibly be affected by Shell's planned activities. Spotted seals are
also harvested during the summer. Most seals are harvested in coastal
waters, with available maps of recent and past subsistence use areas
indicating seal harvests have occurred only within 30-40 mi (48-64 km)
off the coastline. Shells planned offshore surveys, equipment recovery
and maintenance would occur outside state waters and are not likely to
have an impact on subsistence hunting for seals. Resupply vessel and
air traffic between land and the operations vessels could potentially
disturb seals and, therefore, subsistence hunts for seals, but any such
effects would be minor due to the small number of supporting vessels
and the fact that most seal hunting is done during the winter and
spring.
As stated earlier, the proposed seismic survey would take place
between July and October. The closest extension of the proposed site
clearance and shallow hazards surveys located approximately 120 km to
Wainwright and 150 km to Point Lay, and much farther to Barrow.
Potential impact from the planned activities is expected mainly from
sounds generated by the vessel and during active airgun deployment. Due
to the timing of the project and the distance from the surrounding
communities, it is anticipated to have no effects on spring harvesting
and little or no effects on the occasional summer harvest of beluga
whale, subsistence seal hunts (ringed and spotted seals are primarily
harvested in winter while bearded seals are hunted during July--
September in the Beaufort Sea), or the fall bowhead hunt.
In addition, Shell has developed and proposes to implement a number
of mitigation measures which include a proposed Marine Mammal
Monitoring and Mitigation Plan (4MP), employment of subsistence
advisors in the villages, and implementation of a Communications Plan
(with operation of Communication Centers). Shell is also preparing a
Plan of Cooperation (POC) under 50 CFR 216.104 Article 12 of the MMPA
to address potential impacts on subsistent seal hunting activities.
Shell will meet with the Alaska Eskimo Whaling Commission (AEWC) and
communities' Whaling Captains' Associations as part of the POC
development, to establish avoidance guidelines and other mitigation
measures to be followed where the proposed activities may have an
impact on subsistence.
Finally, to ensure that there will be no conflict from Shell's
proposed open-water marine surveys and equipment recovery and
maintenance to subsistence activities, NMFS encourages Shell to sign a
Conflict Avoidance Agreement with the local subsistence communities.
The CAA identifies what measures have been or will be taken to minimize
adverse impacts of the planned activities on subsistence harvesting.
[[Page 28423]]
Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an incidental take authorization under Section
101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA, NMFS must 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.
For the proposed Shell open-water marine surveys and equipment
recovery and maintenance activities in the Chukchi Sea, Shell worked
with NMFS and proposed the following mitigation measures to minimize
the potential impacts to marine mammals in the project vicinity as a
result of the marine seismic survey activities. The primary purpose of
these mitigation measures is to detect marine mammals within, or about
to enter designated exclusion zones and to initiate immediate shutdown
or power down of the airgun(s), therefore it's very unlikely potential
injury or TTS to marine mammals would occur, and Level B behavioral of
marine mammals would be reduced to the lowest level practicable.
(1) Establishing Exclusion and Disturbance Zones
Under current NMFS guidelines, the ``exclusion zone'' for marine
mammal exposure to impulse sources is customarily defined as the area
within which received sound levels are >=180 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa for
cetaceans and >=190 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa for pinnipeds. These safety
criteria are based on an assumption that SPL received at levels lower
than these will not injure these animals or impair their hearing
abilities, but that at higher levels might have some such effects.
Disturbance or behavioral effects to marine mammals from underwater
sound may occur after exposure to sound at distances greater than the
exclusion zones (Richarcdson et al. 1995). Currently, NMFS uses 160 dB
(rms) re 1 [mu]Pa as the threshold for Level B behavioral harassment
from impulses noise, and 120 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa for Level B
behavioral harassment from non-impulse noise.
Exclusion and disturbance radii for the sound levels produced by
the 40 in\3\ array and the single mitigation airgun (10 cubic inches)
to be used during the 2013 site clearance and shallow hazards survey
activities were measured at the Honeyguide and Burger prospect areas a
total of three separate times between 2008 and 2009. The largest radii
from these measurements will be implemented at the commencement of 2013
airgun operations to establish marine mammal exclusion zones used for
mitigation (Table 3). Shell will conduct sound source measurements of
the airgun array at the beginning of survey operations in 2013 to
verify the size of the various marine mammal exclusion zones (see
above). The acoustic data will be analyzed as quickly as reasonably
practicable in the field and used to verify and adjust the marine
mammal exclusion zone distances. The mitigation measures to be
implemented at the 190 and 180 dB (rms) sound levels will include power
downs and shut downs as described below.
Table 3--Distances of the 190 and 180 dB (rms) re 1 [micro]Pa Isolpeths (in m) To Be Used for Mitigation
Purposes at the Beginning of 2013 Airgun Operations in the Chukchi Seal Until SSV Results Are Available
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Received levels (dB re 1 [mu]Pa rms) 4-Airgun array (40 in\3\) Single airgun (10 in\3\)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
190................................................. 50 23
180................................................. 160 52
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) Vessel and Helicopter Related Mitigation Measures
This proposed mitigation measures apply to all vessels that are
part of the Chukchi Sea marine surveys and equipment recovery and
maintenance activities, including crew transfer vessels.
Avoid concentrations or groups of whales by all vessels
under the direction of Shell. Operators of support vessels should, at
all times, conduct their activities at the maximum distance possible
from such concentrations of whales.
Vessels in transit shall be operated at speeds necessary
to ensure no physical contact with whales occurs. If any vessel
approaches within 1.6 km (1 mi) of observed bowhead whales, except when
providing emergency assistance to whalers or in other emergency
situations, the vessel operator will take reasonable precautions to
avoid potential interaction with the bowhead whales by taking one or
more of the following actions, as appropriate:
[cir] Reducing vessel speed to less than 5 knots within 300 yards
(900 feet or 274 m) of the whale(s);
[cir] Steering around the whale(s) if possible;
[cir] Operating the vessel(s) in such a way as to avoid separating
members of a group of whales from other members of the group;
[cir] Operating the vessel(s) to avoid causing a whale to make
multiple changes in direction; and
[cir] Checking the waters immediately adjacent to the vessel(s) to
ensure that no whales will be injured when the propellers are engaged.
When weather conditions require, such as when visibility
drops, adjust vessel speed accordingly to avoid the likelihood of
injury to whales.
In the event that any aircraft (such as helicopters) are
used to support the planned survey, the mitigation measures below would
apply:
[cir] Under no circumstances, other than an emergency, shall
aircraft be operated at an altitude lower than 1,000 feet above sea
level (ASL) when within 0.3 mile (0.5 km) of groups of whales.
[cir] Helicopters shall not hover or circle above or within 0.3
mile (0.5 km) of groups of whales.
(3) Mitigation Measures for Airgun Operations
The primary role for airgun mitigation during the site clearance
and shallow hazards surveys is to monitor marine mammals near the
airgun array during all daylight airgun operations and during any
nighttime start-up of the airguns. During the site clearance and
shallow hazards surveys PSOs will monitor the pre-established exclusion
zones for the presence of marine mammals. When marine mammals are
observed within, or about to enter, designated safety zones, PSOs have
the authority to call for immediate power down (or shutdown) of airgun
operations as required by the situation. A summary of the procedures
associated with each mitigation measure is provided below.
Ramp Up Procedure
A ramp up of an airgun array provides a gradual increase in sound
levels, and
[[Page 28424]]
involves a step-wise increase in the number and total volume of airguns
firing until the full volume is achieved. The purpose of a ramp up (or
``soft start'') is to ``warn'' cetaceans and pinnipeds in the vicinity
of the airguns and to provide time for them to leave the area and thus
avoid any potential injury or impairment of their hearing abilities.
During the proposed shallow hazards survey program, the seismic
operator will ramp up the airgun arrays slowly. Full ramp ups (i.e.,
from a cold start after a shut down, when no airguns have been firing)
will begin by firing a single airgun in the array (i.e., the mitigation
airgun). A full ramp up, after a shut down, will not begin until there
has been a minimum of 30 min of observation of the safety zone by PSOs
to assure that no marine mammals are present. The entire safety zone
must be visible during the 30-minute lead-in to a full ramp up. If the
entire safety zone is not visible, then ramp up from a cold start
cannot begin. If a marine mammal(s) is sighted within the safety zone
during the 30-minute watch prior to ramp up, ramp up will be delayed
until the marine mammal(s) is sighted outside of the safety zone or the
animal(s) is not sighted for at least 15-30 minutes: 15 minutes for
small odontocetes (harbor porpoise) and pinnipeds, or 30 minutes for
baleen whales and large odontocetes (including beluga and killer whales
and narwhal).
Use of a Small-Volume Airgun During Turns and Transits
Throughout the seismic survey, particularly during turning
movements, and short transits, Shell will employ the use of a small-
volume airgun (i.e., 10 in\3\ ``mitigation airgun'') to deter marine
mammals from being within the immediate area of the seismic operations.
The mitigation airgun would be operated at approximately one shot per
minute and would not be operated for longer than three hours in
duration (turns may last two to three hours for the proposed project).
During turns or brief transits (e.g., less than three hours)
between seismic tracklines, one mitigation airgun will continue
operating. The ramp-up procedure will still be followed when increasing
the source levels from one airgun to the full airgun array. However,
keeping one airgun firing will avoid the prohibition of a ``cold
start'' during darkness or other periods of poor visibility. Through
use of this approach, site clearance and shallow hazards surveys using
the full array may resume without the 30 minute observation period of
the full exclusion zone required for a ``cold start''. PSOs will be on
duty whenever the airguns are firing during daylight, during the 30
minute periods prior to ramp-ups.
Power-down and Shut Down Procedures
A power down is the immediate reduction in the number of operating
energy sources from all firing to some smaller number (e.g., single
mitigation airgun). A shut down is the immediate cessation of firing of
all energy sources. The array will be immediately powered down whenever
a marine mammal is sighted approaching close to or within the
applicable safety zone of the full array, but is outside the applicable
safety zone of the single mitigation source. If a marine mammal is
sighted within or about to enter the applicable safety zone of the
single mitigation airgun, the entire array will be shut down (i.e., no
sources firing).
Poor Visibility Conditions
Shell plans to conduct 24-hour operations. PSOs will not be on duty
during ongoing seismic operations during darkness, given the very
limited effectiveness of visual observation at night (there will be no
periods of darkness in the survey area until mid-August). The proposed
provisions associated with operations at night or in periods of poor
visibility include the following:
If during foggy conditions, heavy snow or rain, or
darkness (which may be encountered starting in late August), the full
180 dB exclusion zone is not visible, the airguns cannot commence a
ramp-up procedure from a full shut-down.
If one or more airguns have been operational before
nightfall or before the onset of poor visibility conditions, they can
remain operational throughout the night or poor visibility conditions.
In this case ramp-up procedures can be initiated, even though the
exclusion zone may not be visible, on the assumption that marine
mammals will be alerted by the sounds from the single airgun and have
moved away.
(4) Mitigation Measures for Subsistence Activities
Regulations at 50 CFR 216.104(a)(12) require IHA applicants for
activities that take place in Arctic waters to provide a Plan of
Cooperation (POC) or information that identifies what measures have
been taken and/or will be taken to minimize adverse effects on the
availability of marine mammals for subsistence purposes.
Shell is preparing a POC, which relies upon the Chukchi Sea
Communication Plans to identify the measures that Shell has developed
in consultation with North Slope subsistence communities and will
implement during its planned 2013 activities to minimize any adverse
effects on the availability of marine mammals for subsistence uses. In
addition, the POC will detail Shell's communications and consultations
with local subsistence communities concerning its planned 2013 program,
potential conflicts with subsistence activities, and means of resolving
any such conflicts. Shell states that it continues to document its
contacts with the North Slope subsistence communities, as well as the
substance of its communications with subsistence stakeholder groups.
The POC will be, and has been in the past, the result of numerous
meetings and consultations between Shell, affected subsistence
communities and stakeholders, and federal agencies. The POC identifies
and documents potential conflicts and associated measures that will be
taken to minimize any adverse effects on the availability of marine
mammals for subsistence use. Outcomes of POC meetings are typically
included in updates attached to the POC as addenda and distributed to
federal, state, and local agencies as well as local stakeholder groups
that either adjudicate or influence mitigation approaches for Shell's
open-water programs.
Meetings for Shell's 2013 drilling and open-water marine surveys
programs in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas occurred in Kaktovik, Nuiqsut
Barrow, Wainwright, and Point Lay, during October of 2012. Shell met
with the marine mammal commissions and committees including the Alaska
Eskimo Whaling Commission (AEWC), Eskimo Walrus Commission (EWC),
Alaska Beluga Whale Committee (ABWC), Alaska Ice Seal Committee (AISC),
and the Alaska Nanuuq Commission (ANC) on December 17 and 18, 2012 in a
co-management meeting. In March 2013, Shell revised its 2013 program to
suspend plans for drilling, delete the proposed geotechnical program
entirely, and remove survey activities from the Beaufort Sea. As a
result, Shell has revised the proposed open-water marine surveys
program for 2013, thereby necessitating the additional community
meetings that must be held this spring in Chukchi Sea villages to
present changes to the 2013 season. Shell plans to conduct POC meetings
in Chukchi Sea villages May 20-23 and May 29-31, 2013, dependent on
abilities to schedule meetings around subsistence activities. Shell
will update NMFS promptly after completing the village POC visits.
[[Page 28425]]
Following the 2013 season, Shell intends to have a post-season co-
management meeting with the commissioners and committee heads to
discuss results of mitigation measures and outcomes of the preceding
season. The goal of the post-season meeting is to build upon the
knowledge base, discuss successful or unsuccessful outcomes of
mitigation measures, and possibly refine plans or mitigation measures
if necessary.
In addition, Shell indicated that it will continue to attend 2013
Conflict Avoidance Agreement (CAA) negotiation meetings in support of
its 2013 activities in the Chukchi Sea.
Mitigation Conclusions
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; 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.
I. Proposed Monitoring Measures
The monitoring plan proposed by Shell can be found in its Marine
Mammal Monitoring and Mitigation Plan (4MP). The plan may be modified
or supplemented based on comments or new information received from the
public during the public comment period. A summary of the primary
components of the plan follows.
Monitoring will provide information on the numbers of marine
mammals potentially affected by the exploration operations and
facilitate real time mitigation to prevent injury of marine mammals by
industrial sounds or activities. These goals will be accomplished in
the Chukchi Sea during 2013 by conducting vessel-based monitoring from
all ships with sound sources and an acoustic monitoring program to
document underwater sounds and the vocalizations of marine mammals in
the region.
Visual monitoring by Protected Species Observers (PSOs) during
active marine survey operations, and periods when these surveys are not
occurring, will provide information on the numbers of marine mammals
potentially affected by these activities and facilitate real time
mitigation to prevent impacts to marine mammals by industrial sounds or
operations. Vessel-based PSOs onboard the survey vessel will record the
numbers and species of marine mammals observed in the area and any
observable reaction of marine mammals to the survey activities in the
Chukchi Sea. Additionally, monitoring by PSOs aboard the vessel
utilized for equipment recovery and maintenance activities at the
Burger A well site will ensure that there are no interactions between
marine mammals and these operations. PSOs aboard the vessel will
monitor adjacent areas while the vessel operates from a stationary
position in DP mode.
The acoustics monitoring program will characterize the sounds
produced by marine surveys and will document the potential reactions of
marine mammals in the area to those sounds and activities. Recordings
of ambient sound levels and vocalizations of marine mammals along the
Chukchi Sea coast and offshore will also be used to interpret potential
impacts to marine mammals around the marine survey and equipment
recovery and maintenance activity, in addition to subsistence use areas
closer to shore. Although these monitoring programs were designed
primarily to understand the impacts of exploratory drilling in the
Chukchi Sea they will also provide valuable information about the
potential impacts of the 2013 marine surveys on marine mammals in the
area.
Visual-Based Protected Species Observers (PSOs)
The visual-based marine mammal monitoring will be implemented by a
team of experienced PSOs, including both biologists and Inupiat
personnel. PSOs will be stationed aboard the marine survey vessel and
the vessel used to facilitate equipment recovery and maintenance work
at the Burger A exploratory well site through the duration of the
projects. The vessel-based marine mammal monitoring will provide the
basis for real-time mitigation measures as discussed in the Proposed
Mitigation section. In addition, monitoring results of the vessel-based
monitoring program will include the estimation of the number of
``takes'' as stipulated in the IHA.
(1) Protected Species Observers
Vessel-based monitoring for marine mammals will be done by trained
PSOs throughout the period of survey activities. The observers will
monitor the occurrence of marine mammals near the survey vessel during
all daylight periods during operation, and during most daylight periods
when operations are not occurring. PSO duties will include watching for
and identifying marine mammals; recording their numbers, distances, and
reactions to the survey operations; and documenting ``take by
harassment''.
A sufficient number of PSOs will be required onboard the survey
vessel to meet the following criteria:
100% monitoring coverage during all periods of survey
operations in daylight;
maximum of 4 consecutive hours on watch per PSO; and
maximum of ~12 hours of watch time per day per PSO.
PSO teams will consist of Inupiat observers and experienced field
biologists. An experienced field crew leader will supervise the PSO
team onboard the survey vessel. The total number of PSOs may decrease
later in the season as the duration of daylight decreases.
(2) Observer Qualifications and Training
Crew leaders and most PSOs will be individuals with experience as
observers during recent seismic, site clearance and shallow hazards,
and other monitoring projects in Alaska or other offshore areas in
recent years.
Biologist-observers will have previous marine mammal observation
experience, and field crew leaders will be highly
[[Page 28426]]
experienced with previous vessel-based marine mammal monitoring and
mitigation projects. Resumes for those individuals will be provided to
NMFS for review and acceptance of their qualifications. Inupiat
observers will be experienced in the region and familiar with the
marine mammals of the area. All observers will complete a NMFS-approved
observer training course designed to familiarize individuals with
monitoring and data collection procedures. A marine mammal observers'
handbook, adapted for the specifics of the planned survey program will
be prepared and distributed beforehand to all PSOs (see below).
PSOs will complete a two or three-day training and refresher
session on marine mammal monitoring, to be conducted shortly before the
anticipated start of the 2013 open-water season. Any exceptions will
have or receive equivalent experience or training. The training
session(s) will be conducted by qualified marine mammalogists with
extensive crew-leader experience during previous vessel-based seismic
monitoring programs.
(3) PSO Handbook
A PSO's Handbook will be prepared for Shell's 2013 vessel-based
monitoring program. Handbooks contain maps, illustrations, and
photographs, as well as text, and are intended to provide guidance and
reference information to trained individuals who will participate as
PSOs. The following topics will be covered in the PSO Handbook for the
Shell project:
summary overview descriptions of the project, marine
mammals and underwater noise, the marine mammal monitoring program
(vessel roles, responsibilities), and the Marine Mammal Protection Act;
monitoring and mitigation objectives and procedures,
including radii for exclusion zones;
responsibilities of staff and crew regarding the marine
mammal monitoring plan;
instructions for ship crew regarding the marine mammal
monitoring plan;
data recording procedures: codes and coding instructions,
PSO coding mistakes, electronic database; navigational, marine
physical, field data sheet;
list of species that might be encountered: identification,
natural history;
use of specialized field equipment (reticle binoculars,
NVDs, etc.);
reticle binocular distance scale;
table of wind speed, Beaufort wind force, and sea state
codes; and
data quality-assurance/quality-control, delivery, storage,
and backup procedures.
Marine Mammal Observer Protocol
The PSOs will watch for marine mammals from the best available
vantage point on the survey vessels, typically the bridge. The PSOs
will scan systematically with the unaided eye and 7 x 50 reticle
binoculars, supplemented with 20 x 60 image-stabilized Zeiss Binoculars
or Fujinon 25 x 150 ``Big-eye'' binoculars, and night-vision equipment
when needed. Personnel on the bridge will assist the marine mammal
observer(s) in watching for marine mammals.
PSOs aboard the stationary vessel used to conduct equipment
recovery and maintenance activity will focus their attention on areas
immediately adjacent to the vessel and where active operations are
occurring to ensure these areas are clear of marine mammals and that
there are no direct interactions between animals and equipment or
project personnel. The observer(s) aboard the marine survey vessel will
give particular attention to the areas within the marine mammal
exclusion zones around the source vessel. These zones are the maximum
distances within which received levels may exceed 180 dB (rms) re 1
[mu]Pa (rms) for cetaceans, or 190 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa for other
marine mammals. Information to be recorded by PSOs will include the
same types of information that were recorded during recent monitoring
programs associated with Industry activity in the Arctic (e.g., Ireland
et al. 2009; Reiser et al. 2010, 2011). When a mammal sighting is made,
the following information about the sighting will be recorded:
Species, group size, age/size/sex categories, behavior
when first sighted and after initial sighting, heading, bearing and
distance from observer, apparent reaction to activities (e.g., none,
avoidance, approach, paralleling, etc.), closest point of approach, and
pace.
Time, location, speed, and activity of the vessel, sea
state, ice cover, visibility, and sun glare.
The positions of other vessel(s) in the vicinity of the
observer location.
Distances to nearby marine mammals will be estimated with
binoculars (Fujinon 7 x 50 binoculars) containing a reticle to measure
the vertical angle of the line of sight to the animal relative to the
horizon. Observers may use a laser rangefinder to test and improve
their abilities for visually estimating distances to objects in the
water.
When a marine mammal is seen approaching or within the exclusion
zone applicable to that species, the marine survey crew will be
notified immediately so that mitigation measures called for in the
applicable authorization(s) can be implemented.
Night-vision equipment (Generation 3 binocular image intensifiers
or equivalent units) will be available for use when/if needed. Past
experience with night-vision devices (NVDs) in the Chukchi Sea and
elsewhere has indicated that NVDs are not nearly as effective as visual
observation during daylight hours (e.g., Harris et al. 1997, 1998;
Moulton and Lawson 2002).
Field Data-Recording, Verification, Handling, and Security
PSOs will record their observations directly into computers running
a custom designed software package. Paper datasheets will be available
as backup if necessary. The accuracy of the data entry will be verified
in the field by computerized validity checks as the data are entered,
and by subsequent manual checking of the database printouts. These
procedures will allow initial summaries of data to be prepared during
and shortly after the field season, and will facilitate transfer of the
data to statistical, graphical or other programs for further
processing. Quality control of the data will be facilitated by (1) The
start-of-season training session, (2) subsequent supervision by the
onboard field crew leader, and (3) ongoing data checks during the field
season.
The data will be sent off of the ship to Anchorage each day (if
possible) and backed up regularly onto CDs and/or USB disks, and stored
at separate locations on the vessel. If possible, data sheets will be
photocopied daily during the field season. Data will be secured further
by having data sheets and backup data CDs carried back to the Anchorage
office during crew rotations.
Passive Acoustic Monitoring
(1) Sound Source Measurements
The objectives of the sound source measurements planned for 2013
will be (1) to measure the distances at which broadband received levels
reach 190, 180, 170, 160, and 120 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa during marine
surveys and equipment recovery and maintenance activity at the Burger A
exploratory well site, and from vessels used during these activities.
The measurements of airguns and other marine survey equipment will be
made by an acoustics contractor at the beginning of the surveys. Data
from survey equipment will be previewed in the field immediately after
download
[[Page 28427]]
from the hydrophone instruments. An initial sound source analysis will
be supplied to NMFS and the vessel within 120 hours of completion of
the measurements, if possible. The report will indicate the distances
to sound levels based on fits of empirical transmission loss formulae
to data in the endfire and broadside directions. A more detailed report
will be provided to NMFS as part of the 90-day report following
completion of the acoustic program.
(2) Long-term Acoustic Monitoring
Acoustic studies that were undertaken from 2006 through 2012 in the
Chukchi Sea as part of the Joint Monitoring Program will be continued
by Shell during its proposed open-water marine survey and equipment
recovery and maintenance activity in 2013. The acoustic ``net'' array
used during the 2006-2012 field seasons in the Chukchi Sea was designed
to accomplish two main objectives. The first was to collect information
on the occurrence and distribution of marine mammals (including beluga
whale, bowhead whale, walrus and other species) that may be available
to subsistence hunters near villages located on the Chukchi Sea coast
and to document their relative abundance, habitat use, and migratory
patterns. The second objective was to measure the ambient soundscape
throughout the eastern Chukchi Sea and to record received levels of
sounds from industry and other activities further offshore in the
Chukchi Sea.
The basic components of this effort consist of autonomous acoustic
recorders deployed widely across the US Chukchi Sea through the open
water season and then the winter season. These precisely calibrated
systems will sample at 16 kHz with 24-bit resolution, and are capable
of recording marine mammal sounds and making anthropogenic noise
measurements. The net array configuration will include a regional array
of 24 Autonomous Multichannel Acoustic Recorders (AMAR) deployed July-
October off the four main transect locations: Cape Lisburne, Point
Hope, Wainwright and Barrow. These will be augmented by six AMARs
deployed August 2013-August 2014 at Hanna Shoal. Six additional AMAR
recorders will be deployed in a hexagonal geometry at 16 km from the
nominal Burger A exploratory well location to monitor directional
variations of equipment recovery/maintenance and support vessel sounds
in addition to examining marine mammal vocalization patterns in the
vicinity of these activities. One new recorder will be placed 32 km
northwest of the Burger A well site to monitor for sound propagation
toward the south side of Hanna Shoal, which acoustic and satellite tag
monitoring has identified as frequented by walrus in August. Marine
survey activities will occur in areas within the coverage of the net
array. All of these offshore systems will capture marine survey and
equipment recovery/maintenance sounds, where present, over large
distances to help characterize the sound transmission properties in the
Chukchi Sea. They will continue to provide a large amount of
information related to marine mammal distributions in the Chukchi Sea.
In early October, all of the regional recorders will be retrieved
except for the six Hanna Shoal recorders, which will continue to record
on a duty cycle until August 2014. An additional set of nine Aural
winter recorders will be deployed at the same time at the same
locations that were instrumented in winter 2012-2013. These recorders
will sample at 16 kHz on a 17% duty cycle (40 minutes every 4 hours).
The winter recorders deployed in previous years have provided important
information about bowhead, beluga, walrus and several seal species
migrations in fall and spring.
Monitoring Plan Peer Review
The MMPA requires that monitoring plans be independently peer
reviewed ``where the proposed activity may affect the availability of a
species or stock for taking for subsistence uses'' (16 U.S.C.
1371(a)(5)(D)(ii)(III)). Regarding this requirement, NMFS' implementing
regulations state, ``Upon receipt of a complete monitoring plan, and at
its discretion, [NMFS] will either submit the plan to members of a peer
review panel for review or within 60 days of receipt of the proposed
monitoring plan, schedule a workshop to review the plan'' (50 CFR
216.108(d)).
NMFS convened an independent peer review panel to review Shell's
mitigation and monitoring plan in its IHA application for taking marine
mammals incidental to the proposed open-water marine surveys and
equipment recovery and maintenance in the Chukchi Sea during 2013. The
panel met on January 8 and 9, 2013, and provided their final report to
NMFS on March 5, 2013. The full panel report can be viewed at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm#applications.
NMFS provided the panel with Shell's monitoring and mitigation plan
and asked the panel to address the following questions and issues for
Shell's plan:
Will the applicant's stated objectives effectively further
the understanding of the impacts of their activities on marine mammals
and otherwise accomplish the goals stated below? If not, how should the
objectives be modified to better accomplish the goals above?
Can the applicant achieve the stated objectives based on
the methods described in the plan?
Are there technical modifications to the proposed
monitoring techniques and methodologies proposed by the applicant that
should be considered to better accomplish their stated objectives?
Are there techniques not proposed by the applicant (i.e.,
additional monitoring techniques or methodologies) that should be
considered for inclusion in the applicant's monitoring program to
better accomplish their stated objectives?
What is the best way for an applicant to present their
data and results (formatting, metrics, graphics, etc.) in the required
reports that are to be submitted to NMFS (i.e., 90-day report and
comprehensive report)?
The peer review panel report contains recommendations that the
panel members felt were applicable to the Shell's monitoring plans.
Overall the panel feels that the proposed methods for visual monitoring
are adequate and appropriate as the primary means of assessing the
acute near-field impacts of the proposed marine surveys. The panel also
cautions that there should be realistic expectations regarding the
limitations of these surveys to provide scientific-level measurements
of distribution and density, but in terms of meeting the monitoring
requirements, the panel finds the proposed methods adequate and
appreciate the improvements and modifications (e.g., in terms of PSO
training, field data collection methods) made over the past few years.
Nevertheless, the panel also provides several recommendations
concerning improving night-time monitoring, passive acoustic
monitoring, and data analysis and presentation.
NMFS has reviewed the report and evaluated all recommendations made
by the panel. NMFS has determined that there are several measures that
Shell can incorporate into its 2013 open-water marine surveys and
equipment recovery and maintenance program. Additionally, there are
other recommendations that NMFS has determined would also result in
better data collection, and could potentially be implemented by oil and
gas industry applicants, but which likely could not
[[Page 28428]]
be implemented for the 2013 open-water season due to time constrains
for this season. While it may not be possible to implement those
changes this year, NMFS believes that they are worthwhile and
appropriate suggestions that may require a bit more time to implement,
and Shell should consider incorporating them into future monitoring
plans should Shell decide to apply for IHAs in the future.
The following subsections lay out measures that NMFS recommends for
implementation as part of the 2013 open-water marine surveys and
equipment recovery and maintenance program by Shell and those that are
recommended for future programs.
Recommendations for Inclusion in the 2013 Monitoring Plan
The peer review panel's report contains several recommendations
regarding visual monitoring during low-visibility and presentation of
data in reports, which NMFS agrees that Shell should incorporate:
(1) Visual monitoring during low-visibility
Shell should use the best available technology to improve
detection capability during periods of fog and other types of inclement
weather. Such technology might include night-vision goggles or
binoculars as well as other instruments that incorporate infrared
technology; presently the efficacy of these technologies appears
limited but the panel and NMFS encourage continued consideration of
their applicability as it continues to evolve.
(2) Data analysis and presentation
Shell should apply appropriate statistical procedures for
probability estimation of marine mammals missed, based on observational
data acquired during some period of time before and after night or fog
events.
Shell should provide useful summaries and interpretations
of results of the various elements of the monitoring results. A clear
timeline and spatial (map) representation/summary of operations and
important observations should be given. Any and all mitigation measures
(e.g., vessel course deviations for animal avoidance, operational shut
down) should be summarized. Additionally, an assessment of the efficacy
of monitoring methods should be provided.
In addition to these recommendations, Shell also agrees to produce
a weekly GIS application that would be available on the web for
regulators to view for every observation and mitigation measure
implemented.
Recommendations to be Partially Implemented or Considered for Future
Monitoring Plans
In addition, the panelists recommended that
Shell should integrate the acoustic information from the
net array to the greatest extent possible to assess the aggregate known
activities, at least those from Shell operations but more broadly as
possible, to assess patterns of marine mammal vocal activities and how
that might be used to investigate potentially broader impacts from
overlapping/interacting activities.
Shell should consider integration of visual and acoustic
data from the Chukchi monitoring program and the Joint Monitoring
Program to produce estimates of bowhead, beluga, and walrus density
using methods developed in the Density Estimation for Cetacean from
Passive Acoustic Fixed Sensors (DECAF) project by the Center for
Research into Ecological and Environmental Modeling (CREEM) at the
University of St. Andrews in Scotland.
After discussion with Shell, NMFS decided not to implement these
two recommendations in full during Shell's 2013 open-water marine
surveys and equipment recovery and maintenance program because the
systematic and comprehensive analyses of these acoustic datasets would
require far more time and effort than what would be needed to assess
marine mammal takes under the MMPA. However, Shell agrees that it will
provide data from net arrays supported in part, or in whole, by Shell
and will participate in the integration of acoustic arrays to assess
the sound field of the lease areas in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas for
the purposes of assessing patterns of marine mammal distribution and
behavior and for assessing the impacts of multiple activities/factors.
In addition, Shell will evaluate the potential of the DECAF project and
efforts will be made to assess the applicability of the data collection
infrastructure established in the Shell monitoring program to these and
similar studies.
II. Reporting Measures
Sound Source Verification Reports
A report on the preliminary results of the sound source
verification measurements, including the measured 190, 180, 160, and
120 dB (rms) radii of the airgun sources, would be submitted within 14
days after collection of those measurements at the start of the field
season. This report will specify the distances of the exclusion zones
that were adopted for the survey.
Field Reports
Throughout the survey program, PSOs will prepare a report each day
or at such other intervals, summarizing the recent results of the
monitoring program. The reports will summarize the species and numbers
of marine mammals sighted. These reports will be provided to NMFS and
to the survey operators.
Technical Reports
The results of Shell's 2013 vessel-based monitoring, including
estimates of ``take'' by harassment, would be presented in the ``90-
day'' and Final Technical reports, if the IHA is issued and the
proposed open-water marine surveys and equipment recovery and
maintenance program is conducted. The Technical Reports should be
submitted to NMFS within 90 days after the end of the seismic survey.
The Technical Reports will include:
(a) Summaries of monitoring effort (e.g., total hours, total
distances, and marine mammal distribution through the study period,
accounting for sea state and other factors affecting visibility and
detectability of marine mammals);
(b) analyses of the effects of various factors influencing
detectability of marine mammals (e.g., sea state, number of observers,
and fog/glare);
(c) species composition, occurrence, and distribution of marine
mammal sightings, including date, water depth, numbers, age/size/gender
categories (if determinable), group sizes, and ice cover;
(d) To better assess impacts to marine mammals, data analysis
should be separated into periods when a seismic airgun array (or a
single mitigation airgun) is operating and when it is not. Final and
comprehensive reports to NMFS should summarize and plot:
Data for periods when a seismic array is active and when
it is not; and
The respective predicted received sound conditions over
fairly large areas (tens of km) around operations;
(e) sighting rates of marine mammals during periods with and
without airgun activities (and other variables that could affect
detectability), such as:
initial sighting distances versus airgun activity state;
closest point of approach versus airgun activity state;
observed behaviors and types of movements versus airgun
activity state;
numbers of sightings/individuals seen versus airgun
activity state;
distribution around the survey vessel versus airgun
activity state; and
[[Page 28429]]
estimates of take by harassment;
(f) Reported results from all hypothesis tests should include
estimates of the associated statistical power when practicable;
(g) Estimate and report uncertainty in all take estimates.
Uncertainty could be expressed by the presentation of confidence
limits, a minimum-maximum, posterior probability distribution, etc.;
the exact approach would be selected based on the sampling method and
data available;
(h) The report should clearly compare authorized takes to the level
of actual estimated takes; and
Notification of Injured or Dead Marine Mammals
In addition, NMFS would require Shell to notify NMFS' Office of
Protected Resources and NMFS' Stranding Network within 48 hours of
sighting an injured or dead marine mammal in the vicinity of marine
survey operations. Shell shall provide NMFS with the species or
description of the animal(s), the condition of the animal(s) (including
carcass condition if the animal is dead), location, time of first
discovery, observed behaviors (if alive), and photo or video (if
available).
In the event that an injured or dead marine mammal is found by
Shell that is not in the vicinity of the proposed open-water marine
survey program, Shell would report the same information as listed above
as soon as operationally feasible to NMFS.
Estimated Take by Incidental Harassment
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]. Only take by Level B behavioral
harassment is anticipated as a result of the proposed open water marine
survey program. Anticipated impacts to marine mammals are associated
with noise propagation from the survey airgun(s) used in the shallow
hazards survey.
The full suite of potential impacts to marine mammals was described
in detail in the ``Potential Effects of the Specified Activity on
Marine Mammals'' section found earlier in this document. The potential
effects of sound from the proposed open water marine survey programs
might include one or more of the following: masking of natural sounds;
behavioral disturbance; non-auditory physical effects; and, at least in
theory, temporary or permanent hearing impairment (Richardson et al.
1995). As discussed earlier in this document, the most common impact
will likely be from behavioral disturbance, including avoidance of the
ensonified area or changes in speed, direction, and/or diving profile
of the animal. For reasons discussed previously in this document,
hearing impairment (TTS and PTS) is highly unlikely to occur based on
the proposed mitigation and monitoring measures that would preclude
marine mammals from being exposed to noise levels high enough to cause
hearing impairment.
For impulse sounds, such as those produced by airgun(s) used in the
site clearance and shallow hazards surveys, NMFS uses the 160 dB (rms)
re 1 [mu]Pa isopleth to indicate the onset of Level B harassment. For
non-impulse sounds, such as those produced by vessel's DP thrusters
during the proposed equipment recovery and maintenance program, NMFS
uses the 120 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa isopleth to indicate the onset of
Level B harassment. Shell provided calculations for both the 160- and
120-dB isopleths produced by these activities and then used those
isopleths to estimate takes by harassment. NMFS used the calculations
to make the necessary MMPA preliminary findings. Shell provided a full
description of the methodology used to estimate takes by harassment in
its IHA application, which is also provided in the following sections.
Basis for Estimating ``Take by Harassment''
The estimated takes by harassment is calculated in this section by
multiplying the expected densities of marine mammals that may occur
near the planned activities by the area of water likely to be exposed
to impulse sound levels of >=160 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa and non-impulse
sound levels >=120 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa.
Marine mammal occurrence near the operation is likely to vary by
season and habitat, mostly related to the presence or absence of sea
ice. Although current NMFS' noise exposure standards state that Level B
harassment occurs at exposure levels >=160 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa by
impulse sources and exposure levels >=120 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa by non-
impulse sources, there is no evidence that avoidance at these received
sound levels would have significant biological effects on individual
animals. Any changes in behavior caused by sounds at or near the
specified received levels would likely fall within the normal variation
in such activities that would occur in the absence of the planned
operations. However, these received levels are currently used to set
the threshold for Level B behavioral harassment.
Marine Mammal Density Estimates
Marine mammal density estimates in the Chukchi Sea have been
derived for two time periods, the summer period covering July and
August, and the fall period including September and October. Animal
densities encountered in the Chukchi Sea during both of these time
periods will further depend on the habitat zone within which the
operations are occurring: open water or ice margin. Vessel and
equipment limitations will result in very little activity occurring in
or near sea ice; however, if ice is present near the areas of activity
some sounds produced by the activities may remain above disturbance
threshold levels in ice margin habitats. Therefore, open water
densities have been used to estimate potential ``take by harassment''
in 90 percent of the area expected to be ensonified above disturbance
thresholds while ice margin densities have been used in the remaining
10 percent of the ensonified area.
For a few marine mammal species, several density estimates were
available. In those cases, the mean and maximum estimates were
determined from the reported densities or survey data. In other cases,
no applicable estimate was available, so correction factors were used
to arrive density estimates. These are described in detail in the
following sections.
Detectability bias, quantified in part by f(0), is associated with
diminishing sightability with increasing lateral distance from the
survey trackline. Availability bias, g(0), refers to the fact that
there is <100 percent probability of sighting an animal that is present
along the survey trackline.
Nine cetacean and four pinniped species under NMFS jurisdiction are
known to occur in the planned project area in the Chukchi Sea. Five of
them (bowhead, fin, and humpback whales, and ringed and bearded seals)
are listed as ``endangered'' or ``threatened'' under the ESA.
(1) Beluga Whale
Summer densities of belugas in offshore waters are expected to be
low, with somewhat higher densities in ice-margin and nearshore areas.
Aerial surveys have recorded few belugas in the offshore Chukchi Sea
during the
[[Page 28430]]
summer months (Moore et al. 2000). Aerial surveys of the Chukchi Sea in
2008-2009 flown by the National Marine Mammal Laboratory (NMML) as part
of the Chukchi Offshore Monitoring in Drilling Area (COMIDA) project
have only reported 5 beluga sightings during >8,700 mi (>14,000 km) of
on-transect effort, only 2 of which were offshore (COMIDA 2009). One of
the three nearshore sightings was of a large group (~275 individuals on
July 12, 2009) of migrating belugas along the coastline just north of
Peard Bay. Additionally, only one beluga sighting was recorded during
>49,710 mi (>80,000 km) of visual effort during good visibility
conditions from industry vessels operating in the Chukchi Sea in
September-October of 2006-2010 (Hartin et al. 2011). If belugas are
present during the summer, they are more likely to occur in or near the
ice edge or close to shore during their northward migration. Expected
densities have previously been calculated from data in Moore et al.
(2000). However, more recent data from COMIDA aerial surveys during
2008-2010 are now available (Clarke and Ferguson in prep.). Effort and
sightings reported by Clarke and Ferguson (in prep.) were used to
calculate the average open-water density estimate. Clarke and Ferguson
(in prep) reported two on-transect beluga sightings (5 individuals)
during 11,985 km of on-transect effort in waters 36-50 m deep in the
Chukchi Sea during July and August. The mean group size of these two
sightings is 2.5. A f(0) value of 2.841 and g(0) value of 0.58 from
Harwood et al. (1996) were also used in the density calculation.
Specific data on the relative abundance of beluga in open-water versus
ice-margin habitat during the summer in the Chukchi Sea is not
available. However, belugas are commonly associated with ice, so an
inflation factor of 4 was used to estimate the average ice-margin
density from the open-water density. Very low densities observed from
vessels operating in the Chukchi Sea during non-seismic periods and
locations in July-August of 2006-2010 (0.0-0.0003/mi\2\, 0.0-0.0001/
km2; Hartin et al. 2011), also suggest the number of beluga whales
likely to be present near the planned activities will not be large.
In the fall, beluga whale densities offshore in the Chukchi Sea are
expected to be somewhat higher than in the summer because individuals
of the eastern Chukchi Sea stock and the Beaufort Sea stock will be
migrating south to their wintering grounds in the Bering Sea (Allen and
Angliss 2012). Densities derived from survey results in the northern
Chukchi Sea in Clarke and Ferguson (in prep) were used as the average
density for open-water fall season estimates. Clarke and Ferguson (in
prep) reported 3 beluga sightings (6 individuals) during 10,036 km of
on-transect effort in water depths 36-50 m. The mean group size of
those three sightings is 2. A f(0) value of 2.841 and g(0) value of
0.58 from Harwood et al. (1996) were used in the calculation. Moore et
al. (2000) reported lower than expected beluga sighting rates in open-
water during fall surveys in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, so an
inflation value of 4 was used to estimate the average ice-margin
density from the open-water density. Based on the few beluga sightings
from vessels operating in the Chukchi Sea during non-seismic periods
and locations in September-November of 2006-2010 (Hartin et al. 2011),
the relatively low densities are consistent with what is likely to be
observed form vessels during the planned operations.
(2) Bowhead Whale
By July, most bowhead whales are northeast of the Chukchi Sea,
within or migrating toward their summer feeding grounds in the eastern
Beaufort Sea. No bowheads were reported during 6,640 mi (10,686 km) of
on-transect effort in the Chukchi Sea by Moore et al. (2000). Aerial
surveys in 2008-2010 by the NMML as part of the COMIDA project reported
only 6 sightings during >16,020 mi (>25,781 km) of on-transect effort
(Clarke and Ferguson in prep). Two of the six sightings were in waters
<=35 m deep and the remaining four sightings were in waters 51-200 m
deep. Bowhead whales were also rarely sighted in July-August of 2006-
2010 during aerial surveys of the Chukchi Sea coast (Thomas et al.
2011). This is consistent with movements of tagged whales, all of which
moved through the Chukchi Sea by early May 2009, and tended to travel
relatively close to shore, especially in the northern Chukchi Sea. The
estimate of bowhead whale density in the Chukchi Sea was calculated by
assuming there was one bowhead sighting during the 7,447 mi (11,985 km)
of survey effort in waters 36-50 m deep in the Chukchi Sea during July-
August reported in Clarke and Ferguson (in prep), although no bowheads
were actually observed during those surveys. The mean group size from
September-October sightings reported in Clarke and Ferguson (in prep)
is 1.1, and this was also used in the calculation of summer densities.
The group size value, along with a f(0) value of 2 and a g(0) value of
0.07, both from Thomas et al. (2002) were used to estimate a summer
density of bowhead whales. Bowheads are not expected to be encountered
in higher densities near ice in the summer (Moore et al. 2000), so the
same density estimates are used for open-water and ice-margin habitats.
Densities from vessel based surveys in the Chukchi Sea during non-
seismic periods and locations in July-August of 2006-2010 (Hartin et
al. 2011) ranged from 0.0005-0.0021/mi\2\ (0.0002-0.0008/km\2\).
During the fall, bowhead whales that summered in the Beaufort Sea
and Amundsen Gulf migrate west and south to their wintering grounds in
the Bering Sea making it more likely that bowheads will be encountered
in the Chukchi Sea at this time of year. Moore et al. (2000) reported
34 bowhead sightings during 27,560 mi (44,354 km) of on-transect survey
effort in the Chukchi Sea during September-October. Thomas et al.
(2011) also reported increased sightings on coastal surveys of the
Chukchi Sea during October and November of 2006-2010. GPS tagging of
bowheads appear to show that migration routes through Chukchi Sea are
more variable than through the Beaufort Sea (Quakenbush et al. 2010).
Some of the routes taken by bowheads remain well north of the planned
marine survey activities while others have passed near to or through
the area. Kernel densities estimated from GPS locations of whales
suggest that bowheads do not spend much time (e.g., feeding or resting)
in the north-central Chukchi Sea near the area of planned activities
(Quakenbush et al. 2010). Clarke and Ferguson (in prep) reported 14
sightings (15 individuals) during 10,036 km of on transect aerial
survey effort in 2008-2010. The mean group size of those sightings is
1.1. The same f(0) and g(0) values that were used for the summer
estimates above were used for the fall estimates. Moore et al. (2000)
found that bowheads were detected more often than expected in
association with ice in the Chukchi Sea in September-October, so a
density of twice the average open-water density was used as the average
ice-margin density. Densities from vessel based surveys in the Chukchi
Sea during non-seismic periods and locations in September-November of
2006-2010 (Hartin et al. 2011) ranged from 0.0008 to 0.0135/mi\2\
(0.0003-0.0052/km\2\). This suggests the densities used in the
calculations are somewhat higher than are likely to be observed from
vessels near the areas of planned operations.
(3) Gray Whale
Gray whale densities are expected to be much higher in the summer
months than during the fall. Moore et al. (2000) found the distribution
of gray whales in
[[Page 28431]]
the planned operational area was scattered and limited to nearshore
areas where most whales were observed in water less than 114 ft (35 m)
deep. Thomas et al. (2011) also reported substantial declines in the
sighting rates of gray whales in the fall. The average open-water
summer density was calculated from 2008-2010 aerial survey effort and
sightings in Clarke and Ferguson (in prep) for water depths 118-164 ft
(36-50 m) including 54 sightings (73 individuals) during 7,447 mi
(11,985 km) of on-transect effort. The average group size of those
sightings is 1.35. Correction factors f(0) = 2.49 (Forney and Barlow
1998) and g(0) = 0.30 (Forney and Barlow 1998, Mallonee 1991) were also
used in the density calculation. Gray whales are not commonly
associated with sea ice, but may be present near it, so the same
densities were used for ice-margin habitat as were derived for open-
water habitat during both seasons. Densities from vessel based surveys
in the Chukchi Sea during non-seismic periods and locations in July-
August of 2006-2010 (Hartin et al. 2011) ranged from 0.0021/mi\2\ to
0.0221/mi\2\ (0.0008/km\2\ to 0.0085/km\2\).
In the fall, gray whales may be dispersed more widely through the
northern Chukchi Sea (Moore et al. 2000), but overall densities are
likely to be decreasing as the whales begin migrating south. A density
calculated from effort and sightings (15 sightings [19 individuals]
during 6,236 mi (10,036 km) of on-transect effort) in water 118-164 ft
(36-50 m) deep during September-October reported by Clarke and Ferguson
(in prep) was used as the average estimate for the Chukchi Sea during
the fall period. The corresponding group size value of 1.26, along with
the same f(0) and g(0) values described above were used in the
calculation. Densities from vessel based surveys in the Chukchi Sea
during non-seismic periods and locations in September-November of 2006-
2010 (Hartin et al. 2011) ranged from 0.0/mi\2\ to 0.0114/mi\2\ (0.0/
km\2\ to 0.0044/km\2\).
(4) Harbor Porpoise
Harbor Porpoise densities were estimated from industry data
collected during 2006-2010 activities in the Chukchi Sea. Prior to
2006, no reliable estimates were available for the Chukchi Sea and
harbor porpoise presence was expected to be very low and limited to
nearshore regions. Observers on industry vessels in 2006-2010, however,
recorded sightings throughout the Chukchi Sea during the summer and
early fall months. Density estimates from 2006-2010 observations during
non-seismic periods and locations in July-August ranged from 0.0034/
mi\2\ to 0.0075/mi\2\ (0.0013/km\2\ to 0.0029/km\2\) (Hartin et al.
2011). The average density from the summer season of those three years
(0.0057/mi\2\, 0.0022/km\2\) was used as the average open-water density
estimate. Harbor porpoise are not expected to be present in higher
numbers near ice, so the open-water densities were used for ice-margin
habitat in both seasons. Harbor porpoise densities recorded during
industry operations in the fall months of 2006-2010 were slightly lower
and ranged from 0.0/mi\2\ to 0.0114/mi\2\ (0.0/km\2\ to 0.0044/km\2\).
The average of those years (0.0055/mi\2\, 0.0021/km\2\) was again used
as the average density estimate.
(5) Other Cetaceans
The remaining five cetacean species that could be encountered in
the Chukchi Sea during Shell's planned marine survey program include
the humpback whale, killer whale, minke whale, fin whale, and narwhal.
Although there is evidence of the occasional occurrence of these
animals in the Chukchi Sea, it is unlikely that more than a few
individuals will be encountered during the planned marine survey
activities. Clarke et al. (2011b) and Hartin et al. (2011) reported
humpback whale sightings; George and Suydam (1998) reported killer
whales; Brueggeman et al. (1990), Hartin et al. (2011) and COMIDA
(2011) reported minke whales; and Clarke et al. (2011b) and Hartin et
al. (2011) reported fin whales. Narwhal sightings in the Chukchi Sea
have not been reported in recent literature, but subsistence hunters
occasionally report observations near Barrow, and Reeves et al. (2002)
indicated a small number of extralimital sightings in the Chukchi Sea.
(6) Ringed and Bearded Seals
Ringed seal and bearded seals summer ice-margin densities were
available in Bengtson et al. (2005) from spring surveys in the offshore
pack ice zone of the northern Chukchi Sea. However, corrections for
bearded seal availability, g(0), based on haulout and diving patterns
were not available. Densities of ringed and bearded seals in open water
are expected to be somewhat lower in the summer when preferred pack ice
habitat may still be present in the Chukchi Sea. Average and maximum
open-water densities have been estimated at \3/4\ of the ice margin
densities during both seasons for both species. The fall density of
ringed seals in the offshore Chukchi Sea has been estimated as \2/3\
the summer densities because ringed seals begin to reoccupy nearshore
fast ice areas as it forms in the fall. Bearded seals may also begin to
leave the Chukchi Sea in the fall, but less is known about their
movement patterns so fall densities were left unchanged from summer
densities. For comparison, the ringed seal density estimates calculated
from data collected during summer 2006-2010 industry operations ranged
from 0.0359/mi\2\ to 0.1206/mi\2\ (0.0138/km\2\ to 0.0464/km\2\)
(Hartin et al. 2011). These estimates are lower than those made by
Bengtson et al. (2005) which is not surprising given the different
survey methods and timing.
(7) Spotted Seal
Little information on spotted seal densities in offshore areas of
the Chukchi Sea is available. Spotted seal densities in the summer were
estimated by multiplying the ringed seal densities by 0.02. This was
based on the ratio of the estimated Chukchi populations of the two
species. Chukchi Sea spotted seal abundance was estimated by assuming
that 8 percent of the Alaskan population of spotted seals is present in
the Chukchi Sea during the summer and fall (Rugh et al. 1997), the
Alaskan population of spotted seals is 59,214 (Allen and Angliss 2012),
and that the population of ringed seals in the Alaskan Chukchi Sea is
~208,000 animals (Bengtson et al. 2005). In the fall, spotted seals
show increased use of coastal haulouts so densities were estimated to
be \2/3\ of the summer densities.
(8) Ribbon Seals
Four ribbon seal sightings were reported during industry vessel
operations in the Chukchi Sea in 2006-2010 (Hartin et al. 2011). The
resulting density estimate of 0.0013/mi\2\ (0.0007/km\2\) was used for
both seasons and habitat zones.
Area Potentially Exposed to Sound Levels above 160 dB during Site
Clearance and Shallow Hazards Surveys
As described earlier, Shell's proposed site clearance and shallow
hazards surveys would occur in three survey areas of the Chukchi Sea
Lease Area. These three survey areas are the Burger prospect (Survey
Area 2), Crackerjack prospect (Survey Area 1), and an area northeast of
Burger (Survey Area 3; Figure 1-2 of the IHA application). The precise
survey sites within the survey areas at these prospects have not yet
been determined, but there are five notional locations at Burger, three
at Crackerjack, and one northeast of Burger. The five potential survey
sites at Burger range in size from 23 km\2\ to 40
[[Page 28432]]
km\2\ (9 mi\2\ to 15 mi\2\) while the three potential sites at
Crackerjack range from 35 km\2\ to 119 km\2\ (14 mi\2\ to 46 mi\2\).
The single site northeast of Burger may be ~119 km\2\ (46 mi\2\).
Shell plans to use the same 4 x 10 in\3\ airgun configuration that
was used during site clearance and shallow hazards surveys in the
Chukchi Sea in 2008 and 2009. Measurements during these two years
occurred at three locations: Honeyguide (west of the Crackerjack
prospect), Crackerjack, and Burger. The measurements showed that the
Burger site had the largest radius from the source to the 160 dB (rms)
re 1 [micro]Pa isopleths at 1,800 m. As a cautionary approach, the
Burger site distance (1,800 m from the source) plus a 25 percent
inflation factor (equaling 2,250 m) was used to estimate the total area
that may be ensonified to 160 dB (rms) re 1 [micro]Pa by seismic sounds
at all of the potential survey sites at any given time, which equals to
15.9 km\2\.
Shell's operations plan calls for site clearance and shallow
hazards surveys to begin at the Burger prospect. Adding the 2.25 km 160
dB (rms) radius to the perimeter of all five of the notional survey
grids at that site results in a total area at Burger of 477 km\2\ being
exposed to seismic sound >=160 dB (rms). This is approximately 40
percent of the total area that may be exposed to seismic sounds during
the survey activities and it has been attributed to the July-August
period. Adding the 2.25 km 160 dB (rms) radius to the perimeter of the
three notional survey areas at Crackerjack and the one northeast of
Burger results in a total area of 826 km\2\ being potentially exposed
to pulsed seismic sounds >=160 dB (rms). Since these areas would likely
be surveyed after the Burger sites are completed they have been
attributed to the September-October period. The total area potentially
exposed is then 1,303 km\2\ (477 km\2\ + 826 km\2\).
Area Potentially Exposed to Sound Levels Above 120 dB During Equipment
Recovery and Maintenance Program
As described earlier, Shell's proposed equipment recovery and
maintenance at the Burger A well site where drilling took place in 2012
would involve a vessel engaging with DP thrusters while remotely
operated vehicles or divers are used to perform the required work.
Sounds produced by the vessel while in dynamic positioning mode will be
non-impulse in nature and are thus evaluated at the >=120 dB (rms)
level.
The vessel from which equipment recovery and maintenance will be
conducted has not yet been determined. Various sound measurements were
conducted from vessels during DP operations and during drilling
activities (which may include DP operations) in the Chukchi Sea in the
past two years. Under most circumstances, sounds from dynamic
positioning thrusters are expected to be well below 120 dB (rms) at
distances greater than 10 km (6 mi). Among those measurements, the
drilling activities conducted by the Tor Viking II at the Burger A well
site in 2012 may have included dynamic positioning, and its distance of
13 km (8 mi) was selected to model the 120 dB (rms) re 1 [micro]Pa
isopleths for Shell's proposed 2013 equipment recovery and maintenance
program. This yields to a 120 dB (rms) re 1 [micro]Pa ensonified zone
of approximately 531 km\2\ (205 mi\2\).
The equipment recovery and maintenance work at the well site may
occur during either or both of the seasonal periods and may take place
over as many as 28 days. Therefore, the entire area potentially exposed
to continuous sounds >=120 dB (rms) from dynamic positioning thrusters
has been applied to densities of marine mammals during both seasonal
periods.
Potential Number of ``Take by Harassment''
As stated earlier, the estimates of potential Level B takes of
marine mammals by noise exposure are based on a consideration of the
number of marine mammals that might be present during operations in the
Chukchi Sea and the anticipated area exposed to those sound pressure
levels (SPLs) above 160 dB re 1 [micro]Pa for impulse sources (seismic
aregun during site clearance and shallow hazards surveys) and SPLs
above 120 dB re 1 [micro]Pa for non-impulse sources (vessel's DP
operation during equipment recovery and maintenance program).
The number of individuals of each species potentially exposed to
received levels was estimated by multiplying the anticipated area to be
ensonified to the specified SPLs in each season (summer and fall) and
habitat zone (open water and ice margin) to which a density applies, by
the expected species density. The numbers of individuals potentially
exposed were then summed for each species across the two seasons and
habitat zones.
An additional calculation was made that assumes the entire
population of marine mammals within the 531 km\2\ (205 mi\2\) area
exposed to non-pulsed sounds >=120 dB (rms) re 1 [micro]Pa during the
equipment recovery and maintenance activity is different every day
during that 28 day period. To do this, the 28 days were split evenly
between the July-August and September-October periods (14 days in each
period). The area ensonified by continuous sounds on each day was then
multiplied by 14 before being multiplied by the appropriate species
density within each season.
Some of the animals estimated to be exposed, particularly migrating
bowhead whales, might show avoidance reactions before being exposed to
sounds at the specified threshold levels. Thus, these calculations
actually estimate the number of individuals potentially exposed to the
specified sounds levels that would occur if there were no avoidance of
the area ensonified to that level.
As described above, vessel and equipment limitations will result in
very little activity occurring in or near sea ice; however, if ice is
present near the areas of activity, some sounds produced by the
activities may remain above disturbance threshold levels in ice margin
habitats. Therefore, open water densities have been used to estimate
potential ``take by harassment'' in 90 percent of the area expected to
be ensonified above disturbance thresholds while ice margin densities
have been used in the remaining 10 percent of the ensonified area.
Species with an estimated average number of individuals exposed equal
to zero are included below for completeness, but are not likely to be
encountered.
Numbers of marine mammals that might be present and potentially
taken are summarized in Table 4 based on calculation described above.
Some of the animals estimated to be exposed, particularly migrating
bowhead whales, might show avoidance reactions before being exposed to
>=160 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa. Thus, these calculations actually estimate
the number of individuals potentially exposed to specific SPLs, i.e.,
>=160 dB (rms) re 1 [mu]Pa for impulse noise and >=120 dB (rms) re 1
[mu]Pa for non-impulse noise, that would occur if there were no
avoidance of the area ensonified to that level.
Because beluga whales may form groups, additional takes were added
on top of the density-based take calculation in the event a large group
is encountered during the survey. For marine mammal species that are
rare and for which no density estimates are available in the vicinity
of the proposed project area (such as humpback, fin, minke, and killer
whales and narwhal), a small number of takes have been requested in
case they are encountered (Table 4).
[[Page 28433]]
Table 4--Estimates of the Possible Maximum Numbers of Marine Mammals Taken by Level B Harassment (Exposed to
>=160 dB From Airgun Sound and >=120 dB From Dynamic Positioning Operations) During Shell's Proposed Marine
Survey and Equipment Recovery and Maintenance Activity in the Chukchi Sea, July-October 2013, Including a Daily
Multiplier for the Entire 28 Days Operational Period at the Burger A Well Site
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Species Level B takes Percent population
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bowhead whale................................................. 209 1.98
Gray whale.................................................... 270 1.41
Fin whale..................................................... 10 0.18
Humpback whale................................................ 10 1.07
Minke whale................................................... 10 1.23
Beluga whale*................................................. 53 1.43
Narwhal....................................................... 4 NA
Killer whale.................................................. 10 3.18
Harbor porpoise............................................... 35 0.07
Ringed seal................................................... 5,096 2.44
Bearded seal.................................................. 178 0.07
Spotted seal.................................................. 102 0.17
Ribbon seal................................................... 12 0.02
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Additional takes were added in the event that a large group of Beluga whales is encountered.
Estimated Take Conclusions
Effects on marine mammals are generally expected to be restricted
to avoidance of the area around the planned activities and short-term
changes in behavior, falling within the MMPA definition of ``Level B
harassment''.
Cetaceans--The average estimates without a daily multiplier for the
stationary operations suggest a total of 209 bowhead whales may be
exposed to sounds at or above the specified levels. This number is
approximately 1.98% of the BCB population of 10,545 assessed in 2001
(Allen and Angliss 2011) and is assuming to be increasing at an annual
growth rate of 3.4% (Zeh and Punt 2005), which is supported by a 2004
population estimate of 12,631 by Koski et al. (2010). Including a daily
multiplier brings the average estimate up to 209 individual bowhead
whales with the daily multiplier (Table 4). The total estimated number
of gray whales that may be exposed to sounds from the activities ranges
up to 270 with the daily multiplier (Table 4). Fewer beluga whales and
harbor porpoises are likely to be exposed to sounds during the
activities. The small numbers of other whale species that may occur in
the Chukchi Sea are unlikely to be present around the planned
operations but chance encounters may occur. The few individuals would
represent a very small proportion of their respective populations.
Pinnipeds--Ringed seal is by far the most abundant species expected
to be encountered during the planned operations. The best estimate of
the numbers of ringed seals exposed to sounds at the specified received
levels during the planned activities is 727 not including a daily
multiplier, and 5,096 if a daily multiplier is included. Both of these
numbers represent <3 percent of the estimated Alaska population. Fewer
individuals of other pinniped species are estimated to be exposed to
sounds at the specified received levels, also representing small
proportions of their populations. Pinnipeds are unlikely to react to
non-impulse sounds until received levels are much stronger than 120 dB
(rms), so it is probable that a smaller number of these animals would
actually be appreciably disturbed.
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 takes occur.
No injuries or mortalities are anticipated to occur as a result of
Shell's proposed 2013 marine surveys and equipment recovery and
maintenance program in the Chukchi Sea, and none are proposed to be
authorized. The proposed site clearance and shallow hazards surveys
would use a very small 40 in\3\ airgun array, which have much less
acoustic power outputs compared to conventional airgun arrays with
displacement volume in the range of thousands of cubic inches. The
modeled isopleths at 180 dB, based on prior measurements for the same
airgun array in the vicinity of the 2013 survey sites, is expected to
be 160 m from the source at maximum. Source levels from vessel's DP
thrusters during Shell's proposed equipment recovery and maintenance
program are below 180 dB re 1 [micro]Pa.
In addition, animals in the area are not expected to incur hearing
impairment (i.e., TTS or PTS) or non-auditory physiological effects.
The modeled isopleths at 160 dB and 120 dB, based on prior
measurements, are expected to be approximately 1.8 km and 13km from the
airgun array and DP-operating vessel, respectively. Takes will be
limited to Level B behavioral harassment. Although it is possible that
some individuals of marine mammals may be exposed to sounds from the
proposed site clearance and shallow hazard surveys and equipment
recovery and maintenance activities more than once, the expanse of
these multi-exposures are expected to be less extensive since either
the animals or the vessels conducting the marine surveys will be moving
constantly in and out of the survey areas.
Most of the bowhead whales encountered will likely show overt
disturbance (avoidance) only if they receive airgun sounds with levels
>= 160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa. Odontocete reactions to seismic airgun pulses
are usually assumed to be limited to shorter distances from the
airgun(s) than are those of mysticetes, probably in part because
odontocete low-frequency hearing is assumed to be less sensitive than
that of mysticetes. However, at least when in the Canadian Beaufort Sea
[[Page 28434]]
in summer, belugas appear to be fairly responsive to seismic energy,
with few being sighted within 6-12 mi (10-20 km) of seismic vessels
during aerial surveys (Miller et al. 2005). Belugas will likely occur
in small numbers in the Chukchi Sea during the survey period and few
will likely be affected by the survey activity.
Although the stationary nature of the vessel that conducts
equipment recovery and maintenance could affect different individuals
of marine mammals during the operations, the relatively short period
(28 days) of this activity precludes the take of large numbers of
marine mammals. In addition, the noise levels generated from DP
thrusters are much lower than the levels from the airgun array, and the
modeled 120 dB isopleths is expected to be 13 km at the maximum,
resulting an ensonified area of 531 km\2\.
Taking into account the mitigation measures that are planned,
effects on marine mammals are generally expected to be restricted to
avoidance of a limited area around Shell's proposed open-water
activities and short-term changes in behavior, falling within the MMPA
definition of ``Level B harassment''. The many reported cases of
apparent tolerance by cetaceans of seismic exploration, vessel traffic,
and some other human activities show that co-existence is possible.
Mitigation measures such as controlled vessel speed, dedicated marine
mammal observers, non-pursuit, and shut downs or power downs when
marine mammals are seen within defined ranges will further reduce
short-term reactions and minimize any effects on hearing sensitivity.
In all cases, the effects are expected to be short-term, with no
lasting biological consequence.
Of the thirteen marine mammal species likely to occur in the
proposed marine survey area, bowhead, fin, and humpback whales and
ringed and bearded seals are listed as endangered or threatened under
the ESA. These species are also designated as ``depleted'' under the
MMPA. Despite these designations, the Bering-Chukchi-Beaufort stock of
bowheads has been increasing at a rate of 3.4 percent annually for
nearly a decade (Allen and Angliss 2010). Additionally, during the 2001
census, 121 calves were counted, which was the highest yet recorded.
The calf count provides corroborating evidence for a healthy and
increasing population (Allen and Angliss 2010). The occurrence of fin
and humpback whales in the proposed marine survey areas is considered
very rare. There is no critical habitat designated in the U.S. Arctic
for the bowhead, fin, and humpback whales. The Alaska stock of bearded
seals, part of the Beringia distinct population segment (DPS), and the
Arctic stock of ringed seals, have recently been listed by NMFS as
threatened under the ESA. None of the other species that may occur in
the project area are listed as threatened or endangered under the ESA
or designated as depleted under the MMPA.
Potential impacts to marine mammal habitat were discussed
previously in this document (see the ``Anticipated Effects on Habitat''
section). Although some disturbance is possible to food sources of
marine mammals, the impacts are anticipated to be minor enough as to
not affect rates of recruitment or survival of marine mammals in the
area. Based on the vast size of the Arctic Ocean where feeding by
marine mammals occurs versus the localized area of the marine survey
activities, any missed feeding opportunities in the direct project area
would be minor based on the fact that other feeding areas exist
elsewhere.
The estimated takes proposed to be authorized represent 1.43% of
the Eastern Chukchi Sea population of approximately 3,710 beluga
whales, 3.18% of Aleutian Island and Bering Sea stock of approximately
314 killer whales, 0.07% of Bering Sea stock of approximately 48,215
harbor porpoises, 1.41% of the Eastern North Pacific stock of
approximately 19,126 gray whales, 1.98% of the Bering-Chukchi-Beaufort
population of 10,545 bowhead whales, 1.07% of the Western North Pacific
stock of approximately 938 humpback whales, 0.18% of the Northeast
Pacific stock of approximately 5,700 fin whales, and 1.43% of the
Alaska stock of approximately 810 minke whales. The take estimates
presented for ringed, bearded, spotted, and ribbon seals represent
2.44, 0.07, 0.17, and 0.02% of U.S. Arctic stocks of each species,
respectively. The percentage of Level B behavioral take of 4 individual
narwhals among its percentage is unknown as narwhal are not regularly
sighted in the U.S. Chukchi Sea. Nevertheless, it is reasonable to
believe that the number of narwhal estimated to be taken is very low
among its population. The mitigation and monitoring measures (described
previously in this document) proposed for inclusion in the IHA (if
issued) are expected to reduce even further any potential disturbance
to marine mammals.
In addition, no important feeding and reproductive areas are known
in the vicinity of the Shell's proposed marine surveys at the time the
proposed surveys are to take place. No critical habitat of ESA-listed
marine mammal species occurs in the Chukchi Sea.
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 Shell's proposed 2013 open-
water marine surveys in the Chukchi Sea may result in the incidental
take of small numbers of marine mammals, by Level B harassment only,
and that the total taking from the marine surveys will have a
negligible impact on the affected species or stocks.
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis and Preliminary Determination
NMFS has preliminarily determined that Shell's proposed 2013 open-
water marine surveys in the Chukchi Sea will not have an unmitigable
adverse impact on the availability of species or stocks for taking for
subsistence uses. This preliminary determination is supported by
information contained in this document and Shell's draft POC. Shell has
adopted a spatial and temporal strategy for its Chukchi Sea open-water
marine surveys that should minimize impacts to subsistence hunters. Due
to the timing of the project and the distance from the surrounding
communities (the proposed site clearance and shallow hazards surveys
and equipment recovery and maintenance activities would be
approximately 120 km to Wainwright and 150 km to Point Lay), it is
anticipated to have no effects on spring harvesting and little or no
effects on the occasional summer harvest of beluga whale, subsistence
seal hunts (ringed and spotted seals are primarily harvested in winter
while bearded seals are hunted during July-September in the Beaufort
Sea), or the fall bowhead hunt.
In addition, based on the measures described in Shell's Draft POC,
the proposed mitigation and monitoring measures (described earlier in
this document), and the project design itself, NMFS has determined
preliminarily that there will not be an unmitigable adverse impact on
subsistence uses from Shell's 2013 open-water marine surveys in the
Chukchi Sea.
Proposed Incidental Harassment Authorization
This section contains a draft of the IHA itself. The wording
contained in this section is proposed for inclusion in the IHA (if
issued).
(1) This Authorization is valid from July 1, 2013, through October
30, 2013.
[[Page 28435]]
(2) This Authorization is valid only for activities associated with
open-water marine surveys and related activities in the Chukchi Sea.
The specific areas where Shell's surveys will be conducted are within
the Chukchi Sea, Alaska, as shown in Figures 1-1, 1-2, and 1-3 of
Shell's IHA application.
(3)(a) The species authorized for incidental harassment takings,
Level B harassment only, are: beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas);
Narwhals (Monodon monoceros); harbor porpoises (Phocoena phocoena);
killer whales (Orcinus orca); bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus); gray
whales (Eschrichtius robustus); humpback whales (Megaptera
novaeangliae); fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus); minke whales (B.
acutorostrata); bearded seals (Erignathus barbatus); spotted seals
(Phoca largha); ringed seals (P. hispida); and ribbon seals (P.
fasciata).
(3)(b) The authorization for taking by harassment is limited to the
following acoustic sources and from the following activities:
(i) 40 in\3\ airgun arrays and other acoustic sources for site
clearance and shallow hazards surveys;
(ii) Non-airgun active acoustic sources for ice gouge surveys;
(iii) Vessel activities related to open-water marine surveys listed
in (i) and (ii); and
(iv) Vessel activities related to equipment recovery and
maintenance at Burger A well site.
(3)(c) The taking of any marine mammal in a manner prohibited under
this Authorization must be reported within 24 hours of the taking to
the Alaska Regional Administrator (907-586-7221) or his designee in
Anchorage (907-271-3023), National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and
the Chief of the Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, at (301) 427-8401, or his designee (301-427-8418).
(4) The holder of this Authorization must notify the Chief of the
Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected Resources, at
least 48 hours prior to the start of collecting seismic data (unless
constrained by the date of issuance of this Authorization in which case
notification shall be made as soon as possible).
(5) Prohibitions
(a) The taking, by incidental harassment only, is limited to the
species listed under condition 3(a) above and by the numbers listed in
Table 1 (attached). The taking by Level A harassment, injury or death
of these species or the taking by harassment, injury or death of any
other species of marine mammal is prohibited and may result in the
modification, suspension, or revocation of this Authorization.
(b) The taking of any marine mammal is prohibited whenever the
required source vessel protected species observers (PSOs), required by
condition 7(a)(i), are not onboard in conformance with condition
7(a)(i) of this Authorization.
(6) Mitigation
(a) Establishing Exclusion and Disturbance Zones
(i) Establish and monitor with trained PSOs a preliminary exclusion
zone for cetaceans surrounding the airgun array on the source vessel
where the received level would be 180 dB (rms) re 1 [micro]Pa. For
purposes of the field verification test, described in condition
7(e)(i), this radius is estimated to be 160 m from the seismic source
for the 40 in\3\ airgun arrays and 52 m for a single 10 in\3\ airgun
for site clearance and shallow hazards surveys.
(ii) Establish and monitor with trained PSOs a preliminary
exclusion zone for pinnipeds surrounding the airgun array on the source
vessel where the received level would be 190 dB (rms) re 1 [micro]Pa.
For purposes of the field verification test described in condition
7(e)(i), this radius is estimated to be 50 m from the seismic source
for the 640 in\3\ airgun arrays and 23 m for the single 10 in\3\ airgun
for site clearance and shallow hazards surveys.
(iii) Establish a zone of influence (ZOI) for cetaceans and
pinnipeds surrounding the airgun array on the source vessel where the
received level would be 160 dB (rms) re 1 [micro]Pa. For purposes of
the field verification test described in condition 7(e)(i), this radius
is estimated to be 1,800 m from the seismic source for the 40 in\3\
airgun arrays and 569 m for the single 10 in\3\ airgun for site
clearance and shallow hazards surveys.
(iv) Establish a ZOI for cetaceans and pinnipeds surrounding the
vessel while operating dynamic positioning (DP) thruster where the
received level would be 120 dB (rms) re 1 [micro]Pa. For purposes of
the field verification test described in condition 7(b)(i), this radius
is estimated to be 13 km from the DP thruster source for equipment
recovery and maintenance operations.
(v) Immediately upon completion of data analysis of the field
verification measurements required under condition 7(e)(i) below, the
new 120-dB, 160-dB, 180-dB, and 190-dB marine mammal ZOIs and exclusion
zones shall be established based on the sound source verification.
(b) Vessel and Helicopter Movement Mitigation:
(i) Avoid concentrations or groups of whales by all vessels under
the direction of Shell. Operators of support vessels should, at all
times, conduct their activities at the maximum distance possible from
such concentrations of whales.
(ii) Vessels in transit shall be operated at speeds necessary to
ensure no physical contact with whales occurs. If any vessel approaches
within 1.6 km (1 mi) of observed bowhead whales, except when providing
emergency assistance to whalers or in other emergency situations, the
vessel operator will take reasonable precautions to avoid potential
interaction with the bowhead whales by taking one or more of the
following actions, as appropriate:
(A) Reducing vessel speed to less than 5 knots within 300 yards
(900 feet or 274 m) of the whale(s);
(B) Steering around the whale(s) if possible;
(C) Operating the vessel(s) in such a way as to avoid separating
members of a group of whales from other members of the group;
(D) Operating the vessel(s) to avoid causing a whale to make
multiple changes in direction; and
(E) Checking the waters immediately adjacent to the vessel(s) to
ensure that no whales will be injured when the propellers are engaged.
(iii) When weather conditions require, such as when visibility
drops, adjust vessel speed accordingly to avoid the likelihood of
injury to whales.
(iv) In the event that any aircraft (such as helicopters) are used
to support the planned survey, the mitigation measures below would
apply:
(A) Under no circumstances, other than an emergency, shall aircraft
be operated at an altitude lower than 1,000 feet above sea level (ASL)
when within 0.3 mile (0.5 km) of groups of whales.
(B) Helicopters shall not hover or circle above or within 0.3 mile
(0.5 km) of groups of whales.
(c) Mitigation Measures for Airgun Operations
(i) Ramp-up:
(A) A ramp up, following a cold start, can be applied if the
exclusion zone has been free of marine mammals for a consecutive 30-
minute period. The entire exclusion zone must have been visible during
these 30 minutes. If the entire exclusion zone is not visible, then
ramp up from a cold start cannot begin.
(B) If a marine mammal(s) is sighted within the exclusion zone
during the 30-minute watch prior to ramp up, ramp up will be delayed
until the marine mammal(s) is sighted outside of the exclusion zone or
the animal(s) is not
[[Page 28436]]
sighted for at least 15-30 minutes: 15 minutes for small odontocetes
(harbor porpoise) and pinnipeds, or 30 minutes for baleen whales and
large odontocetes (including beluga and killer whales and narwhal).
(C) If, for any reason, electrical power to the airgun array has
been discontinued for a period of 10 minutes or more, ramp-up
procedures shall be implemented. Only if the PSO watch has been
suspended, a 30-minute clearance of the exclusion zone is required
prior to commencing ramp-up. Discontinuation of airgun activity for
less than 10 minutes does not require a ramp-up.
(D) The seismic operator and PSOs shall maintain records of the
times when ramp-ups start and when the airgun arrays reach full power.
(ii) Power-down/Shutdown:
(A) The airgun array shall be immediately powered down whenever a
marine mammal is sighted approaching close to or within the applicable
exclusion zone of the full array, but is outside the applicable
exclusion zone of the single mitigation airgun.
(B) If a marine mammal is already within the exclusion zone when
first detected, the airguns shall be powered down immediately.
(C) Following a power-down, firing of the full airgun array shall
not resume until the marine mammal has cleared the exclusion. The
animal will be considered to have cleared the exclusion zone if it is
visually observed to have left the exclusion zone of the full array, or
has not been seen within the zone for 15 minutes (pinnipeds or small
toothed whales) or 30 minutes (baleen whales or large toothed whales).
(D) If a marine mammal is sighted within or about to enter the 190
or 180 dB (rms) applicable exclusion zone of the single mitigation
airgun, the airgun array shall be shutdown.
(E) Firing of the full airgun array or the mitigation gun shall not
resume until the marine mammal has cleared the exclusion zone of the
full array or mitigation gun, respectively. The animal will be
considered to have cleared the exclusion zone as described above under
ramp up procedures.
(iii) Poor Visibility Conditions:
(A) If during foggy conditions, heavy snow or rain, or darkness,
the full 180 dB exclusion zone is not visible, the airguns cannot
commence a ramp-up procedure from a full shut-down.
(B) If one or more airguns have been operational before nightfall
or before the onset of poor visibility conditions, they can remain
operational throughout the night or poor visibility conditions. In this
case ramp-up procedures can be initiated, even though the exclusion
zone may not be visible, on the assumption that marine mammals will be
alerted by the sounds from the single airgun and have moved away.
(iv) Use of a Small-Volume Airgun During Turns and Transits
(A) Throughout the seismic survey, particularly during turning
movements, and short transits, Shell will employ the use of a small-
volume airgun (i.e., 10 in\3\ ``mitigation airgun'') to deter marine
mammals from being within the immediate area of the seismic operations.
The mitigation airgun would be operated at approximately one shot per
minute and would not be operated for longer than three hours in
duration (turns may last two to three hours for the proposed project).
(B) During turns or brief transits (e.g., less than three hours)
between seismic tracklines, one mitigation airgun will continue
operating. The ramp-up procedure will still be followed when increasing
the source levels from one airgun to the full airgun array. However,
keeping one airgun firing will avoid the prohibition of a ``cold
start'' during darkness or other periods of poor visibility. Through
use of this approach, site clearance and shallow hazards surveys using
the full array may resume without the 30 minute observation period of
the full exclusion zone required for a ``cold start''. PSOs will be on
duty whenever the airguns are firing during daylight, during the 30
minute periods prior to ramp-ups.
(d) Mitigation Measures for Subsistence Activities:
(i) For the purposes of reducing or eliminating conflicts between
subsistence whaling activities and Shell's survey program, the holder
of this Authorization will participate with other operators in the
Communication and Call Centers (Com-Center) Program. The Com-Centers
will be operated 24 hours/day during the 2013 fall subsistence bowhead
whale hunt.
(ii) The appropriate Com-Center shall be notified if there is any
significant change in plans.
(iii) Upon notification by a Com-Center operator of an at-sea
emergency, the holder of this Authorization shall provide such
assistance as necessary to prevent the loss of life, if conditions
allow the holder of this Authorization to safely do so.
(7) Monitoring
(a) Vessel-based Visual Monitoring:
(i) Vessel-based visual monitoring for marine mammals shall be
conducted by NMFS-approved protected species observers (PSOs)
throughout the period of survey activities.
(ii) PSOs shall be stationed aboard the marine survey vessel and
the vessel used to facilitate equipment recovery and maintenance work
at the Burger A exploratory well site through the duration of the
projects.
(iii) A sufficient number of PSOs shall be onboard the survey
vessel to meet the following criteria:
(A) 100% monitoring coverage during all periods of survey
operations in daylight;
(B) maximum of 4 consecutive hours on watch per PSO; and
(C) maximum of 12 hours of watch time per day per PSO.
(iv) The vessel-based marine mammal monitoring shall provide the
basis for real-time mitigation measures as described in (6)(c) above.
(v) Results of the vessel-based marine mammal monitoring shall be
used to calculate the estimation of the number of ``takes'' from the
marine surveys and equipment recovery and maintenance program.
(b) Protected Species Observers and Training
(i) PSO teams shall consist of Inupiat observers and NMFS-approved
field biologists.
(ii) Experienced field crew leaders shall supervise the PSO teams
in the field. New PSOs shall be paired with experienced observers to
avoid situations where lack of experience impairs the quality of
observations.
(iii) Crew leaders and most other biologists serving as observers
in 2013 shall be individuals with experience as observers during recent
seismic or shallow hazards monitoring projects in Alaska, the Canadian
Beaufort, or other offshore areas in recent years.
(iv) Resumes for PSO candidates shall be provided to NMFS for
review and acceptance of their qualifications. Inupiat observers shall
be experienced in the region and familiar with the marine mammals of
the area.
(v) All observers shall complete a NMFS-approved observer training
course designed to familiarize individuals with monitoring and data
collection procedures. The training course shall be completed before
the anticipated start of the 2013 open-water season. The training
session(s) shall be conducted by qualified marine mammalogists with
extensive crew-leader experience during previous vessel-based
monitoring programs. A marine mammal observers' handbook, adapted for
the specifics of the planned survey program will be reviewed as part of
the training.
[[Page 28437]]
(vi) Training for both Alaska native PSOs and biologist PSOs shall
be conducted at the same time in the same room. There shall not be
separate training courses for the different PSOs.
(vii) Crew members should not be used as primary PSOs because they
have other duties and generally do not have the same level of
expertise, experience, or training as PSOs, but they could be stationed
on the fantail of the vessel to observe the near field, especially the
area around the airgun array and implement a rampdown or shutdown if a
marine mammal enters the safety zone (or exclusion zone).
(viii) If crew members are to be used as PSOs, they shall go
through some basic training consistent with the functions they will be
asked to perform. The best approach would be for crew members and PSOs
to go through the same training together.
(ix) PSOs shall be trained using visual aids (e.g., videos,
photos), to help them identify the species that they are likely to
encounter in the conditions under which the animals will likely be
seen.
(x) Shell shall train its PSOs to follow a scanning schedule that
consistently distributes scanning effort according to the purpose and
need for observations. All PSOs should follow the same schedule to
ensure consistency in their scanning efforts.
(xi) PSOs shall be trained in documenting the behaviors of marine
mammals. PSOs should simply record the primary behavioral state (i.e.,
traveling, socializing, feeding, resting, approaching or moving away
from vessels) and relative location of the observed marine mammals.
(c) PSO Handbook: A PSO's Handbook shall be prepared for Shell's
2013 vessel-based monitoring program. Handbooks contain maps,
illustrations, and photographs, as well as text, and are intended to
provide guidance and reference information to trained individuals who
will participate as PSOs. The following topics shall be covered in the
PSO Handbook for the Shell project:
(i) summary overview descriptions of the project, marine mammals
and underwater noise, the marine mammal monitoring program (vessel
roles, responsibilities), and the Marine Mammal Protection Act;
(ii) monitoring and mitigation objectives and procedures, including
radii for exclusion zones and zones of influence (ZOIs);
(iii) responsibilities of staff and crew regarding the marine
mammal monitoring plan;
(iv) instructions for ship crew regarding the marine mammal
monitoring plan;
(v) data recording procedures: codes and coding instructions, PSO
coding mistakes, electronic database; navigational, marine physical,
field data sheet;
(vi) list of species that might be encountered: identification,
natural history;
(vii) use of specialized field equipment (reticle binoculars, nigh
vision devices, etc.);
(viii) table of wind speed, Beaufort wind force, and sea state
codes; and
(ix) data quality-assurance/quality-control, delivery, storage, and
backup procedures.
(d) Marine Mammal Observation Protocol
(i) PSOs shall watch for marine mammals from the best available
vantage point on the survey vessels, typically the bridge.
(ii) Observations by the PSOs on marine mammal presence and
activity shall begin a minimum of 30 minutes prior to the estimated
time that the seismic source is to be turned on and/or ramped-up.
(iii) PSOs shall scan systematically with the unaided eye and 7 x
50 reticle binoculars, supplemented with 20 x 60 image-stabilized Zeiss
Binoculars or Fujinon 25 x 150 ``Big-eye'' binoculars, and night-vision
equipment when needed.
(iv) Personnel on the bridge shall assist the marine mammal
observer(s) in watching for marine mammals.
(v) PSOs aboard the marine survey vessel shall give particular
attention to the areas within the marine mammal exclusion zones around
the source vessel, as noted in (6)(a)(i) and (ii). They shall avoid the
tendency to spend too much time evaluating animal behavior or entering
data on forms, both of which detract from their primary purpose of
monitoring the exclusion zone.
(vi) Monitoring shall consist of recording of the following
information:
(A) the species, group size, age/size/sex categories (if
determinable), the general behavioral activity, heading (if
consistent), bearing and distance from seismic vessel, sighting cue,
behavioral pace, and apparent reaction of all marine mammals seen near
the seismic vessel and/or its airgun array (e.g., none, avoidance,
approach, paralleling, etc);
(B) the time, location, heading, speed, and activity of the vessel
(shooting or not), along with sea state, visibility, cloud cover and
sun glare at (I) any time a marine mammal is sighted (including
pinnipeds hauled out on barrier islands), (II) at the start and end of
each watch, and (III) during a watch (whenever there is a change in one
or more variable);
(C) the identification of all vessels that are visible within 5 km
of the seismic vessel whenever a marine mammal is sighted and the time
observed;
(D) any identifiable marine mammal behavioral response (sighting
data should be collected in a manner that will not detract from the
PSO's ability to detect marine mammals);
(E) any adjustments made to operating procedures; and
(F) visibility during observation periods so that total estimates
of take can be corrected accordingly.
(vii) Distances to nearby marine mammals will be estimated with
binoculars (Fujinon 7 x 50 binoculars) containing a reticle to measure
the vertical angle of the line of sight to the animal relative to the
horizon. Observers may use a laser rangefinder to test and improve
their abilities for visually estimating distances to objects in the
water.
(viii) PSOs shall understand the importance of classifying marine
mammals as ``unknown'' or ``unidentified'' if they cannot identify the
animals to species with confidence. In those cases, they shall note any
information that might aid in the identification of the marine mammal
sighted. For example, for an unidentified mysticete whale, the
observers should record whether the animal had a dorsal fin.
(ix) Additional details about unidentified marine mammal sightings,
such as ``blow only'', mysticete with (or without) a dorsal fin, ``seal
splash'', etc., shall be recorded.
(x) When a marine mammal is seen approaching or within the
exclusion zone applicable to that species, the marine survey crew shall
be notified immediately so that mitigation measures described in (6)
can be promptly implemented.
(xi) Shell shall use of the best available technology to improve
detection capability during periods of fog and other types of inclement
weather. Such technology might include night-vision goggles or
binoculars as well as other instruments that incorporate infrared
technology.
(d) Field Data-Recording, Verification, Handling, and Security
(i) PSOs shall record their observations directly into computers
running a custom designed software package. Paper datasheets shall be
available as backup if necessary.
[[Page 28438]]
(ii) The accuracy of the data entry shall be verified in the field
by computerized validity checks as the data are entered, and by
subsequent manual checking of the database printouts.
(iii) Quality Control of the Data Shall B Facilitated by
(A) the start-of-season training session,
(B) subsequent supervision by the onboard field crew leader, and
(C) ongoing data checks during the field season.
(iv) Data will be sent off of the ship to Anchorage each day and
backed up regularly onto CDs and/or USB disks, and stored at separate
locations on the vessel. Data shall be secured further by having data
sheets and backup data CDs carried back to the Anchorage office during
crew rotations.
(e) Passive Acoustic Monitoring
(i) Sound Source Measurements: Using a hydrophone system, the
holder of this Authorization is required to conduct sound source
verification tests for seismic airgun array(s) and other marine survey
equipment that are involved in the open-water marine surveys.
(A) Sound source verification shall consist of distances where
broadside and endfire directions at which broadband received levels
reach 190, 180, 170, 160, and 120 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) for the airgun
array(s). The configurations of airgun arrays shall include at least
the full array and the operation of a single source that will be used
during power downs.
(B) The test results shall be reported to NMFS within 5 days of
completing the test.
(ii) Long-Term Acoustic Monitoring
(A) Shell will use an acoustic net array to (I) collect information
on the occurrence and distribution of marine mammals (including beluga
whale, bowhead whale, walrus and other species) that may be available
to subsistence hunters near villages located on the Chukchi Sea coast
and to document their relative abundance, habitat use, and migratory
patterns; and (II) measure the ambient soundscape throughout the
eastern Chukchi Sea and to record received levels of sounds from
industry and other activities further offshore in the Chukchi Sea.
(8) Data Analysis and Presentation in Reports
(a) Estimation of potential takes or exposures shall be improved
for times with low visibility (such as during fog or darkness) through
interpolation or possibly using a probability approach. Those data
could be used to interpolate possible takes during periods of
restricted visibility.
(b) To better assess impacts to marine mammals, data analysis shall
be separated into periods when a seismic airgun array (or a single
mitigation airgun) is operating and when it is not. Final and report to
NMFS should summarize and plot:
(i) Data for periods when a seismic array is active and when it is
not; and
(ii) The respective predicted received sound conditions over fairly
large areas (tens of km) around operations.
(c) To help evaluate the effectiveness of PSOs and more effectively
estimate take, if appropriate data are available, Shell shall perform
analysis of sightability curves (detection functions) for distance-
based analyses.
(d) To better understand the potential effects of oil and gas
activities on marine mammals and to facilitate integration among
companies and other researchers, the following data should be obtained
and provided electronically in the 90-day report:
(i) the location and time of each vessel-based sighting or acoustic
detection;
(ii) position of the sighting or acoustic detection relative to
ongoing operations (i.e., distance from sightings to seismic operation,
DP operation, etc.), if known;
(iii) the nature of activities at the time (e.g., seismic on/off);
(iv) any identifiable marine mammal behavioral response (sighting
data should be collected in a manner that will not detract from the
PSO's ability to detect marine mammals); and
(v) adjustments made to operating procedures.
(e) Shell shall provide useful summaries and interpretations of
results of the various elements of the monitoring results, which shall
include a clear timeline and spatial (map) representation/summary of
operations and important observations. Any and all mitigation measures
(e.g., vessel course deviations for animal avoidance, operational shut
down) should be summarized. Additionally, an assessment of the efficacy
of monitoring methods should be provided.
(f) Shell shall provide data from net arrays supported in part, or
in whole, by Shell and will participate in the integration of acoustic
arrays to assess the sound field of the lease areas in the Chukchi and
Beaufort seas for the purposes of assessing patterns of marine mammal
distribution and behavior and for assessing the impacts of multiple
activities/factors.
(9) Reporting:
(a) Sound Source Verification Report: A report on the preliminary
results of the sound source verification measurements, including the
measured 190, 180, 160, and 120 dB (rms) radii of the airgun sources
and other acoustic survey equipment, shall be submitted within 14 days
after collection of those measurements at the start of the field
season. This report will specify the distances of the exclusion zones
that were adopted for the survey.
(b) Shell shall produce a weekly GIS application that would be
available on the web for regulators to view for every observation and
mitigation measure implemented.
(c) Seismic Vessel Monitoring Program: A draft report will be
submitted to the Director, Office of Protected Resources, NMFS, within
90 days after the end of Shell's 2013 open-water marine surveys in the
Chukchi Seas. The report will describe in detail:
(i) summaries of monitoring effort (e.g., total hours, total
distances, and marine mammal distribution through the study period,
accounting for sea state and other factors affecting visibility and
detectability of marine mammals);
(ii) analyses of the effects of various factors influencing
detectability of marine mammals (e.g., sea state, number of observers,
and fog/glare);
(iii) species composition, occurrence, and distribution of marine
mammal sightings, including date, water depth, numbers, age/size/gender
categories (if determinable), group sizes, and ice cover;
(iv) to better assess impacts to marine mammals, data analysis
should be separated into periods when an airgun array (or a single
airgun) is operating and when it is not. Final and comprehensive
reports to NMFS should summarize and plot: (A) Data for periods when a
seismic array is active and when it is not; and (B) The respective
predicted received sound conditions over fairly large areas (tens of
km) around operations.
(v) sighting rates of marine mammals during periods with and
without airgun activities (and other variables that could affect
detectability), such as: (A) initial sighting distances versus airgun
activity state; (B) closest point of approach versus airgun activity
state; (C) observed behaviors and types of movements versus airgun
activity state; (D) numbers of sightings/individuals seen versus airgun
activity state; (E) distribution around the survey vessel versus airgun
activity state; and (F) estimates of take by harassment.
[[Page 28439]]
(vi) reported results from all hypothesis tests should include
estimates of the associated statistical power when practicable.
(vii) estimate and report uncertainty in all take estimates.
Uncertainty could be expressed by the presentation of confidence
limits, a minimum-maximum, posterior probability distribution, etc.;
the exact approach would be selected based on the sampling method and
data available.
(viii) The report should clearly compare authorized takes to the
level of actual estimated takes.
(d) The draft report will be subject to review and comment by NMFS.
Any recommendations made by NMFS must be addressed in the final report
prior to acceptance by NMFS. The draft report will be considered the
final report for this activity under this Authorization if NMFS has not
provided comments and recommendations within 90 days of receipt of the
draft report.
(10)(a) In the unanticipated event that survey operations clearly
cause the take of a marine mammal in a manner prohibited by this
Authorization, such as an injury (Level A harassment), serious injury
or mortality (e.g., ship-strike, gear interaction, and/or
entanglement), Shell shall immediately cease survey operations and
immediately report the incident to the Supervisor of the Incidental
Take Program, Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, at 301-427-8401 and/or by email to
Jolie.Harrison@noaa.gov and Shane.Guan@noaa.gov and the Alaska Regional
Stranding Coordinators (Aleria.Jensen@noaa.gov and
Barbara.Mahoney@noaa.gov). The report must include the following
information:
(i) time, date, and location (latitude/longitude) of the incident;
(ii) the name and type of vessel involved;
(iii) the vessel's speed during and leading up to the incident;
(iv) description of the incident;
(v) status of all sound source use in the 24 hours preceding the
incident;
(vi) water depth;
(vii) environmental conditions (e.g., wind speed and direction,
Beaufort sea state, cloud cover, and visibility);
(viii) description of marine mammal observations in the 24 hours
preceding the incident;
(ix) species identification or description of the animal(s)
involved;
(x) the fate of the animal(s); and
(xi) photographs or video footage of the animal (if equipment is
available).
Activities shall not resume until NMFS is able to review the
circumstances of the prohibited take. NMFS shall work with Shell to
determine what is necessary to minimize the likelihood of further
prohibited take and ensure MMPA compliance. Shell may not resume their
activities until notified by NMFS via letter, email, or telephone.
(b) In the event that Shell discovers an injured or dead marine
mammal, and the lead PSO determines that the cause of the injury or
death is unknown and the death is relatively recent (i.e., in less than
a moderate state of decomposition as described in the next paragraph),
Shell will immediately report the incident to the Supervisor of the
Incidental Take Program, Permits and Conservation Division, Office of
Protected Resources, NMFS, at 301-427-8401, and/or by email to
Jolie.Harrison@noaa.gov and Shane.Guan@noaa.gov and the NMFS Alaska
Stranding Hotline (1-877-925-7773) and/or by email to the Alaska
Regional Stranding Coordinators (Aleria.Jensen@noaa.gov and
Barabara.Mahoney@noaa.gov). The report must include the same
information identified in Condition 10(a) above. Activities may
continue while NMFS reviews the circumstances of the incident. NMFS
will work with Shell to determine whether modifications in the
activities are appropriate.
(c). In the event that Shell discovers an injured or dead marine
mammal, and the lead PSO determines that the injury or death is not
associated with or related to the activities authorized in Condition 3
of this Authorization (e.g., previously wounded animal, carcass with
moderate to advanced decomposition, or scavenger damage), Shell shall
report the incident to the Supervisor of the Incidental Take Program,
Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected Resources, NMFS,
at 301-427-8401, and/or by email to Jolie.Harrison@noaa.gov and
Shane.Guan@noaa.gov and the NMFS Alaska Stranding Hotline (1-877-925-
7773) and/or by email to the Alaska Regional Stranding Coordinators
(Aleria.Jensen@noaa.gov and Barbara.Mahoney@noaa.gov), within 24 hours
of the discovery. Shell shall provide photographs or video footage (if
available) or other documentation of the stranded animal sighting to
NMFS and the Marine Mammal Stranding Network. Shell can continue its
operations under such a case.
(11) Activities related to the monitoring described in this
Authorization do not require a separate scientific research permit
issued under section 104 of the Marine Mammal Protection Act.
(12) The Plan of Cooperation outlining the steps that will be taken
to cooperate and communicate with the native communities to ensure the
availability of marine mammals for subsistence uses, must be
implemented.
(13) This Authorization may be modified, suspended or withdrawn if
the holder fails to abide by the conditions prescribed herein or if the
authorized taking is having more than a negligible impact on the
species or stock of affected marine mammals, or if there is an
unmitigable adverse impact on the availability of such species or
stocks for subsistence uses.
(14) A copy of this Authorization and the Incidental Take Statement
must be in the possession of each seismic vessel operator taking marine
mammals under the authority of this Incidental Harassment
Authorization.
(15) Shell is required to comply with the Terms and Conditions of
the Incidental Take Statement corresponding to NMFS' Biological
Opinion.
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
The bowhead, fin, and humpback whales and ringed and bearded seals
are the only marine mammal species currently listed as endangered or
threatened under the ESA that could occur during Shell's proposed
marine surveys during the Arctic open-water season. NMFS' Permits and
Conservation Division has initiated consultation with NMFS' Protected
Resources Division under section 7 of the ESA on the issuance of an IHA
to Shell under section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA for this activity.
Consultation will be concluded prior to a determination on the issuance
of an IHA.
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
NMFS is currently preparing an Environmental Assessment, pursuant
to NEPA, to determine whether or not this proposed activity may have a
significant effect on the human environment. This analysis will be
completed prior to the issuance or denial of the IHA.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary determinations, NMFS proposes to
authorize the take of marine mammals incidental to Shell's 2013 open-
water marine surveys in the Alaskan Chukchi Sea, provided the
previously mentioned mitigation, monitoring, and reporting requirements
are incorporated.
[[Page 28440]]
Dated: May 8, 2013.
Perry F. Gayaldo,
Acting Deputy Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2013-11406 Filed 5-13-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P