Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to a Geophysical Survey in the Arctic Ocean, 28787-28809 [2021-11339]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 102 / Friday, May 28, 2021 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[RTID 0648–XB015]
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to
Specified Activities; Taking Marine
Mammals Incidental to a Geophysical
Survey in the Arctic Ocean
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental
harassment authorization; request for
comments on proposed authorization
and possible renewal.
AGENCY:
NMFS has received a request
from the University of Alaska
Geophysics Institute (UAGI) for
authorization to take marine mammals
incidental to a geophysical survey in the
Arctic Ocean. The proposed survey
would be funded by the National
Science Foundation (NSF). Pursuant to
the Marine Mammal Protection Act
(MMPA), NMFS is requesting comments
on its proposal to issue an incidental
harassment authorization (IHA) to
incidentally take marine mammals
during the specified activities. NMFS is
also requesting comments on a possible
one-time, one-year renewal that could
be issued under certain circumstances
and if all requirements are met, as
described in Request for Public
Comments at the end of this notice.
NMFS will consider public comments
prior to making any final decision on
the issuance of the requested MMPA
authorizations and agency responses
will be summarized in the final notice
of our decision.
DATES: Comments and information must
be received no later than June 28, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be
addressed to Jolie Harrison, Chief,
Permits and Conservation Division,
Office of Protected Resources, National
Marine Fisheries Service and should be
submitted via email to ITP.Corcoran@
noaa.gov.
Instructions: NMFS is not responsible
for comments sent by any other method,
to any other address or individual, or
received after the end of the comment
period. Comments, including all
attachments, must not exceed a 25megabyte file size. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted online at
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/permit/
incidental-take-authorizations-undermarine-mammal-protection-act without
change. All personal identifying
SUMMARY:
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information (e.g., name, address)
voluntarily submitted by the commenter
may be publicly accessible. Do not
submit confidential business
information or otherwise sensitive or
protected information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kim
Corcoran, Office of Protected Resources,
NMFS, (301) 427–8401. Electronic
copies of the application and supporting
documents, as well as a list of the
references cited in this document, may
be obtained online at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/permit/
incidental-take-authorizations-undermarine-mammal-protection-act. In case
of problems accessing these documents,
or for anyone who is unable to comment
via electronic mail, please call the
contact listed above.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The MMPA prohibits the ‘‘take’’ of
marine mammals, with certain
exceptions. Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and
(D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et
seq.) direct the Secretary of Commerce
(as delegated to NMFS) 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
incidental take authorization may be
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) and will not have
an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for
taking for subsistence uses (where
relevant). Further, NMFS must prescribe
the permissible methods of taking and
other means of effecting the least
practicable adverse impact on the
affected species or stocks and their
habitat, paying particular attention to
rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of
similar significance, and on the
availability of the species or stocks for
taking for certain subsistence uses
(referred to in shorthand as
‘‘mitigation’’); and requirements
pertaining to the monitoring and
reporting of the takings.
The definitions of all applicable
MMPA statutory terms cited above are
included in the relevant sections below.
National Environmental Policy Act
To comply with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
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(NEPA; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and
NOAA Administrative Order (NAO)
216–6A, NMFS must review our
proposed action (i.e., the issuance of an
IHA) with respect to potential impacts
on the human environment.
NMFS plans to adopt the NSF’s
Environmental Assessment (EA), as we
have preliminarily determined that it
includes adequate information
analyzing the effects on the human
environment of issuing the IHA. NSF’s
EA is available at www.nsf.gov/geo/oce/
envcomp/.
We will review all comments
submitted in response to this notice
prior to concluding our NEPA process
or making a final decision on the IHA
request.
Summary of Request
On February 12, 2021, NMFS received
a request from UAGI for an IHA to take
marine mammals incidental to a
geophysical survey in the Arctic Ocean.
The application was deemed adequate
and complete on April 6, 2021. UAGI’s
request is for take of 13 species of
marine mammals, by Level B
harassment only. No Level A
harassment is anticipated. Neither UAGI
nor NMFS expects serious injury or
mortality to result from this activity.
Therefore, an IHA is appropriate.
Description of Proposed Activity
Overview
Researchers at UAGI, with funding
from NSF, propose to conduct a seismic
survey from the Research Vessel (R/V)
Sikuliaq in the Arctic Ocean to
document the structure and stratigraphy
of the Chukchi Borderland and adjacent
Canada basin. The proposed activity is
planned to take place in late summer
2021 (August/September) with a total of
30 days of data acquisition. The survey
would include both high energy and
low energy components. High-energy
ocean bottom seismometer (OBS)
refraction surveys will use a 6-airgun,
3120 cubic inches (in3) array and
consist of ∼12 percent of total survey
effort (henceforth referred to as highenergy survey). Low-energy multichannel seismic (MCS) reflection
surveys will use a 2-airgun array with a
total discharge volume of 1040 in3 and
consist of ∼88 percent of total survey
effort (henceforth referred to as lowenergy survey).
Dates and Duration
The proposed activity will occur
between August and September, 2021.
The activity is planned to occur for 45
days total, with ∼30 days dedicated to
seismic data acquisition (with 24-hours
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a day operations), ∼8 days devoted to
transit and 7 days used for equipment
deployment and recovery.
Specific Geographic Region
The proposed surveys would occur
within ∼73.5–81.0°N, ∼139.5–168°W
(≥300 kilometer (km) north of
Utqiag˙vik). Representative survey track
lines can be seen in Figure 1. Some
deviation in track lines, including the
order of survey operations, could be
necessary for reasons such as science
drivers, poor data quality, inclement
weather, or mechanical issues with the
research vessel and/or equipment. Thus,
the track lines could occur anywhere
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within the coordinates noted above and
within the study area. Four percent of
the surveys will occur within the U.S.
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) with
the remaining part of the survey
occurring beyond the EEZ. The activity
will take place in depths ranging from
200–4,000 meters (m). The R/V Sikuliaq
would likely leave and return to Nome,
AK.
The low-energy survey activity will
begin ∼300 km from the Alaskan
coastline (North of Utqiagvik) and
extend ∼800 km north from the initial
survey site (i.e., the survey would occur
∼300–1,100 km from the Alaska
coastline). The high-energy survey
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activity will only occur ∼530 km from
the coastline and occur only in the
northeastern part of the survey area (See
Figure 1). Eighty percent of the total
survey will occur in deep waters
(>1,000m) with the remainder of the
survey occurring in intermediate depth
waters (100–1,000 m); no surveying will
occur in waters <100 m deep. All highenergy surveys (680 km total) will occur
in deep waters, while 67 percent of lowenergy surveys will occur in deep
waters (3,981 km) with the remainder
occurring in intermediate depth waters
(1,189 km or 23 percent).
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Detailed Description of Specific Activity
The proposed study would use lowenergy two-dimensional (2–D) seismic
surveying to document the history,
structure, and stratigraphy of the
Chukchi Borderland and adjacent
Canada Basin, and use high-energy
seismic refraction data in the Canada
Basin to characterize the deep crustal
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structure associated with an extinct
mid-ocean ridge in the central basin.
The procedures to be used for the
proposed marine geophysical survey
would include conventional seismic
methodology. The survey would involve
one source vessel, R/V Sikuliaq, which
has a cruising speed of 10 knots (kt),
and would tow an array of 6 airguns
(520 in3 (8,521.27 cm3) each) and a total
possible discharge volume of ∼3,120 in3
during high-energy surveys. During low-
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energy reflection surveys, a 2-airgun
array (at 520 in3 each) would be used
with a total discharge volume of 1,040
in3. Both arrays will be towed at a depth
of 9m. During low-energy surveys (∼88
percent of total line km), a 1–3 km long
hydrophone streamer (depending on ice
conditions) would be employed as the
receiving system, and high-energy
surveys (∼12 percent of total line km)
would employ nine OBSs as the
receiving system. As the airgun arrays
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Figure 1. Location of the proposed seismic surveys and OBS deployments in the
Arctic Ocean and Endangered Species Act critical habitat in the U.S.
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are towed along the survey lines, the
OBSs would receive and store the
returning acoustic signals internally for
later analysis, and the hydrophone
streamer would transfer the data to the
on-board processing system. The
airguns would fire at a shot interval of
35 m (∼15 seconds (s)) during the lowenergy surveys and at a 139-m (∼60 s)
interval during the high-energy
refraction surveys. The airguns would
operate at a firing pressure of 2,540
pounds per square inch (psi).
In addition to the aforementioned
planned survey lines, some lines, as
indicated in Figure 1, will be surveyed
twice: Once for low-energy reflection
and again for high energy refraction.
These surveys would take place near the
end of operations in the northeastern
part of the survey area (Fig. 1); however,
the location of these surveys could shift
slightly to ensure one survey occurs
over the extinct ridge axis and the other
on hyper-extended continental crust. A
total of nine OBSs would be deployed
twice for a total of 18 deployment sites
during high energy survey effort. Nine
OBSs would be deployed during lowenergy surveying, then high-energy
refraction data would be acquired along
these same lines, followed by retrieval
of the OBS equipment, before R/V
Sikuliaq would travel to the next site to
deploy all nine OBSs again.
Approximately 5,850 total line km
would be surveyed, including 5,170 km
of low-energy surveys, and 680 km of
high-energy surveys. There could be
additional seismic operations associated
with turns, airgun testing, and repeat
coverage of any areas where initial data
quality is sub-standard. As a result, a 25
percent buffer has been added in the
form of operational days, which is
equivalent to adding 25 percent to the
proposed line km to be surveyed. Most
of the survey (80 percent) would occur
in deep water (>1,000 m), and 20
percent would occur in intermediate
water (100–1,000 m deep); there would
be no effort in shallow water <100 m
deep.
In addition to the operations of the
airgun array, a multibeam echosounder
(MBES), a sub-bottom profiler (SBP),
and an Acoustic Doppler Current
Profiler (ADCP) would be operated from
R/V Sikuliaq continuously during the
seismic surveys, but not during transit
to and from the survey area. Take of
marine mammals is not expected to
occur incidental to use of the MBES,
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SBP, or ADCP because they will be
operated only during seismic
acquisition, and it is assumed that,
during simultaneous operations of the
airgun array and the other sources, any
marine mammals close enough to be
affected by the MBES, SBP, and ADCP
would already be affected by the
airguns. However, whether or not the
airguns are operating simultaneously
with the other sources, given their
characteristics (e.g., narrow downwarddirected beam), marine mammals would
experience no more than one or two
brief ping exposures, if any exposure
were to occur.
Proposed mitigation, monitoring, and
reporting measures are described in
detail later in this document (please see
Proposed Mitigation and Proposed
Monitoring and Reporting).
Description of Marine Mammals in the
Area of Specified Activities
Sections 3 and 4 of the application
summarize available information
regarding status and trends, distribution
and habitat preferences, and behavior
and life history of the potentially
affected species. Additional information
regarding population trends and threats
may be found in NMFS’s Stock
Assessment Reports (SARs; https://
www.fisheries.noaa. gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/marinemammal-stock-assessments) and more
general information about these species
(e.g., physical and behavioral
descriptions) may be found on NMFS’s
website (https://www.fisheries.noaa
.gov/find-species). Additional
information may be found in the Aerial
Survey of Arctic Marine Mammals
(ASAMM) reports, which are available
online at https://www.fisheries.noaa.
gov/alaska/marine-mammal-protection/
aerial-surveys-arctic-marine-mammals.
Table 1 lists all species or stocks for
which take is expected and proposed to
be authorized for this action, and
summarizes information related to the
population or stock, including
regulatory status under the MMPA and
Endangered Species Act (ESA) and
potential biological removal (PBR),
where known. For taxonomy, we follow
Committee on Taxonomy (2020). PBR is
defined by the MMPA as the maximum
number of animals, not including
natural mortalities, that may be removed
from a marine mammal stock while
allowing that stock to reach or maintain
its optimum sustainable population (as
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described in NMFS’s SARs). While no
mortality is anticipated or authorized
here, PBR and annual serious injury and
mortality from anthropogenic sources
are included here as gross indicators of
the status of the species and other
threats.
Marine mammal abundance estimates
presented in this document represent
the total number of individuals that
make up a given stock or the total
number estimated within a particular
study or survey area. NMFS’s stock
abundance estimates for most species
represent the total estimate of
individuals within the geographic area,
if known, that comprises that stock. For
most species, stock abundance estimates
are based on sightings within the U.S.
EEZ, however for some species, this
geographic area may extend beyond U.S.
waters. Other species may use survey
abundance estimates. Survey abundance
(as compared to stock or species
abundance) is the total number of
individuals estimated within the survey
area, which may or may not align
completely with a stock’s geographic
range as defined in the SARs. These
surveys may also extend beyond U.S.
waters. In this case, the proposed survey
area outside of the U.S. EEZ does not
necessarily overlap with the ranges for
stocks managed by NMFS. However, we
assume that individuals of these species
that may be encountered during the
survey would be part of those stocks.
Additionally, six species listed in Table
1 indicate Unknown abundance
estimates. This may be due to outdated
data and population estimates or data is
not representative of the entire stock.
All managed stocks in this region are
assessed in NMFS’s U.S. Alaska and
Pacific SARs (e.g., Muto et al., 2020,
Carretta et al., 2020). All values
presented in Table 1 are the most recent
available at the time of publication and
are available in the 2019 SARs (Muto et
al., 2020, Carretta et al., 2020) and draft
2020 SARs (available online at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/draftmarine-mammal-stock-assessmentreports).
In addition, the Pacific walrus
(Odobenus rosmarus divergens) and the
Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) may be
found in the Arctic. However, Pacific
walruses and Polar bears are managed
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
and are not considered further in this
document.
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TABLE 1—MARINE MAMMALS EXPECTED TO OCCUR IN THE SURVEY AREA
Common name
Scientific name
Stock
I
ESA/
MMPA
status;
strategic
(Y/N) 1
I
Stock abundance
(CV, Nmin,
most recent
abundance survey) 2
Annual M/SI 3
PBR
I
I
Order Cetartiodactyla—Cetacea—Superfamily Mysticeti (baleen whales)
Family Eschrichtiidae:
Gray whale .....................
Family Balaenidae:
Bowhead whale ..............
Family Balaenopteridae
(rorquals):
Fin whale ........................
Humpback whale ............
Minke whale ...................
Eschrichtius robustus ...........
Eastern N Pacific .................
-, -, N
26,960 (0.05, 25,849, 2016)
801
131
Balaena mysticetus ..............
Western Arctic ......................
E, D, Y
16,820 (0.052,16,100,2011)
161
56
Balaenoptera physalus .........
Megaptera novaeangliae ......
Balaenoptera acutorostrata ..
Northeast Pacific 4 * ..............
Western N Pacific * ..............
Alaska 4 * ..............................
E, D, Y
E, D, Y
-, -, N
Unknown ..............................
1,107 (0.3, 865, 2006) .........
Unknown ..............................
UND
3
UND
0.6
2.8
0
Superfamily Odontoceti (toothed whales, dolphins, and porpoises)
Family Delphinidae:
Beluga whale ..................
Killer whale .....................
Narwhal ..........................
Family Phocoenidae (porpoises):
Harbor Porpoise .............
Orcinus orca .........................
Monodon Monoceros ...........
Beaufort Sea 4 ......................
Eastern Chukchi ...................
Alaska resident .....................
Unidentified 4 * ......................
-,
-,
-,
-,
N
N
N
N
39,258 (0.229, N/A. 1992) ...
13,305 (0.51, 8,875, 2017) ..
2,347 c (N/A, 2347, 2012) ...
Unknown ..............................
UND
178
24
UND
102
55
1
0
Phocoena phocoena ............
Bering Sea 4 * .......................
-, -, Y
Unknown ..............................
UND
0.4
Unknown ..............................
184,687 (see SAR, 163,086,
2013).
Unknown ..............................
461,625 (see SAR, 423,237,
2013).
UND
9,785
6,709
163
5,100
25,394
6,459
5,254
Delphinapterus leucas ..........
-,
-,
-,
-,
Order Carnivora—Superfamily Pinnipedia
Family Phocidae (earless
seals):
Bearded Seal .................
Ribbon Seal ....................
Erignathus barbatus .............
Histriophoca fasciata ............
Beringia 4 * ............................
Unidentified * ........................
T, D, Y
-, -, N
Ringed Seal ....................
Spotted Seal ...................
Pusa hispida .........................
Phoca largha ........................
Arctic ....................................
Bering ...................................
T, D, Y
-, -, N
* Stocks marked with an asterisk are addressed in further detail in the text below.
1 Endangered Species Act (ESA) status: Endangered (E), Threatened (T)/MMPA status: Depleted (D). A dash (-) indicates that the species is not listed under the
ESA or designated as depleted under the MMPA. Under the MMPA, a strategic stock is one for which the level of direct human-caused mortality exceeds PBR or
which is determined to be declining and likely to be listed under the ESA within the foreseeable future. Any species or stock listed under the ESA is automatically
designated under the MMPA as depleted and as a strategic stock.
2 NMFS marine mammal stock assessment reports online at: www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/. CV is coefficient of variation; N
min is the minimum estimate of stock
abundance. In some cases, CV is not applicable. For most stocks of killer whales, the abundance values represent direct counts of individually identifiable animals;
therefore there is only a single abundance estimate with no associated CV. For certain stocks of pinnipeds, abundance estimates are based upon observations of animals (often pups) ashore multiplied by some correction factor derived from knowledge of the species’ (or similar species’) life history to arrive at a best abundance estimate; therefore, there is no associated CV. In these cases, the minimum abundance may represent actual counts of all animals ashore.
3 These values, found in NMFS’s SARs, represent annual levels of human-caused mortality plus serious injury from all sources combined (e.g., commercial fisheries, ship strike).
4 Abundance estimates for these stocks are not considered current. PBR is therefore considered undetermined for these stocks, as there is no current minimum
abundance estimate for use in calculation. We nevertheless present the most recent abundance estimates, as these present the best available information for use in
this document.
As indicated above, all 13 species
(with 14 managed stocks) in Table 1
could temporally and spatially co-occur
with the activity to the degree that take
is reasonably likely to occur, and we
have proposed authorizing it. All
species that could potentially occur in
the proposed survey areas are included
in Table 4 of the IHA application.
Beluga whales and ringed seals are
the marine mammal species most likely
to be encountered during this survey,
with bowhead whales and bearded seals
also having a higher likelihood of cooccuring in the survey area over the
other proposed species in Table 1.
However, these four species (beluga
whales, ringed seals, bowhead whales
and bearded seals) are most common
within 100 km of shore, whereas the
proposed survey would occur no closer
than 300 km from shore, with most
effort further north. Thus, despite their
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prevalence in Arctic waters north of
Alaska, we expect there to be a low
likelihood of encountering even beluga
whales, ringed seals, bowhead whales
and bearded seals during the proposed
survey given the proposed activity’s
distance from shore.
Humpbacks, fin and minke whales
have rarely been observed as far north
in the Arctic Ocean as the planned
survey location but have been spotted
on rare occasions in areas coinciding
with the lower latitudes of the proposed
survey area during previous aerial
surveys. Similar sightings during the
proposed activity are expected to be
limited during the proposed survey as
the majority of the proposed survey area
occurs in higher latitudes and outside
typical migratory patterns for these
species (Brueggeman, 2009; Haley et al.
2010; Clarke et al., 2011; Schuck et al.,
2017). However, Brower et al. (2018)
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suggest that sightings of these sub-Arctic
species are increasing in the eastern
Chukchi Sea as of recent years due to
climate change. Killer whales, gray
whales, humpback whales, fin whales,
minke whales and harbor porpoises are
minimally sighted in the Chukchi Sea
based on ASAMM data and are
primarily coastal species, however
recent monitoring activities in the
Chukchi and Beaufort seas during
industry seismic surveys also suggests
that some of these species may be
increasing in numbers in the Arctic but
are still expected to be south of the
proposed survey area (Funk et al.,
2010). Additionally, there are scattered
records of narwhal in Alaskan waters,
where the species is considered to be
extralimital. However, we do not expect
the species to be encountered far north
in the proposed survey area (Reeves et
al., 2002). Although we do not expect
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the proposed survey area to coincide
with expected ranges of the species
described in this paragraph, takes
equivalent to the average group size for
the species are proposed for
authorization at the applicant’s request
as a precaution due to the potential that
they could be encountered.
Prior to 2016, humpback whales were
listed under the ESA as an endangered
species worldwide. Following a 2015
global status review (Bettridge et al.,
2015), NMFS delineated 14 distinct
population segments (DPS) with
different listing statuses (81 FR 62259;
September 8, 2016) pursuant to the ESA.
The DPSs that occur in U.S. waters do
not necessarily equate to the existing
stocks designated under the MMPA.
Within Alaska waters, four humpback
whale DPSs may occur: The Western
North Pacific (WNP) DPS (endangered),
Hawaii DPS (not listed), Mexico DPS
(threatened), and Central America DPS
(endangered). According to Wade
(2017), in the Bering, Chukchi, and
Beaufort Seas, encountered whales are
most likely to be from the Hawaii DPS
(86.8 percent), but could be from the
Mexico DPS (11.0 percent) or WNP DPS
(2.1 percent). Note that these
probabilities reflect the upper limit of
the 95 percent confidence interval of the
probability of occurrence; therefore,
numbers may not sum to 100 percent for
a given area. Because this project occurs
north of the Chukchi and Beaufort Sea
and in the Arctic, we hypothesize that
the Western North Pacific Stock of
humpback whales will overlap with the
proposed survey area, and thus include
animals from the WNP DPS, Hawaii
DPS and Mexico DPS as previously
mentioned.
At this time, there is no
comprehensive abundance estimate
available in the SARs for the Alaska
stock of minke whales. However, the
International Whaling Commission
(IWC) reports an abundance estimate of
20,000 minke whales in the North
Pacific (North West Pacific and Okhotsk
Sea) (2003), which is the figure used for
analysis. This estimate encompasses the
distribution of minke whales throughout
the North Pacfic extending to 80 degrees
North. 20,000 is the most recent
abundance estimate available for minke
whales in the North Pacific provided by
IWC. In 2017, the IWC Scientific
Committee established a new group to
review all abundance estimates and
ensure quality and consistency across
estimates used by IWC. According to the
IWC website and the criteria established
by this group, the 20,000 whale estimate
in the North Pacific from 2003 is
considered to be the ‘best’ estimate at
this time.
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Similarly, although a comprehensive
abundance estimate is not available for
the northeast Pacific stock of fin whales,
provisional estimates representing
portions of the range are available. The
same 2010 survey of the eastern Bering
sea shelf provided an estimate of 1,061
(CV = 0.38) fin whales (Friday et al.
2013). The estimate is not corrected for
missed animals, but is expected to be
robust as previous studies have shown
that only small correction factors are
needed for fin whales (Barlow, 1995).
Zerbini et al. (2006) produced an
estimate of 1,652 (95 percent
Confidence Interval (CI): 1,142–2,389)
fin whales for the area described above.
Narwhals are found year-round in the
Arctic but rarely occur in the western
Arctic, in areas including the Bering,
Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas (COSEWIC,
2004). There are three populations of
narwhals recognized internationally
based on geographic separation, which
include the Baffin Bay population,
Hudson Bay population, and the East
Greenland population. Currently, very
little is known about these populations.
The primary source for data and
knowledge of narwhals in Alaska waters
is local observations and traditional
ecological knowledge dating back to the
1800s (Noogwook et al., 2007).
Individual sightings have occurred in
Russian waters of the northern Chukchi
Sea (Yablokov and Bel’kovich, 1968;
Reeves and Tracey, 1980). Additionally,
Alaska Native hunters recorded seven
sightings of narwhals between 1989 and
2008, four of which consisted of mixed
groups of narwhals and belugas (George
and Suydam, unpublished manuscript).
Records of narwhals in the Beaufort,
Chukchi, and Bering Seas are
hypothesized to be whales from the
Baffin Bay population, migrating into
the Canadian Arctic as ice conditions
permit (COSEWIC, 2004). At this time,
there are no reliable estimates of
abundance for narwhals in Alaskan
waters.
Based on previous industry-sponsored
monitoring in the Beaufort Sea, harbor
porpoises regularly occur in both the
Chukchi and Beaufort Seas (Funk et al.,
2011). They have been sighted during
several seismic surveys, both nearshore
and offshore, between July and
November (Funk et al., 2010, 2011;
Reiser et al., 2011; Aerts et al., 2013).
After gray whales and bowhead whales,
they are the most frequently sighted
cetacean in the Chukchi Sea (Funk et
al., 2011; Reiser et al., 2011). Shipboard
visual line-transect surveys occurred
biannually from 1999 to 2010, resulting
in harbor porpoise abundance estimates
for each survey. These surveys
demonstrate the distribution of harbor
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porpoises throughout the Chukchi and
Beaufort Seas but are not reliable for
estimating abundance estimates in this
region.
Bearded seals are widely distributed
throughout the summer and fall,
following ice coverage northward, while
juvenile seals remain near the coasts of
the Bering and Chukchi Seas (Burns,
1967, 1981; Heptner et al., 1976; Nelson,
1981; Cameron et al., 2018). At this
time, there is no reliable population
estimate available for the entire Alaska
stock of bearded seals. Recent aerial
abundance surveys (Conn et al., 2014)
used a sub-sample of data collected in
the U.S. portion of the Bering Sea to
calculate a partial abundance estimate
of 301,836 seals (95 percent CI:
238,195–371,147). Future studies plan
to combine spring survey results of the
Chukchi Sea and Beaufort Sea.
Similarly, ringed seals also lack a
reliable population estimate for the
entire stock. Conn et al. (2014)
calculated an abundance estimate of
171,418 ringed seals (95 percent CI:
141,588–201,090) using a sub-sample of
data collected from the U.S. portion of
the Bering Sea in 2012. Researchers plan
to combine these results with those from
spring surveys of the Chukchi and
Beaufort Seas once complete. During the
summer months, ringed seals forage
along ice edges or in open water areas
of high productivity and have been
observed in the northern Beaufort Sea
during summer months (Harwood and
Stirling, 1992; Freitas et al., 2008; Kelly
et al., 2010b; Harwood et al., 2015). This
open water movement becomes limited
with the onset of ice in the fall forcing
the seals to move west and south as ice
packs advance, dispersing the animals
throughout the Chukchi and Bering
Seas, with only a portion remaining in
the Beaufort Sea (Frost and Lowry,
1984; Crawford et al., 2012; Harwood et
al., 2012).
In addition to ringed and bearded
seals, other pinniped species that could
be encountered during the proposed
survey include the ribbon seal and
spotted seal. The ribbon seal is
uncommon in the Chukchi Sea, and
there are few sightings in the Beaufort
Sea. From late March to early May,
ribbon seals inhabit the Bering Sea ice
front. They are most abundant in the
northern part of the ice front in the
central and western parts of the Bering
Sea. As the ice recedes in May to midJuly, the seals move farther north in the
Bering Sea, where they haul out on the
receding ice edge and remnant ice.
Spotted seals are more abundant in the
Chukchi Sea and occur in small
numbers in the Beaufort Sea. As the ice
melts, seals become more concentrated,
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with part of the Bering Sea population
moving to the Bering Strait and the
southern part of the Chukchi Sea. The
distribution of spotted seals is
seasonally related to specific life-history
events that can be broadly divided into
two periods: Late-fall through spring,
when whelping, nursing, breeding, and
molting occur in association with the
presence of sea ice on which the seals
haul out, and summer through fall when
seasonal sea ice has melted and most
spotted seals use land for hauling out.
Satellite-tagging studies showed that
seals tagged in the northeastern Chukchi
Sea moved south in October and passed
through the Bering Strait in November.
Seals overwintered in the Bering Sea
along the ice edge and made east-west
movements along the edge. In summer
and fall, spotted seals use coastal haulout sites regularly and may be found as
far north as 69–72° N in the Chukchi
and Beaufort seas. Neither of these
species would likely be encountered
during the proposed activity other than
perhaps during transit periods to or
from the survey area. Although their
encounters this far north in the Arctic
are rare, authorization of take has been
proposed at the request of the applicant.
Clarke et al. (2015) described Biological
Important Areas (BIAs) for cetaceans in
the Arctic. BIAs were delineated for two
baleen whale species, bowhead whales
and gray whales, and one toothed
whale, the beluga whale. The proposed
UAGI survey areas do not coincide with
any of the three Arctic BIAs.
Unusual Mortality Events (UME)
A UME is defined under the MMPA
as ‘‘a stranding that is unexpected;
involves a significant die-off of any
marine mammal population; and
demands immediate response.’’ For
more information on UMEs, please visit:
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/marinemammal-unusual-mortality-events.
Currently recognized UMEs in Alaska
involving species under NMFS’
jurisdiction include those affecting ice
seals in the Bering and Chukchi Seas
and gray whales. Since June 1, 2018,
elevated strandings for bearded, ringed
and spotted seals have occurred in the
Bering and Chukchi seas in Alaska, with
causes undetermined. Through 2020,
there were 315 recorded seal strandings.
For more information, please visit:
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/alaska/marinelife-distress/2018-2020-ice-seal-unusualmortality-event-alaska.
Since January 1, 2019, elevated gray
whale strandings have occurred along
the west coast of North America from
Mexico through Alaska. As of April 5,
2021, there have been a total of 430
whales reported in the event, with
approximately 205 dead whales in
Mexico, 209 whales in the United States
(including 93 in Alaska), and 16 whales
in British Columbia, Canada. For the
United States, the historical 18-year 5month average (Jan–May) is 14.8 whales
for this same time-period. Several dead
whales have been emaciated with
moderate to heavy whale lice (cyamid)
loads. Necropsies have been conducted
on a subset of whales with additional
findings of vessel strike in three whales
and entanglement in one whale. In
Mexico, 50–55 percent of the freeranging whales observed in the lagoons
in winter have been reported as
‘‘skinny’’ compared to the annual
average of 10–12 percent ‘‘skinny’’
whales normally seen. The cause of the
UME is as yet undetermined. For more
information, please visit:
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-life-distress/2019-2020-graywhale-unusual-mortality-event-alongwest-coast-and.
Marine Mammal Hearing
Hearing is the most important sensory
modality for marine mammals
underwater, and exposure to
anthropogenic sound can have
deleterious effects. To appropriately
assess the potential effects of exposure
to sound, it is necessary to understand
the frequency ranges marine mammals
are able to hear. Current data indicate
that not all marine mammal species
have equal hearing capabilities (e.g.,
Richardson et al. 1995; Wartzok and
Ketten, 1999; Au and Hastings, 2008).
To reflect this, Southall et al. (2007)
recommended that marine mammals be
divided into functional hearing groups
based on directly measured or estimated
hearing ranges on the basis of available
behavioral response data, audiograms
derived using auditory evoked potential
techniques, anatomical modeling, and
other data. Note that no direct
measurements of hearing ability have
been successfully completed for
mysticetes (i.e., low-frequency
cetaceans). Subsequently, NMFS’ 2018
Revision to its Technical Guidance for
Assessing the Effects of Anthropogenic
Sound on Marine Mammal Hearing
(Technical Guidance) (NMFS, 2018)
described generalized hearing ranges for
these marine mammal hearing groups.
Generalized hearing ranges were chosen
based on the approximately 65 decibel
(dB) threshold from the normalized
composite audiograms, with the
exception for lower limits for lowfrequency cetaceans where the lower
bound was deemed to be biologically
implausible and the lower bound from
Southall et al. (2007) retained. Marine
mammal hearing groups and their
associated hearing ranges are provided
in Table 2.
TABLE 2—MARINE MAMMAL HEARING GROUPS
[NMFS, 2018]
Generalized
hearing range *
Hearing group
Low-frequency (LF) cetaceans (baleen whales) .....................................................................................................................
Mid-frequency (MF) cetaceans (dolphins, toothed whales, beaked whales, bottlenose whales) ...........................................
High-frequency (HF) cetaceans (true porpoises, Kogia, river dolphins, cephalorhynchid, Lagenorhynchus cruciger & L.
australis).
Phocid pinnipeds (PW) (underwater) (true seals) ...................................................................................................................
Otariid pinnipeds (OW) (underwater) (sea lions and fur seals) ..............................................................................................
7 Hz to 35 kHz.
150 Hz to 160 kHz.
275 Hz to 160 kHz.
50 Hz to 86 kHz.
60 Hz to 39 kHz.
* Represents the generalized hearing range for the entire group as a composite (i.e., all species within the group), where individual species’
hearing ranges are typically not as broad. Generalized hearing range chosen based on ∼65 dB threshold from normalized composite audiogram,
with the exception for lower limits for LF cetaceans (Southall et al., 2007) and PW pinniped (approximation).
The pinniped functional hearing
group was modified from Southall et al.
(2007) on the basis of data indicating
that phocid species have consistently
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demonstrated an extended frequency
range of hearing compared to otariids,
especially in the higher frequency range
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(Hemila¨ et al., 2006; Kastelein et al.,
2009; Reichmuth and Holt, 2013).
For more detail concerning these
groups and associated frequency ranges,
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please see NMFS (2018) for a review of
available information. Thirteen marine
mammal species (9 cetacean and 4
pinniped (all phocid) species) have the
reasonable potential to co-occur with
the proposed survey activities. Please
refer to Table 1. Of the cetacean species
that may be present, 5 are classified as
low-frequency cetaceans (i.e., all
mysticete species), 3 are classified as
mid-frequency cetaceans (i.e., all
delphinid species), and 1 is classified as
high-frequency cetacean (i.e., harbor
porpoise).
Potential Effects of Specified Activities
on Marine Mammals and Their Habitat
This section includes a summary of
the ways that UAGI’s specified activity
may impact marine mammals and their
habitat. Detailed descriptions of the
potential effects of similar specified
activities have been provided in other
recent Federal Register notices,
including for survey activities using the
same methodology and over a similar
amount of time, and affecting similar
species (e.g., 83 FR 29212, June 22,
2018; 84 FR 14200, April 9, 2019; 85 FR
19580, April 7, 2020). No significant
new information is available, and we
refer the reader to these documents for
additional detail. The Estimated Take
section includes a quantitative analysis
of the number of individuals that are
expected to be taken by UAGI’s activity.
The Negligible Impact Analysis and
Determination section considers the
potential effects of the specified activity,
the Estimated Take section, and the
Proposed Mitigation section, to draw
conclusions regarding the likely impacts
of these activities on the reproductive
success or survivorship of individuals
and how those impacts on individuals
are likely to impact marine mammal
species or stocks.
Background on Active Acoustic Sound
Sources and Acoustic Terminology
This section contains a brief technical
background on sound, on the
characteristics of certain sound types,
and on metrics used in this proposal
inasmuch as the information is relevant
to the specified activity and to the
discussion of the effects of the specified
activity on marine mammals in this
document. For general information on
sound and its interaction with the
marine environment, please see, e.g., Au
and Hastings (2008); Richardson et al.
(1995); Urick (1983).
Sound travels in waves, the basic
components of which are frequency,
wavelength, velocity, and amplitude.
Frequency is the number of pressure
waves that pass by a reference point per
unit of time and is measured in hertz or
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cycles per second. Wavelength is the
distance between two peaks or
corresponding points of a sound wave
(length of one cycle). Higher frequency
sounds have shorter wavelengths than
lower frequency sounds, and typically
attenuate (decrease) more rapidly,
except in certain cases in shallower
water. Amplitude is the height of the
sound pressure wave or the ‘‘loudness’’
of a sound and is typically described
using the relative unit of the decibel. A
sound pressure level (SPL) in dB is
described as the ratio between a
measured pressure and a reference
pressure (for underwater sound, this is
1 microPascal (mPa)), and is a
logarithmic unit that accounts for large
variations in amplitude. Therefore, a
relatively small change in dB
corresponds to large changes in sound
pressure. The source level (SL)
represents the SPL referenced at a
distance of 1 m from the source
(referenced to 1 mPa), while the received
level is the SPL at the listener’s position
(referenced to 1 mPa).
Root mean square (rms) is the
quadratic mean sound pressure over the
duration of an impulse. Root mean
square is calculated by squaring all of
the sound amplitudes, averaging the
squares, and then taking the square root
of the average (Urick, 1983). Root mean
square accounts for both positive and
negative values; squaring the pressures
makes all values positive so that they
may be accounted for in the summation
of pressure levels (Hastings and Popper,
2005). This measurement is often used
in the context of discussing behavioral
effects, in part because behavioral
effects, which often result from auditory
cues, may be better expressed through
averaged units than by peak pressures.
Sound exposure level (SEL;
represented as dB re 1 mPa2-s) represents
the total energy in a stated frequency
band over a stated time interval or event
and considers both intensity and
duration of exposure. The per-pulse SEL
is calculated over the time window
containing the entire pulse (i.e., 100
percent of the acoustic energy). SEL is
a cumulative metric; it can be
accumulated over a single pulse, or
calculated over periods containing
multiple pulses. Cumulative SEL
represents the total energy accumulated
by a receiver over a defined time
window or during an event. Peak sound
pressure (also referred to as zero-to-peak
sound pressure or 0–pk) is the
maximum instantaneous sound pressure
measurable in the water at a specified
distance from the source and is
represented in the same units as the rms
sound pressure.
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When underwater objects vibrate or
activity occurs, sound-pressure waves
are created. These waves alternately
compress and decompress the water as
the sound wave travels. Underwater
sound waves radiate in a manner similar
to ripples on the surface of a pond and
may be either directed in a beam or
beams or may radiate in all directions
(omnidirectional sources), as is the case
for sound produced by the pile driving
activity considered here. The
compressions and decompressions
associated with sound waves are
detected as changes in pressure by
aquatic life and man-made sound
receptors such as hydrophones.
Even in the absence of sound from the
specified activity, the underwater
environment is typically loud due to
ambient sound, which is defined as
environmental background sound levels
lacking a single source or point
(Richardson et al., 1995). The sound
level of a region is defined by the total
acoustical energy being generated by
known and unknown sources. These
sources may include physical (e.g.,
wind and waves, earthquakes, ice,
atmospheric sound), biological (e.g.,
sounds produced by marine mammals,
fish, and invertebrates), and
anthropogenic (e.g., vessels, dredging,
construction) sound. A number of
sources contribute to ambient sound,
including wind and waves, which are a
main source of naturally occurring
ambient sound for frequencies between
200 hertz (Hz) and 50 kilohertz (kHz)
(Mitson, 1995). In general, ambient
sound levels tend to increase with
increasing wind speed and wave height.
Precipitation can become an important
component of total sound at frequencies
above 500 Hz, and possibly down to 100
Hz during quiet times. Marine mammals
can contribute significantly to ambient
sound levels, as can some fish and
snapping shrimp. The frequency band
for biological contributions is from
approximately 12 Hz to over 100 kHz.
Sources of ambient sound related to
human activity include transportation
(surface vessels), dredging and
construction, oil and gas drilling and
production, geophysical surveys, sonar,
and explosions. Vessel noise typically
dominates the total ambient sound for
frequencies between 20 and 300 Hz. In
general, the frequencies of
anthropogenic sounds are below 1 kHz
and, if higher frequency sound levels
are created, they attenuate rapidly.
The sum of the various natural and
anthropogenic sound sources that
comprise ambient sound at any given
location and time depends not only on
the source levels (as determined by
current weather conditions and levels of
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biological and human activity) but also
on the ability of sound to propagate
through the environment. In turn, sound
propagation is dependent on the
spatially and temporally varying
properties of the water column and sea
floor, and is frequency-dependent. As a
result of the dependence on a large
number of varying factors, ambient
sound levels can be expected to vary
widely over both coarse and fine spatial
and temporal scales. Sound levels at a
given frequency and location can vary
by 10–20 dB from day to day
(Richardson et al., 1995). The result is
that, depending on the source type and
its intensity, sound from the specified
activity may be a negligible addition to
the local environment or could form a
distinctive signal that may affect marine
mammals. Details of source types are
described in the following text.
Sounds are often considered to fall
into one of two general types: Pulsed
and non-pulsed (defined in the
following). The distinction between
these two sound types is important
because they have differing potential to
cause physical effects, particularly with
regard to hearing (e.g., Ward, 1997 in
Southall et al., 2007). Please see
Southall et al. (2007) for an in-depth
discussion of these concepts. The
distinction between these two sound
types is not always obvious, as certain
signals share properties of both pulsed
and non-pulsed sounds. A signal near a
source could be categorized as a pulse,
but due to propagation effects as it
moves farther from the source, the
signal duration becomes longer (e.g.,
Greene and Richardson, 1988).
Pulsed sound sources (e.g., airguns,
explosions, gunshots, sonic booms,
impact pile driving) produce signals
that are brief (typically considered to be
less than one second), broadband, atonal
transients (ANSI, 1986, 2005; Harris,
1998; NIOSH, 1998; ISO, 2003) and
occur either as isolated events or
repeated in some succession. Pulsed
sounds are all characterized by a
relatively rapid rise from ambient
pressure to a maximal pressure value
followed by a rapid decay period that
may include a period of diminishing,
oscillating maximal and minimal
pressures, and generally have an
increased capacity to induce physical
injury as compared with sounds that
lack these features.
Non-pulsed sounds can be tonal,
narrowband, or broadband, brief or
prolonged, and may be either
continuous or intermittent (ANSI, 1995;
NIOSH, 1998). Some of these nonpulsed sounds can be transient signals
of short duration but without the
essential properties of pulses (e.g., rapid
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rise time). Examples of non-pulsed
sounds include those produced by
vessels, aircraft, machinery operations
such as drilling or dredging, vibratory
pile driving, and active sonar systems.
The duration of such sounds, as
received at a distance, can be greatly
extended in a highly reverberant
environment.
Airgun arrays produce pulsed signals
with energy in a frequency range from
about 10–2,000 Hz, with most energy
radiated at frequencies below 200 Hz.
The amplitude of the acoustic wave
emitted from the source is equal in all
directions (i.e., omnidirectional), but
airgun arrays do possess some
directionality due to different phase
delays between guns in different
directions. Airgun arrays are typically
tuned to maximize functionality for data
acquisition purposes, meaning that
sound transmitted in horizontal
directions and at higher frequencies is
minimized to the extent possible.
Summary on Specific Potential Effects
of Acoustic Sound Sources
Underwater sound from active
acoustic sources can include one or
more of the following: Temporary or
permanent hearing impairment, nonauditory physical or physiological
effects, behavioral disturbance, stress,
and masking. The degree of effect is
intrinsically related to the signal
characteristics, received level, distance
from the source, and duration of the
sound exposure. Marine mammals
exposed to high-intensity sound, or to
lower-intensity sound for prolonged
periods, can experience hearing
threshold shift (TS), which is the loss of
hearing sensitivity at certain frequency
ranges (Finneran, 2015). TS can be
permanent (PTS), in which case the loss
of hearing sensitivity is not fully
recoverable, or temporary (TTS), in
which case the animal’s hearing
threshold would recover over time
(Southall et al., 2007).
Animals in the vicinity of UAGI’s
proposed seismic survey activity are
unlikely to incur PTS due to the small
estimated auditory injury zones, in
conjunction with the anticipated
efficacy of the proposed mitigation
requirements. Please see Estimated Take
and Proposed Mitigation for further
discussion.
Behavioral disturbance may include a
variety of effects, including subtle
changes in behavior (e.g., minor or brief
avoidance of an area or changes in
vocalizations), more conspicuous
changes in similar behavioral activities,
and more sustained and/or potentially
severe reactions, such as displacement
from or abandonment of high-quality
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28795
habitat. Behavioral responses to sound
are highly variable and context-specific
and any reactions depend on numerous
intrinsic and extrinsic factors (e.g.,
species, state of maturity, experience,
current activity, reproductive state,
auditory sensitivity, time of day), as
well as the interplay between factors.
Available studies show wide variation
in response to underwater sound;
therefore, it is difficult to predict
specifically how any given sound in a
particular instance might affect marine
mammals perceiving the signal.
In addition, sound can disrupt
behavior through masking, or interfering
with, an animal’s ability to detect,
recognize, or discriminate between
acoustic signals of interest (e.g., those
used for intraspecific communication
and social interactions, prey detection,
predator avoidance, navigation).
Masking occurs when the receipt of a
sound is interfered with by another
coincident sound at similar frequencies
and at similar or higher intensity, and
may occur whether the sound is natural
(e.g., snapping shrimp, wind, waves,
precipitation) or anthropogenic (e.g.,
shipping, sonar, seismic exploration) in
origin.
Sound may affect marine mammals
through impacts on the abundance,
behavior, or distribution of prey species
(e.g., crustaceans, cephalopods, fish,
zooplankton) (i.e., effects to marine
mammal habitat). Prey species exposed
to sound might move away from the
sound source, experience TTS,
experience masking of biologically
relevant sounds, or show no obvious
direct effects. The most likely impacts
(if any) for most prey species in a given
area would be temporary avoidance of
the area. Surveys using active acoustic
sound sources move through an area
relatively quickly, limiting exposure to
multiple pulses. In all cases, sound
levels would return to ambient once a
survey ends and the noise source is shut
down and, when exposure to sound
ends, behavioral and/or physiological
responses are expected to end relatively
quickly. Finally, the survey equipment
will not have significant impacts to the
seafloor and does not represent a source
of pollution.
Vessel Strike
Vessel collisions with marine
mammals, or ship strikes, can result in
death or serious injury of the animal.
These interactions are typically
associated with large whales, which are
less maneuverable than are smaller
cetaceans or pinnipeds in relation to
large vessels. The severity of injuries
typically depends on the size and speed
of the vessel, with the probability of
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death or serious injury increasing as
vessel speed increases (Knowlton and
Kraus, 2001; Laist et al., 2001;
Vanderlaan and Taggart, 2007; Conn
and Silber, 2013). Impact forces increase
with speed, as does the probability of a
strike at a given distance (Silber et al.,
2010; Gende et al., 2011). The chances
of a lethal injury decline from
approximately 80 percent at 15 kn to
approximately 20 percent at 8.6 kn. At
speeds below 11.8 kn, the chances of
lethal injury drop below 50 percent
(Vanderlaan and Taggart, 2007).
Ship strikes generally involve
commercial shipping, which is much
more common in both space and time
than is geophysical survey activity and
which typically involves larger vessels
moving at faster speeds. Jensen and
Silber (2004) summarized ship strikes of
large whales worldwide from 1975–
2003 and found that most collisions
occurred in the open ocean and
involved large vessels (e.g., commercial
shipping). Commercial fishing vessels
were responsible for three percent of
recorded collisions, while no such
incidents were reported for geophysical
survey vessels during that time period.
For vessels used in geophysical
survey activities, vessel speed while
towing gear is typically only 4–5 knots.
At these speeds, both the possibility of
striking a marine mammal and the
possibility of a strike resulting in
serious injury or mortality are so low as
to be discountable. At average transit
speed for geophysical survey vessels
(approximately 10 kn), the probability of
serious injury or mortality resulting
from a strike (if it occurred) is less than
50 percent (Vanderlaan and Taggart,
2007; Conn and Silber, 2013). However,
the likelihood of a strike actually
happening is again low given the
smaller size of these vessels and
generally slower speeds. We anticipate
that vessel collisions involving seismic
data acquisition vessels towing gear,
while not impossible, represent
unlikely, unpredictable events for
which there are no preventive measures.
Given the required mitigation measures,
the relatively slow speeds of vessels
towing gear, the presence of bridge crew
watching for obstacles at all times
(including marine mammals), the
presence of marine mammal observers,
and the small number of seismic survey
cruises relative to commercial ship
traffic, we believe that the possibility of
ship strike is discountable and, further,
that were a strike of a large whale to
occur, it would be unlikely to result in
serious injury or mortality. No
incidental take resulting from ship
strike is anticipated or proposed for
authorization, and this potential effect
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of the specified activity will not be
discussed further in the following
analysis.
The potential effects of UAGI’s
specified survey activity are expected to
be limited to Level B behavioral
harassment. No permanent auditory
effects, or significant impacts to marine
mammal habitat, including prey, are
expected.
basic factors can contribute to a basic
calculation to provide an initial
prediction of takes, additional
information that can qualitatively
inform take estimates is also sometimes
available (e.g., previous monitoring
results or average group size). Below, we
describe the factors considered here in
more detail and present the proposed
take estimate.
Estimated Take
This section provides an estimate of
the number of incidental takes proposed
for authorization through this IHA,
which will inform both NMFS’
consideration of ‘‘small numbers’’ and
the negligible impact determination.
Harassment is the only type of take
expected to result from these activities.
Except with respect to certain activities
not pertinent here, section 3(18) of 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).
Authorized takes would be by Level B
harassment, as use of seismic airguns
may result, either directly or as a result
of TTS, in disruption of behavioral
patterns of marine mammals. The
proposed mitigation and monitoring
measures are expected to minimize the
severity of such taking to the extent
practicable. Moreover, based on the
nature of the activity and the
anticipated effectiveness of the
mitigation measures (i.e.,
implementation of extended shutdown
distances for certain species)—
discussed in detail below in the
Proposed Mitigation section—Level A
harassment is neither anticipated nor
proposed to be authorized.
As described previously, no mortality
is anticipated or proposed to be
authorized for this activity. Below we
describe how the take is estimated.
Generally speaking, we estimate take
by considering: (1) Acoustic thresholds
above which NMFS believes the best
available science indicates marine
mammals will be behaviorally harassed
or incur some degree of permanent
hearing impairment; (2) the area or
volume of water that will be ensonified
above these levels in a day; (3) the
density or occurrence of marine
mammals within these ensonified areas;
and, (4) and the number of days of
activities. We note that while these
Acoustic Thresholds
NMFS recommends the use of
acoustic thresholds that identify the
received level of underwater sound
above which exposed marine mammals
would be reasonably expected to be
behaviorally harassed (equated to Level
B harassment) or to incur PTS of some
degree (equated to Level A harassment).
Level B Harassment for non-explosive
sources—Though significantly driven by
received level, the onset of behavioral
disturbance from anthropogenic noise
exposure is also informed to varying
degrees by other factors related to the
source (e.g., frequency, predictability,
duty cycle), the environment (e.g.,
bathymetry), the receiving animals
(hearing, motivation, experience,
demography, behavioral context), and
the distance between the sound source
and the animal, and can be difficult to
predict (Southall et al., 2007, Ellison et
al., 2012). NMFS uses a generalized
acoustic threshold based on received
level to estimate the onset of behavioral
harassment. NMFS predicts that marine
mammals may be behaviorally harassed
(i.e., Level B harassment) when exposed
to underwater anthropogenic noise
above received levels 160 dB re 1 mPa
(rms) for the impulsive sources (i.e.,
seismic airguns) evaluated here.
Level A harassment for non-explosive
sources—NMFS’ Technical Guidance
for Assessing the Effects of
Anthropogenic Sound on Marine
Mammal Hearing (Version 2.0)
(Technical Guidance, 2018) identifies
dual criteria to assess auditory injury
(Level A harassment) to five different
marine mammal groups (based on
hearing sensitivity) as a result of
exposure to noise from two different
types of sources (impulsive or nonimpulsive). UAGI’s proposed seismic
survey includes the use of impulsive
sources (seismic airgun).
These thresholds are provided in
Table 3 below. The references, analysis,
and methodology used in the
development of the thresholds are
described in NMFS 2018 Technical
Guidance, which may be accessed at
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/
national/marine-mammal-protection/
marine-mammal-acoustic-technicalguidance.
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TABLE 3—THRESHOLDS IDENTIFYING THE ONSET OF PERMANENT THRESHOLD SHIFT
PTS onset acoustic thresholds *
(received level)
Hearing group
Impulsive
Low-Frequency (LF) Cetaceans ...................
Mid-Frequency (MF) Cetaceans ..................
High-Frequency (HF) Cetaceans .................
Phocid Pinnipeds (PW) (Underwater) ..........
Otariid Pinnipeds (OW) (Underwater) ..........
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
Non-impulsive
1: Lpk,flat: 219 dB; LE,LF,24h: 183 dB ........................................
3: Lpk,flat: 230 dB; LE,MF,24h: 185 dB .......................................
5: Lpk,flat: 202 dB; LE,HF,24h: 155 dB ........................................
7: Lpk,flat: 218 dB; LE,PW,24h: 185 dB .......................................
9:Lpk,flat: 232 dB; LE,OW,24h: 203 dB ........................................
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
2: LE,LF,24h: 199 dB.
4: LE,MF,24h: 198 dB.
6: LE,HF,24h: 173 dB.
8: LE,PW,24h: 201 dB.
10:LE,OW,24h: 219 dB.
* Dual metric acoustic thresholds for impulsive sounds: Use whichever results in the largest isopleth for calculating PTS onset. If a non-impulsive sound has the potential of exceeding the peak sound pressure level thresholds associated with impulsive sounds, these thresholds should
also be considered.
Note: Peak sound pressure (Lpk) has a reference value of 1 μPa, and cumulative sound exposure level (LE) has a reference value of 1μPa2s.
In this Table, thresholds are abbreviated to reflect American National Standards Institute standards (ANSI 2013). However, peak sound pressure
is defined by ANSI as incorporating frequency weighting, which is not the intent for this Technical Guidance. Hence, the subscript ‘‘flat’’ is being
included to indicate peak sound pressure should be flat weighted or unweighted within the generalized hearing range. The subscript associated
with cumulative sound exposure level thresholds indicates the designated marine mammal auditory weighting function (LF, MF, and HF
cetaceans, and PW and OW pinnipeds) and that the recommended accumulation period is 24 hours. The cumulative sound exposure level
thresholds could be exceeded in a multitude of ways (i.e., varying exposure levels and durations, duty cycle). When possible, it is valuable for
action proponents to indicate the conditions under which these acoustic thresholds will be exceeded.
Ensonified Area
Here, we describe operational and
environmental parameters of the activity
that will feed into identifying the area
ensonified above the acoustic
thresholds, which include source levels
and acoustic propagation modeling.
The acoustic propagation modeling
methodologies are described in greater
detail in Appendix A of UAGI’s IHA
application. The proposed survey would
primarily acquire data using the 2airgun array with a total discharge
volume of 1,040 in3 and an
approximately 15-second shot interval.
During approximately 12 percent of the
planned survey tracklines, the 6-airgun,
3,120 in3 array would be used with a 60second shot interval. All tracklines
would be surveyed with a maximum
tow depth of 9 m. The modeling
assumed an airgun firing pressure of
2,540 psi. Propagation modeling for
UAGI’s application follows the
approach used by the Lamont-Doherty
Earth Observatory (L–DEO) for other,
similar IHA applications. L–DEO uses
ray tracing for the direct wave traveling
from the array to the receiver and its
associated source ghost (reflection at the
air-water interface in the vicinity of the
array), in a constant-velocity half-space
(infinite homogeneous ocean layer,
unbounded by a seafloor). To validate
the model results, L–DEO measured
propagation of pulses from a 36-airgun
array at a tow depth of 6 m in the Gulf
of Mexico, for deep water (∼1,600 m),
intermediate water depth on the slope
(∼600–1,100 m), and shallow water (∼50
m) (Tolstoy et al., 2009; Diebold et al.,
2010).
L–DEO collected a MCS data set from
R/V Marcus G. Langseth (with the same
36-airgun array referenced above) on an
8 km streamer in 2012 on the shelf of
the Cascadia Margin off of Washington
in water up to 200 m deep that allowed
Crone et al. (2014) to analyze the
hydrophone streamer (>1,100 individual
shots). These empirical data were then
analyzed to determine in situ sound
levels for shallow and upper
intermediate water depths. These data
suggest that modeled radii were 2–3
times larger than the measured radii in
shallow water. Similarly, data collected
by Crone et al. (2017) during a survey
off New Jersey in 2014 and 2015
confirmed that in situ measurements
collected by R/V Langseth hydrophone
streamer were 2–3 times smaller than
the predicted radii.
L–DEO model results are used to
determine the assumed radial distance
to the 160–dB rms threshold for these
arrays in deep water (>1,000 m) (down
to a maximum water depth of 2,000 m)
(see Table 4). Water depths in the
project area may be up to 4,000 m, but
marine mammals in the region are
generally not anticipated to dive below
2,000 m (Costa and Williams, 1999). The
radii for intermediate water depths
(100–1000 m) are derived from the
deep-water ones by applying a
correction factor (multiplication) of 1.5.
No survey effort would occur in water
depths <100 m.
The area expected to be ensonified
was determined by entering the planned
survey lines into a GIS and then
‘‘buffering’’ the lines by the applicable
160–dB distance (see Appendix B in
IHA application). The resulting
ensonified areas were then increased by
25% to allow for any necessary
additional operations, such as resurveying segments where data quality
was insufficient. This approach assumes
that no marine mammals would move
away or toward the trackline in
response to increasing sound levels
before the levels reach the threshold as
R/V Sikuliaq approaches.
TABLE 4—PREDICTED RADIAL DISTANCES TO ISOPLETHS CORRESPONDING TO LEVEL B HARASSMENT THRESHOLD
Tow depth
(m)
Source and volume
Water depth
(m)
6 airgun array; 3,120 in3 ..............................................
9
2 airgun array; 1,040 in3 ..............................................
9
>1,000 ...........................................................................
100–1,000 .....................................................................
>1,000 ...........................................................................
100–1,000 .....................................................................
1 Distance
2 Based
based on L–DEO model results.
on L–DEO model results with 1.5x correction factor applied.
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Level B
harassment
zone
(m)
1 4,640
3 6,960
1 1,604
2 2,406
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Predicted distances to Level A
harassment isopleths, which vary based
on marine mammal hearing groups,
were calculated based on L–DEO
modeling performed using the
NUCLEUS source modeling software
program and the NMFS User
Spreadsheet, described below. The
acoustic thresholds for impulsive
sounds (e.g., airguns) contained in the
Technical Guidance were presented as
dual metric acoustic thresholds using
both SELcum and peak sound pressure
metrics (NMFS 2018). As dual metrics,
NMFS considers onset of PTS (Level A
harassment) to have occurred when
either one of the two metrics is
exceeded (i.e., metric resulting in the
largest isopleth). The SELcum metric
considers both level and duration of
exposure, as well as auditory weighting
functions by marine mammal hearing
group. In recognition of the fact that the
requirement to calculate Level A
harassment ensonified areas could be
more technically challenging to predict
due to the duration component and the
use of weighting functions in the new
SELcum thresholds, NMFS developed an
optional User Spreadsheet that includes
tools to help predict a simple isopleth
that can be used in conjunction with
marine mammal density or occurrence
to facilitate the estimation of take
numbers.
The values for SELcum and peak SPL
were derived from calculating the
modified far-field signature. The farfield
signature is often used as a theoretical
representation of the source level. To
compute the farfield signature, the
source level is estimated at a large
distance below the array (e.g., 9 km),
and this level is back projected
mathematically to a notional distance of
1 m from the array’s geometrical center.
However, when the source is an array of
multiple airguns separated in space, the
source level from the theoretical farfield
signature is not necessarily the best
measurement of the source level that is
physically achieved at the source
(Tolstoy et al., 2009). Near the source (at
short ranges, distances <1 km), the
pulses of sound pressure from each
individual airgun in the source array do
not stack constructively, as they do for
the theoretical farfield signature. The
pulses from the different airguns spread
out in time such that the source levels
observed or modeled are the result of
the summation of pulses from a few
airguns, not the full array (Tolstoy et al.,
2009). At larger distances, away from
the source array center, sound pressure
of all the airguns in the array stack
coherently, but not within one time
sample, resulting in smaller source
levels (a few dB) than the source level
derived from the farfield signature.
Because the farfield signature does not
take into account the large array effect
near the source and is calculated as a
point source, the modified farfield
signature is a more appropriate measure
of the sound source level for distributed
sound sources, such as airgun arrays.
The acoustic modeling methodology as
used for estimating Level B harassment
distances with a small grid step of 1 m
in both the inline and depth directions.
The propagation modeling takes into
account all airgun interactions at short
distances from the source, including
interactions between subarrays, which
are modeled using the NUCLEUS
software to estimate the notional
signature and MATLAB software to
calculate the pressure signal at each
mesh point of a grid.
In order to more realistically
incorporate the Technical Guidance’s
weighting functions over the seismic
array’s full acoustic band, unweighted
spectrum data (modeled in 1 Hz bands)
were used to make adjustments (dB) to
the unweighted spectrum levels, by
frequency, according to the weighting
functions for each relevant marine
mammal hearing group. These adjusted/
weighted spectrum levels were then
converted to pressures (mPa) in order to
integrate them over the entire
broadband spectrum, resulting in
broadband weighted source levels by
hearing group that could be directly
incorporated within the User
Spreadsheet (i.e., to override the
Spreadsheet’s more simple weighting
factor adjustment). Using the User
Spreadsheet’s ‘‘safe distance’’
methodology for mobile sources
(described by Sivle et al., 2014) with the
hearing group-specific weighted source
levels, and inputs assuming spherical
spreading propagation and source
velocities and shot intervals specific to
the planned survey, potential radial
distances to auditory injury zones were
then calculated for SELcum thresholds.
For full detail of the modeling
methodology used for estimating
distance to Level A harassment peak
pressure and cumulative SEL criteria,
please see Appendix A of UAGI’s
application.
Inputs to the User Spreadsheets in the
form of estimated source levels are
shown in Appendix A of UAGI’s
application. User Spreadsheets used by
UAGI to estimate distances to Level A
harassment isopleths for the airgun
arrays are also provided in Appendix A
of the application. Outputs from the
User Spreadsheets in the form of
estimated distances to Level A
harassment isopleths for the survey are
shown in Table 5. As described above,
NMFS considers onset of PTS (Level A
harassment) to have occurred when
either one of the dual metrics (SELcum
and Peak SPLflat) is exceeded (i.e.,
metric resulting in the largest isopleth).
TABLE 5—MODELED RADIAL DISTANCES (m) TO ISOPLETHS CORRESPONDING TO LEVEL A HARASSMENT THRESHOLDS
Source
(volume)
Level A
harassment zone
(m)
Threshold
LF cetaceans
6-airgun array (3,120 in3) .................
2-airgun array (1,040 in3) .................
SELcum .............................................
Peak .................................................
SELcum .............................................
Peak .................................................
Note that because of some of the
assumptions included in the methods
used (e.g., stationary receiver with no
vertical or horizontal movement in
response to the acoustic source),
isopleths produced may be
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HF cetaceans
0
7
0
3
0
212
0
73
51
30
17
10
overestimates to some degree, which
will ultimately result in some degree of
overestimation of Level A harassment.
However, these tools offer the best way
to predict appropriate isopleths when
more sophisticated modeling methods
PO 00000
MF cetaceans
Phocids
are not available. NMFS continues to
develop ways to quantitatively refine
these tools and will qualitatively
address the output where appropriate.
For mobile sources, such as the
proposed seismic survey, the User
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2
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Spreadsheet predicts the closest
distance at which a stationary animal
would not incur PTS if the sound source
traveled by the animal in a straight line
at a constant speed.
Auditory injury is unlikely to occur
for mid-frequency and low-frequency
cetaceans given very small modeled
zones of injury for those species (all
estimated zones less than 10 m for midfrequency cetaceans, up to a maximum
of 51 m for low-frequency cetaceans and
34 m for phocid pinnipeds), in context
of distributed source dynamics.
Similarly, for high-frequency cetaceans,
the maximum modeled injury zone for
the low-energy array (88 percent of
survey effort) is 73 m and auditory
injury would be unlikely to occur
during use of that array. The source
level of the array is a theoretical
definition assuming a point source and
measurement in the far-field of the
source (MacGillivray, 2006). As
described by Caldwell and Dragoset
(2000), an array is not a point source,
but one that spans a small area. In the
far-field, individual elements in arrays
will effectively work as one source
because individual pressure peaks will
have coalesced into one relatively broad
pulse. The array can then be considered
a ‘‘point source.’’ For distances within
the near-field, i.e., approximately 2–3
times the array dimensions, pressure
peaks from individual elements do not
arrive simultaneously because the
observation point is not equidistant
from each element. The effect is
destructive interference of the outputs
of each element, so that peak pressures
in the near-field will be significantly
lower than the output of the largest
individual element. Here, the estimated
Level A harassment isopleth distances
would in all cases (other than for highfrequency cetaceans) be expected to be
within the near-field of the array where
the definition of source level breaks
down. Therefore, actual locations
within this distance of the array center
where the sound level exceeds relevant
harassment criteria would not
necessarily exist.
In consideration of the received sound
levels in the near-field as described
above, we expect the potential for Level
A harassment of low- and midfrequency cetaceans and phocid
pinnipeds to be de minimis, even before
the likely moderating effects of aversion
and/or other compensatory behaviors
(e.g., Nachtigall et al., 2018) are
considered. A similar conclusion may
be drawn for high-frequency cetaceans
relative to use of the low-energy airgun
array. We do not believe that Level A
harassment is a likely outcome for any
low- or mid-frequency cetacean or
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phocid pinniped and do not propose to
authorize any Level A harassment for
these species. For high-frequency
cetaceans, the larger estimated Level A
harassment zone associated with the
high-energy array would be present for
only 12 percent of total survey effort,
and given the expected rarity of
occurrence for harbor porpoise, no
incidents of Level A harassment are
expected.
Marine Mammal Occurrence
In this section we provide the
information about the presence, density,
or group dynamics of marine mammals
that will inform the take calculations.
Density values are shown in Table 6.
Cetacean densities in the U.S. Arctic
were published by Schick et al. (2017).
This study used line-transect aerial
survey data from ASAMM collected in
the U.S. Chukchi and Beaufort seas from
2000–2016 and associated habitat
covariates to estimate abundance
monthly within 10 km x 10 km grid
cells (equivalent to a density in units of
individuals/100km2). Estimates were
produced for bowhead, gray, and beluga
whales, as well as other baleen whales
such as fin, humpback, and minke
whales. The spatial extent of the model
predictions differed by species, but for
all species other than bowhead whale
and beluga whale was further south
than the planned location of the UAGI
survey. In general, marine mammals are
expected to be encountered more
frequently to the south of the proposed
survey location. Therefore, estimated
take numbers produced through use of
the density model products are expected
to be a very conservative estimate.
Previous monitoring reports from recent
Arctic surveys using the same research
vessel saw a total of three humpback
whales, 1 spotted seal, 4 unknown seals
(Please see the following link for more
detailed information on this monitoring
report: https://media.fisheries.noaa.gov/
dam-migration/onr_arcticresearch_
2018iha_monrep_opr1.pdf).
Furthermore, based on tagged surveys
from the summer and fall, bowhead
whales migrate across the continental
shelf of Alaska in the Beaufort Sea to the
central Chukchi Sea in September and
remain in this area for the fall
(Quakenbush, Small & Citta, 2013). Only
one whale was reported to travel north
towards the proposed survey area. With
this information in mind, NMFS
believes that the proposed take numbers
conservatively estimate the number of
bowhead whales that will be
encountered during the proposed
activity.
For all species, except for beluga
whales, UAGI extended the Schick et al.
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28799
(2017) density values to calculate
predictions for areas farther north. The
spatial coverage of density estimates for
bowhead whales extends northward to
∼74 °N, which overlaps with the
southern-most survey lines by ∼25 km.
However, the majority of the survey
lines do not overlap with spatial
coverage of the Schick et al. (2017)
density estimates, so the following
method was used to produce a
conservative estimate of average
bowhead density farther north. The two
northern-most rows of 10km x 10km
grid cells (ie., northern 20 km of
estimates) and the two additional cells
overlapped by the southern-most survey
lines were selected from the bowhead
whale GIS raster files for August and
September between 140°W and 165°W,
the approximate east-west extent of the
survey lines. Density estimates within
those cells were then evaluated and
cells east of ∼157°W were excluded as
they contained densities that were
effectively zero which would reduce the
calculated average. The mean of the
remaining cells (west of 157°W) was
then calculated.
The same process was used to
calculate densities for gray whales, fin
whales, humpback whales, and minke
whales. However the northern survey
coverage from Schick et al. (2017) for
these species extends only to ∼73°N.
This meant that there was no overlap
with any of the survey lines and no
additional cells beyond the two
northernmost rows (20km) were used in
the calculations. The resulting density
estimates were extremely small.
For beluga whales, the spatial
coverage of the Schick et al. (2017)
density estimates overlapped the full
extent of the survey lines and associated
ensonified areas. To calculate an
average beluga whale density in areas
that may be exposed above threshold
levels, UAGI selected all grid cells from
the August and September estimates
that overlapped (wholly or partially)
with estimated the 160 dB ensonified
area around the planned tracklines and
calculated the mean.
During ASAMM, sightings of
pinnipeds were recorded when possible
and the resulting data were used by
Schick et al. (2017) to produce habitatbased estimates in the same manner as
cetaceans. However, given ASAMM was
designed for large whales, including
typically being flown at altitudes above
304.8 feet (ft) ASL, and small pinniped
sightings may not have been recorded as
consistently, the Schick et al (2017)
pinniped densities were not used in this
analysis. Instead, bearded and ringed
seal densities from NMFS’s Biological
Opinion for the Navy’s Arctic Research
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Activities 2018–2021 were used (NMFS
2019b), which were based on habitatbased modeling by Kaschner et al.
(2006) and Kaschner (2004).
Spotted and ribbon seals were not
included in NMFS (2019b). Thus,
spotted seal densities were estimated by
multiplying the ringed seal density by
the ratio of the estimated Chukchi Sea
populations of the two species. The best
estimate of the Alaskan population of
spotted seals is 461,625 (Muto et al.,
2020), and ∼8% of the population
(∼37,000) is estimated to be present in
the Chukchi Sea during the summer and
fall (Rugh et al., 1997). As the best
estimate of the population of ringed
seals in the Alaskan Chukchi Sea is
∼208,000 animals (Bengtson et al.,
2005), this resulted in a ratio of 0.18.
Based on Hartin et al., (2013), four
ribbon seal sightings were reported
during vessel operations in the Chukchi
Sea from 2006 through 2010, resulting
in a density estimate of 0.0007/km2.
Highly variable oceanographic and
atmospheric conditions determine the
distribution of sea ice in the Arctic,
which heavily influences the species
and number of marine mammals
potentially present at these high
latitudes. Thus, there is considerable
year-to-year variation in the distribution
and abundance of the marine mammal
species in the survey area. For some
species, the densities derived from past
surveys may not be representative of the
densities that would be encountered
during the proposed seismic surveys.
However, the approach used here is
based on the best available data.
TABLE 6—DENSITY VALUES USED FOR determine the total ensonified area in
TAKE ANALYSIS, CALCULATED BY each depth category. Estimated
incidents of exposure above Level A and
UAGI
Density
(individuals/km2)
Species
Bowhead whale ............
Gray whale ...................
Fin whale ......................
Humpback whale ..........
Minke whale .................
Beluga whale ................
Killer whale ...................
Narwhal ........................
Harbor porpoise ...........
Bearded seal ................
Ribbon seal ..................
Ringed seal ..................
Spotted seal .................
0.0124.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.0255.
Unknown.
Unknown.
Unknown.
0.0332.
0.0677.
0.376.
0.0007.
Take Calculation and Estimation
Here we describe how the information
provided above is brought together to
produce a quantitative take estimate. In
order to estimate the number of marine
mammals predicted to be exposed to
sound levels that would result in Level
A or Level B harassment, radial
distances from the airgun array to
predicted isopleths corresponding to the
Level A harassment and Level B
harassment thresholds are calculated, as
described above. Those radial distances
are then used to calculate the area(s)
around the airgun array predicted to be
ensonified to sound levels that exceed
the Level A and Level B harassment
thresholds. The distance for the 160-dB
threshold (based on L–DEO model
results) was used to draw a buffer
around every transect line in GIS to
Level B harassment criteria are
presented in Table 7. As noted
previously, UAGI has added 25 percent
in the form of operational days, which
is equivalent to adding 25 percent to the
proposed line-kilometers to be
surveyed. This accounts for the
possibility that additional operational
days are required, and is included in the
estimates of actual exposures.
The number of individual marine
mammals potentially exposed to airgun
sounds with received levels ≥ 160 dB re
1 mParms (Level B) was estimated
following NSF’s take calculation
method by multiplying the estimated
densities by the total area expected to be
ensonified above the Level threshold.
The total ensonified area was multiplied
by 25 percent to account for any
necessary additional operations, such as
re-surveying segments where data
quality was insufficient. This approach
assumes that no marine mammals
would move away or toward the
trackline in response to increasing
sound levels before the levels reach the
threshold as R/V Sikuliaq approaches.
This value was then multiplied by the
estimated densities for each species to
produce estimated Level B takes. Given
the location of the survey being far
north in the Arctic, we expect that the
density values, and thus estimated take
numbers, are conservative estimates of
what is likely to be encountered during
the survey.
TABLE 7—ESTIMATED TAKING BY LEVEL A AND LEVEL B HARASSMENT, AND PERCENTAGE OF POPULATION
Species
Stock 1
Bowhead whale .....
Humpback whale 2
Fin whale 2 4 ..........
Gray whale 2 ..........
Minke whale 2 4 ......
Beluga whale ........
Western Arctic ......
WN Pacific ............
NE Pacific .............
EN Pacific .............
Alaska ...................
Beaufort Sea ........
Eastern Chukchi.
Alaska Resident ...
Unidentified ...........
Bering Sea ............
Beringia ................
Arctic .....................
Bering ...................
Unidentified ...........
Killer whale 2 .........
Narwhal 3 4 .............
Harbor porpoise 2 4
Bearded seal .........
Ringed seal ...........
Spotted seal ..........
Ribbon seal ...........
Estimated
Level B
harassment
Estimated
Level A
harassment
Proposed
Level B
harassment
Proposed
Level A
harassment
Total take
Percent of
stock 1
339
0
0
0
0
696
3
0
0
0
0
7
342
2
2
2
2
703
0
0
0
0
0
0
342
2
2
2
2
703
2.03
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
1.34
0
0
0
907
10,268
19
1849
0
0
0
9
105
0
19
6
2
2
916
10,373
19
1868
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
2
2
916
10,373
19
1868
0.00
n/a
0.00
0.73
6.05
0.00
1.01
1 In most cases, where multiple stocks are being affected, for the purposes of calculating the percentage of the stock impacted, the take is
being analyzed as if all proposed takes occurred within each stock. Where necessary, additional discussion is provided in the ‘‘Small Numbers
Analysis’’ section.
2 UAGI requests authorization of gray whale, humpback whale, fin whale, minke whale, killer whale, and harbor porpoise take equivalent to exposure of one group (Clarke et al., 2016; Clarke et al., 2017; Clarke et al., 2018; Clarke et al., 2019).
3 UAGI requests authorization of two takes of narwhals.
4 As noted in Table 1, there is no estimate of abundance available for these species. See ‘‘Small Numbers Analysis’’ section for further
discussion.
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Although, gray whales, fin whales,
humpback whales, minke whales,
narwhals and harbor porpoises are not
expected to occur this far north in the
Arctic, we agree with NSF that there is
possibility that the proposed activity
might encounter these species and thus
a conservative number of takes based on
average group size from yearly Aerial
Surveys of Arctic Marine Mammals
(ASAMM) (Clark et al., 2016, 2017,
2018, 2019) has been proposed.
Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an IHA under section
101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA, NMFS must
set forth the permissible methods of
taking pursuant to the activity, and
other means of effecting the least
practicable impact on the species or
stock and its habitat, paying particular
attention to rookeries, mating grounds,
and areas of similar significance, and on
the availability of the species or stock
for taking for certain subsistence uses.
NMFS regulations require applicants for
incidental take authorizations to include
information about the availability and
feasibility (economic and technological)
of equipment, methods, and manner of
conducting the activity or other means
of effecting the least practicable adverse
impact upon the affected species or
stocks and their habitat (50 CFR
216.104(a)(11)).
In evaluating how mitigation may or
may not be appropriate to ensure the
least practicable adverse impact on
species or stocks and their habitat, as
well as subsistence uses where
applicable, we carefully consider two
primary factors:
(1) The manner in which, and the
degree to which, the successful
implementation of the measure(s) is
expected to reduce impacts to marine
mammals, marine mammal species or
stocks, and their habitat, as well as
subsistence uses. This considers the
nature of the potential adverse impact
being mitigated (likelihood, scope,
range). It further considers the
likelihood that the measure will be
effective if implemented (probability of
accomplishing the mitigating result if
implemented as planned), the
likelihood of effective implementation
(probability implemented as planned),
and;
(2) The practicability of the measures
for applicant implementation, which
may consider such things as cost and
impact on operations.
In order to satisfy the MMPA’s least
practicable adverse impact standard,
NMFS has evaluated a suite of basic
mitigation protocols for seismic surveys
that are required regardless of the status
of a stock. Additional or enhanced
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protections may be required for species
whose stocks are in particularly poor
health and/or are subject to some
significant additional stressor that
lessens that stock’s ability to weather
the effects of the specified activities
without worsening its status. We
reviewed seismic mitigation protocols
required or recommended elsewhere
(e.g., HESS, 1999; DOC, 2013; IBAMA,
2018; Kyhn et al., 2011; JNCC, 2017;
DEWHA, 2008; BOEM, 2016; DFO,
2008; GHFS, 2015; MMOA, 2016;
Nowacek et al., 2013; Nowacek and
Southall, 2016), recommendations
received during public comment
periods for previous actions, and the
available scientific literature. We also
considered recommendations given in a
number of review articles (e.g., Weir and
Dolman, 2007; Compton et al., 2008;
Parsons et al., 2009; Wright and
Cosentino, 2015; Stone, 2015b). This
exhaustive review and consideration of
public comments regarding previous,
similar activities has led to development
of the protocols included here.
Due to the use of high- and lowenergy airgun arrays used within this
survey, two separate mitigation
protocols are proposed for use
throughout the activity depending on
which array is in use (Table 8).
Vessel-Based Visual Mitigation
Monitoring
Visual monitoring requires the use of
trained observers (herein referred to as
visual Protected Species Observers
(PSOs)) to scan the ocean surface for the
presence of marine mammals. The area
to be scanned visually includes
primarily the EZ, within which
observation of certain marine mammals
requires shutdown of the acoustic
source, but also a buffer zone. The
buffer zone means an area beyond the
EZ to be monitored for the presence of
marine mammals that may enter the EZ.
During pre-clearance monitoring (i.e.,
before ramp-up begins), the buffer zone
also acts as an extension of the EZ in
that observations of marine mammals
within the buffer zone would also
prevent airgun operations from
beginning (i.e., ramp-up). The standard
EZ is 500 m from the edges of the airgun
array for high energy surveys and 100 m
for low energy surveys. For high energy
surveys, the buffer zone encompasses
the area at and below the sea surface
from the edge of the 0–500 m EZ, out
to a radius of 1,000 m from the edges of
the airgun array (500–1,000 m). For low
energy surveys, the buffer zone
encompasses the area at and below the
sea surface from the edge of the 0–100
m EZ, out to a radius of 200 m from the
edges of the airgun array (100–200 m).
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28801
Visual monitoring of the EZ and
buffer zones is intended to establish
and, when visual conditions allow,
maintain zones around the sound source
that are clear of marine mammals,
thereby reducing or eliminating the
potential for injury and minimizing the
potential for more severe behavioral
reactions for animals occurring closer to
the vessel. Visual monitoring of the
buffer zone is intended to (1) provide
additional protection to naı¨ve marine
mammals that may be in the area during
pre-clearance, and (2) during airgun use,
aid in establishing and maintaining the
EZ by alerting the visual observer and
crew of marine mammals that are
outside of, but may approach and enter,
the EZ.
UAGI must use dedicated, trained,
NMFS-approved PSOs. The PSOs must
have no tasks other than to conduct
observational effort, record
observational data, and communicate
with and instruct relevant vessel crew
with regard to the presence of marine
mammals and mitigation requirements.
PSO resumes shall be provided to
NMFS for approval.
At least one of the visual PSOs aboard
the vessel must have a minimum of 90
days at-sea experience working in the
roles, with no more than 18 months
elapsed since the conclusion of the atsea experience. One visual PSO with
such experience shall be designated as
the lead for the entire protected species
observation team. The lead PSO shall
serve as primary point of contact for the
vessel operator and ensure all PSO
requirements per the IHA are met. To
the maximum extent practicable, the
experienced PSOs should be scheduled
to be on duty with those PSOs with
appropriate training but who have not
yet gained relevant experience.
During survey operations (e.g., any
day on which use of the acoustic source
is planned to occur, and whenever the
acoustic source is in the water, whether
activated or not), a minimum of two
visual PSOs must be on duty and
conducting visual observations at all
times during daylight hours (i.e., from
30 minutes prior to sunrise through 30
minutes following sunset). Visual
monitoring of the EZ and buffer zone
must begin no less than 30 minutes
prior to ramp-up and must continue
until one hour after use of the acoustic
source ceases or until 30 minutes past
sunset. Visual PSOs shall coordinate to
ensure 360° visual coverage around the
vessel from the most appropriate
observation posts, and shall conduct
visual observations using binoculars
and the naked eye while free from
distractions and in a consistent,
systematic, and diligent manner.
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PSOs shall establish and monitor the
EZ and buffer zone. These zones shall
be based upon the radial distance from
the edges of the acoustic source (rather
than being based on the center of the
array or around the vessel itself). During
use of the acoustic source (i.e., anytime
airguns are active, including ramp-up),
detections of marine mammals within
the buffer zone (but outside the EZ)
shall be communicated to the operator
to prepare for the potential shutdown of
the acoustic source.
During use of the airgun (i.e., anytime
the acoustic source is active, including
ramp-up), detections of marine
mammals within the buffer zone (but
outside the EZ) should be
communicated to the operator to
prepare for the potential shutdown of
the acoustic source. Visual PSOs will
immediately communicate all
observations to the on duty acoustic
PSO(s), including any determination by
the PSO regarding species
identification, distance, and bearing and
the degree of confidence in the
determination. Any observations of
marine mammals by crew members
shall be relayed to the PSO team. During
good conditions (e.g., daylight hours;
Beaufort sea state (BSS) 3 or less), visual
PSOs shall conduct observations when
the acoustic source is not operating for
comparison of sighting rates and
behavior with and without use of the
acoustic source and between acquisition
periods, to the maximum extent
practicable.
Visual PSOs may be on watch for a
maximum of four consecutive hours
followed by a break of at least one hour
between watches and may conduct a
maximum of 12 hours of observation per
24-hour period. Combined observational
duties (visual and acoustic but not at
same time) may not exceed 12 hours per
24-hour period for any individual PSO.
Establishment of Exclusion and Buffer
Zones
An EZ is a defined area within which
occurrence of a marine mammal triggers
mitigation action intended to reduce the
potential for certain outcomes, e.g.,
auditory injury, disruption of behavioral
patterns. The PSOs would establish a
minimum EZ with a 500- or 100-m
radius, during use of the high energy
and low energy arrays, respectively, for
all species except bowhead whales. The
EZ would be based on radial distance
from the edge of the airgun array (rather
than being based on the center of the
array or around the vessel itself).
The EZs are intended to be
precautionary in the sense that they
would be expected to contain sound
exceeding the injury criteria for all
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cetacean hearing groups, (based on the
dual criteria of SELcum and peak SPL),
while also providing a consistent,
reasonably observable zone within
which PSOs would typically be able to
conduct effective observational effort.
Additionally, the EZs are expected to
minimize the likelihood that marine
mammals will be exposed to levels
likely to result in more severe
behavioral responses. Although
significantly greater distances may be
observed from an elevated platform
under good conditions, we believe that
these distances are likely regularly
attainable for PSOs using the naked eye
during typical conditions.
An extended EZ of 1,500/500 m must
be implemented for all bowhead whales
during high energy and low energy
survey effort, respectively, because of
their importance to subsistence hunters
and protected status. No buffer of this
extended EZ is required.
Pre-Clearance and Ramp-Up
Ramp-up (sometimes referred to as
‘‘soft start’’) means the gradual and
systematic increase of emitted sound
levels from an airgun array. Ramp-up
begins by first activating a single airgun
of the smallest volume, followed by
doubling the number of active elements
in stages until the full complement of an
array’s airguns are active. Each stage
should be approximately the same
duration, and the total duration should
not be less than approximately 20
minutes for high energy airgun arrays.
Ramp-up for the low energy array,
which includes only two elements, may
be shorter. The intent of pre-clearance
observation (30 minutes) is to ensure no
protected species are observed within
the buffer zone prior to the beginning of
ramp-up. During pre-clearance is the
only time observations of protected
species in the buffer zone would
prevent operations (i.e., the beginning of
ramp-up). The intent of ramp-up is to
warn protected species of pending
seismic operations and to allow
sufficient time for those animals to leave
the immediate vicinity. A ramp-up
procedure, involving a step-wise
increase in the number of airguns firing
and total array volume until all
operational airguns are activated and
the full volume is achieved, is required
at all times as part of the activation of
the acoustic source. All operators must
adhere to the following pre-clearance
and ramp-up requirements:
• The operator must notify a
designated PSO of the planned start of
ramp-up as agreed upon with the lead
PSO; the notification time should not be
less than 60 minutes prior to the
planned ramp-up in order to allow the
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PSOs time to monitor the EZ and buffer
zone for 30 minutes prior to the
initiation of ramp-up (pre-clearance);
• Ramp-ups shall be scheduled so as
to minimize the time spent with the
source activated prior to reaching the
designated run-in;
• One of the PSOs conducting preclearance observations must be notified
again immediately prior to initiating
ramp-up procedures and the operator
must receive confirmation from the PSO
to proceed;
• Ramp-up may not be initiated if any
marine mammal is within the applicable
EZ or buffer zone. If a marine mammal
is observed within the applicable EZ or
the buffer zone during the 30 minute
pre-clearance period, ramp-up may not
begin until the animal(s) has been
observed exiting the zones or until an
additional time period has elapsed with
no further sightings (15 minutes for
small odontocetes and pinnipeds, and
30 minutes for all mysticetes and all
other odontocetes, including large
delphinids, such as beluga whales and
killer whales);
• Ramp-up shall begin by activating a
single airgun of the smallest volume in
the array and shall continue in stages by
doubling the number of active elements
at the commencement of each stage,
with each stage of approximately the
same duration. Duration shall not be
less than 20 minutes for high energy
arrays. The operator must provide
information to the PSO documenting
that appropriate procedures were
followed;
• PSOs must monitor the relevant EZ
and buffer zone during ramp-up, and
ramp-up must cease and the source
must be shut down upon detection of a
marine mammal within the applicable
EZ. Once ramp-up has begun, detections
of marine mammals within the buffer
zone do not require shutdown, but such
observation shall be communicated to
the operator to prepare for the potential
shutdown;
• Ramp-up may occur at times of
poor visibility, including nighttime, if
appropriate acoustic monitoring has
occurred with no detections in the 30
minutes prior to beginning ramp-up.
Acoustic source activation may only
occur at times of poor visibility where
operational planning cannot reasonably
avoid such circumstances;
• If the acoustic source is shut down
for brief periods (i.e., less than 30
minutes) for reasons other than that
described for shutdown (e.g.,
mechanical difficulty), it may be
activated again without ramp-up if PSOs
have maintained constant visual and/or
acoustic observation and no visual or
acoustic detections of marine mammals
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have occurred within the applicable EZ.
For any longer shutdown, pre-clearance
observation and ramp-up are required.
For any shutdown at night or in periods
of poor visibility (e.g., BSS 4 or greater),
ramp-up is required, but if the
shutdown period was brief and constant
observation was maintained, preclearance watch of 30 minutes is not
required; and
• Testing of the acoustic source
involving all elements requires rampup. Testing limited to individual source
elements or strings does not require
ramp-up but does require pre-clearance
of 30 min.
Shutdown
The shutdown of an airgun array
requires the immediate de-activation of
all individual airgun elements of the
array. Any PSO on duty will have the
authority to delay the start of survey
operations or to call for shutdown of the
acoustic source if a marine mammal is
detected within the applicable EZ. The
operator must also establish and
maintain clear lines of communication
directly between PSOs on duty and
crew controlling the acoustic source to
ensure that shutdown commands are
conveyed swiftly while allowing PSOs
to maintain watch. When the airgun
array is active (i.e., anytime one or more
airguns is active, including during
ramp-up) and a marine mammal appears
within or enters the applicable EZ, the
acoustic source will be shut down.
When shutdown is called for by a PSO,
the acoustic source will be immediately
deactivated and any dispute resolved
only following deactivation.
Following a shutdown, airgun activity
would not resume until the marine
mammal has cleared the EZ. The animal
would be considered to have cleared the
EZ if it is visually observed to have
departed the EZ, or it has not been seen
within the EZ for 15 min in the case of
small odontocetes and pinnipeds, or 30
min in the case of mysticetes and large
odontocetes, including beluga whales
and killer whales.
Upon implementation of shutdown,
the source may be reactivated after the
marine mammal(s) has been observed
exiting the applicable EZ (i.e., animal is
not required to fully exit the buffer zone
where applicable) or following 15
minutes for small odontocetes and
pinnipeds, and 30 minutes for
mysticetes and all other odontocetes,
including beluga whales and killer
whales, with no further observation of
the marine mammal(s).
UAGI must implement shutdown if a
marine mammal species for which take
was not authorized, or a species for
which authorization was granted but the
takes have been met, approaches the
Level A or Level B harassment zones. L–
DEO must also implement shutdown if
any of the following are observed at any
distance:
28803
• Any large whale (defined as any
mysticete species) with a calf (defined
as an animal less than two-thirds the
body size of an adult observed to be in
close association with an adult); and/or
• An aggregation of six or more large
whales.
Passive Acoustic Monitoring (PAM)
NMFS does not propose to require use
of PAM for this activity. NMFS typically
recommends use of PAM as part of
prescribed mitigation requirements for
high energy surveys, but not for low
energy surveys, which here comprise
approximately 88 percent of the
planned survey. Therefore, PAM would
only be applicable to the small portion
of the proposed survey (12 percent)
using the high-energy array. In addition,
use of towed PAM is not generally
expected to be effective in detecting
mysticetes, due to overlap in the
frequencies of mysticete vocalizations
with the noise from the airgun array as
well as from the vessel itself and flow
noise around the towed PAM receiver.
Species of greatest interest in
prescribing use of towed PAM (e.g.,
sperm whales, beaked whales) are not
present in the planned survey area.
Further, UAGI has indicated that it
would not be practicable to carry the
additional monitoring personnel
required for implementation of towed
PAM. The R/V Sikuliaq is a smaller
research vessel with limited space.
TABLE 8—PROPOSED MITIGATION PROTOCOLS FOR HIGH- AND LOW-ENERGY ARRAYS
Mitigation Protocols
Sources ................................
Visual PSOs .........................
Passive acoustic monitoring
Exclusion zones ...................
Pre-start clearance ...............
Ramp-up ..............................
Shutdown .............................
High Energy (6-airgun array with 3120 in3 total discharge volume).
Minimum of 2 NMFS-approved PSOs on duty during
daylight hours (30 minutes before sunrise through 30
minutes after sunset); Limit of 2 consecutive hours
on watch followed by a break of at least 1 hour; Maximum of 12 hours on watch per 24-hour period.
Not Required ...................................................................
• 500 m (all marine mammals) ......................................
• 1,500 m (Bowhead whales) .........................................
Required; 30-minute clearance period of the following
zones:
• 1,000 m (all marine mammals) ...................................
• 1,500 m (Bowhead whales) .........................................
Following detection within zone, animal must be observed exiting or additional period of 15 or 30 minutes.
Required; duration ≥20 minutes ......................................
Shutdown required for marine mammal detected within
defined EZs; Re-start allowed following clearance period of 15 or 30 minutes.
Vessel Strike Avoidance
1. Vessel operators and crews must
maintain a vigilant watch for all
protected species and slow down, stop
their vessel, or alter course, as
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Low Energy (2-airgun array with 1040 in3 total discharge volume).
Minimum of 2 NMFS-approved PSOs on duty during
daylight hours (30 minutes before sunrise through 30
minutes after sunset); Limit of 2 consecutive hours
on watch followed by a break of at least 1 hour; Maximum of 12 hours on watch per 24-hour period.
Not required.
• 100 m (all marine mammals).
• 500 m (Bowhead whales).
Required; 30-minute clearance period of the following
zones:
• 200 m (all marine mammals).
• 500 m (Bowhead whales).
Following detection within zone, animal must be observed exiting or additional period of 15 or 30 minutes.
Required; duration not more than 20 minutes.
Shutdown required for marine mammal detected within
defined EZs; Re-start allowed following clearance period of 15 or 30 minutes
appropriate and regardless of vessel
size, to avoid striking any protected
species. A visual observer aboard the
vessel must monitor a vessel strike
avoidance zone around the vessel
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(distances stated below). Visual
observers monitoring the vessel strike
avoidance zone may be third-party
observers (i.e., PSOs) or crew members,
but crew members responsible for these
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duties must be provided sufficient
training to 1) distinguish marine
mammals from other phenomena, and 2)
broadly identify a marine mammal as a
bowhead whale, other whale (defined in
this context as baleen whales other than
bowhead whales), or other marine
mammal.
2. Vessel speeds must also be reduced
to 10 knots or less when mother/calf
pairs, pods, or large assemblages of
cetaceans are observed near a vessel.
3. All vessels must maintain a
minimum separation distance of 500 m
from bowhead whales. If a whale is
observed but cannot be confirmed as a
species other than a bowhead whale, the
vessel operator must assume that it is a
bowhead whale and take appropriate
action.
4. All vessels must maintain a
minimum separation distance of 100 m
from all other baleen whales.
5. All vessels must, to the maximum
extent practicable, attempt to maintain a
minimum separation distance of 50 m
from all other marine mammals, with an
understanding that at times this may not
be possible (e.g., for animals that
approach the vessel).
6. When marine mammals are sighted
while a vessel is underway, the vessel
shall take action as necessary to avoid
violating the relevant separation
distance (e.g., attempt to remain parallel
to the animal’s course, avoid excessive
speed or abrupt changes in direction
until the animal has left the area). If
protected species are sighted within the
relevant separation distance, the vessel
must reduce speed and shift the engine
to neutral, not engaging the engines
until animals are clear of the area. This
does not apply to any vessel towing gear
or any vessel that is navigationally
constrained.
7. These requirements do not apply in
any case where compliance would
create an imminent and serious threat to
a person or vessel or to the extent that
a vessel is restricted in its ability to
maneuver and, because of the
restriction, cannot comply.
We did not identify any mitigation
specifically appropriate for habitat.
Marine mammal habitat may be
impacted by elevated sound levels, but
these impacts would be temporary. Prey
species are mobile and are broadly
distributed throughout the project area;
therefore, marine mammals that may be
temporarily displaced during survey
activities are expected to be able to
resume foraging once they have moved
away from areas with disturbing levels
of underwater noise. The specified
activity is if relatively short duration (30
days) and the disturbance will be
temporary in nature, similar habitat and
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resources are available in the
surrounding area, the impacts to marine
mammals and the food sources that they
utilize are not expected to cause
significant or long-term consequences
for individual marine mammals or their
populations. No BIAs, designated
critical habitat, or other habitat of
known significance would be impacted
by the planned activities.
We have carefully evaluated the suite
of mitigation measures described here
and considered a range of other
measures in the context of ensuring that
we prescribe the means of effecting the
least practicable adverse impact on the
affected marine mammal species and
stocks and their habitat. Based on our
evaluation of the proposed measures, as
well as other measures considered by
NMFS described above, NMFS has
preliminarily determined that the
mitigation measures provide the means
of effecting the least practicable impact
on the affected species or stocks and
their habitat, paying particular attention
to rookeries, mating grounds, and areas
of similar significance, and on the
availability of such species or stock for
subsistence uses (see Unmitigable
Adverse Impact Analysis and
Determination).
Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an IHA 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 authorizations 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.
Effective reporting is critical both to
compliance as well as ensuring that the
most value is obtained from the required
monitoring.
Monitoring and reporting
requirements prescribed by NMFS
should contribute to improved
understanding of one or more of the
following:
• Occurrence of marine mammal
species or stocks in the area in which
take is anticipated (e.g., presence,
abundance, distribution, density).
• Nature, scope, or context of likely
marine mammal exposure to potential
stressors/impacts (individual or
cumulative, acute or chronic), through
better understanding of: (1) Action or
environment (e.g., source
characterization, propagation, ambient
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noise); (2) affected species (e.g., life
history, dive patterns); (3) co-occurrence
of marine mammal species with the
action; or (4) biological or behavioral
context of exposure (e.g., age, calving or
feeding areas).
• Individual marine mammal
responses (behavioral or physiological)
to acoustic stressors (acute, chronic, or
cumulative), other stressors, or
cumulative impacts from multiple
stressors.
• How anticipated responses to
stressors impact either: (1) Long-term
fitness and survival of individual
marine mammals; or (2) populations,
species, or stocks.
• Effects on marine mammal habitat
(e.g., marine mammal prey species,
acoustic habitat, or other important
physical components of marine
mammal habitat).
• Mitigation and monitoring
effectiveness.
Vessel-Based Visual Monitoring
As described above, PSO observations
would take place during daytime airgun
operations. During seismic operations,
at least five visual PSOs would be based
aboard the R/V Sikuliaq. Two visual
PSOs would be on duty at all time
during daytime hours. Monitoring shall
be conducted in accordance with the
following requirements:
• The operator shall provide PSOs
with bigeye binoculars (e.g., 25 x 150;
2.7 view angle; individual ocular focus;
height control) of appropriate quality
(i.e., Fujinon or equivalent) solely for
PSO use. These shall be pedestalmounted on the deck at the most
appropriate vantage point that provides
for optimal sea surface observation, PSO
safety, and safe operation of the vessel;
and
• The operator will work with the
selected third-party observer provider to
ensure PSOs have all equipment
(including backup equipment) needed
to adequately perform necessary tasks,
including accurate determination of
distance and bearing to observed marine
mammals.
PSOs must have the following
requirements and qualifications:
• PSOs shall be independent,
dedicated, trained visual and acoustic
PSOs and must be employed by a thirdparty observer provider;
• PSOs shall have no tasks other than
to conduct observational effort, collect
data, and communicate with and
instruct relevant vessel crew with regard
to the presence of protected species and
mitigation requirements (including brief
alerts regarding maritime hazards);
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• PSOs shall have successfully
completed an approved PSO training
course;
• NMFS must review and approve
PSO resumes accompanied by a relevant
training course information packet that
includes the name and qualifications
(i.e., experience, training completed, or
educational background) of the
instructor(s), the course outline or
syllabus, and course reference material
as well as a document stating successful
completion of the course;
• NMFS shall have one week to
approve PSOs from the time that the
necessary information is submitted,
after which PSOs meeting the minimum
requirements shall automatically be
considered approved;
• PSOs must successfully complete
relevant training, including completion
of all required coursework and passing
(80 percent or greater) a written and/or
oral examination developed for the
training program;
• PSOs must have successfully
attained a bachelor’s degree from an
accredited college or university with a
major in one of the natural sciences, a
minimum of 30 semester hours or
equivalent in the biological sciences,
and at least one undergraduate course in
math or statistics; and
• The educational requirements may
be waived if the PSO has acquired the
relevant skills through alternate
experience. Requests for such a waiver
shall be submitted to NMFS and must
include written justification. Requests
shall be granted or denied (with
justification) by NMFS within one week
of receipt of submitted information.
Alternate experience that may be
considered includes, but is not limited
to (1) secondary education and/or
experience comparable to PSO duties;
(2) previous work experience
conducting academic, commercial, or
government-sponsored protected
species surveys; or (3) previous work
experience as a PSO; the PSO should
demonstrate good standing and
consistently good performance of PSO
duties. Traditional ecological
knowledge is also a relevant
consideration.
For data collection purposes, PSOs
shall use standardized data collection
forms, whether hard copy or electronic.
PSOs shall record detailed information
about any implementation of mitigation
requirements, including the distance of
animals to the acoustic source and
description of specific actions that
ensued, the behavior of the animal(s),
any observed changes in behavior before
and after implementation of mitigation,
and if shutdown was implemented, the
length of time before any subsequent
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ramp-up of the acoustic source. If
required mitigation was not
implemented, PSOs should record a
description of the circumstances. At a
minimum, the following information
must be recorded:
• Vessel names (source vessel and
other vessels associated with survey)
and call signs;
• PSO names and affiliations;
• Dates of departures and returns to
port with port name;
• Date and participants of PSO
briefings;
• Dates and times (Greenwich Mean
Time) of survey effort and times
corresponding with PSO effort;
• Vessel location (latitude/longitude)
when survey effort began and ended and
vessel location at beginning and end of
visual PSO duty shifts;
• Vessel heading and speed at
beginning and end of visual PSO duty
shifts and upon any line change;
• Environmental conditions while on
visual survey (at beginning and end of
PSO shift and whenever conditions
changed significantly), including BSS
and any other relevant weather
conditions including cloud cover, fog,
sun glare, and overall visibility to the
horizon;
• Factors that may have contributed
to impaired observations during each
PSO shift change or as needed as
environmental conditions changed (e.g.,
vessel traffic, equipment malfunctions);
and
• Survey activity information, such as
acoustic source power output while in
operation, number and volume of
airguns operating in the array, tow
depth of the array, and any other notes
of significance (i.e., pre-clearance, rampup, shutdown, testing, shooting, rampup completion, end of operations,
streamers, etc.).
The following information should be
recorded upon visual observation of any
protected species:
• Watch status (sighting made by PSO
on/off effort, opportunistic, crew,
alternate vessel/platform);
• PSO who sighted the animal;
• Time of sighting;
• Vessel location at time of sighting;
• Water depth;
• Direction of vessel’s travel (compass
direction);
• Direction of animal’s travel relative
to the vessel;
• Pace of the animal;
• Estimated distance to the animal
and its heading relative to vessel at
initial sighting;
• Identification of the animal (e.g.,
genus/species, lowest possible
taxonomic level, or unidentified) and
the composition of the group if there is
a mix of species;
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• Estimated number of animals (high/
low/best);
• Estimated number of animals by
cohort (adults, yearlings, juveniles,
calves, group composition, etc.);
• Description (as many distinguishing
features as possible of each individual
seen, including length, shape, color,
pattern, scars or markings, shape and
size of dorsal fin, shape of head, and
blow characteristics);
• Detailed behavior observations (e.g.,
number of blows/breaths, number of
surfaces, breaching, spyhopping, diving,
feeding, traveling; as explicit and
detailed as possible; note any observed
changes in behavior);
• Animal’s closest point of approach
(CPA) and/or closest distance from any
element of the acoustic source;
• Platform activity at time of sighting
(e.g., deploying, recovering, testing,
shooting, data acquisition, other); and
• Description of any actions
implemented in response to the sighting
(e.g., delays, shutdown, ramp-up) and
time and location of the action.
Reporting
A report would be submitted to NMFS
within 90 days after the end of the
cruise. The report would describe the
operations that were conducted and
sightings of marine mammals near the
operations. The report would provide
full documentation of methods, results,
and interpretation pertaining to all
monitoring. The 90-day report would
summarize the dates and locations of
seismic operations, and all marine
mammal sightings (dates, times,
locations, activities, associated seismic
survey activities).
The draft report shall also include
geo-referenced time-stamped vessel
tracklines for all time periods during
which airguns were operating.
Tracklines should include points
recording any change in airgun status
(e.g., when the airguns began operating,
when they were turned off, or when
they changed from full array to single
gun or vice versa). GIS files shall be
provided in ESRI shapefile format and
include the UTC date and time, latitude
in decimal degrees, and longitude in
decimal degrees. All coordinates shall
be referenced to the WGS84 geographic
coordinate system. In addition to the
report, all raw observational data shall
be made available to NMFS. The report
must summarize the data collected as
described above and in the IHA. A final
report must be submitted within 30 days
following resolution of any comments
on the draft report.
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Reporting Injured or Dead Marine
Mammals
Discovery of injured or dead marine
mammals—In the event that personnel
involved in survey activities covered by
the authorization discover an injured or
dead marine mammal, the UAGI shall
report the incident to the Office of
Protected Resources (OPR), NMFS and
to the NMFS Alaska Regional Stranding
Coordinator as soon as feasible. The
report must include the following
information:
• Time, date, and location (latitude/
longitude) of the first discovery (and
updated location information if known
and applicable);
• Species identification (if known) or
description of the animal(s) involved;
• Condition of the animal(s)
(including carcass condition if the
animal is dead);
• Observed behaviors of the
animal(s), if alive;
• If available, photographs or video
footage of the animal(s); and
• General circumstances under which
the animal was discovered.
Vessel strike—In the event of a ship
strike of a marine mammal by any vessel
involved in the activities covered by the
authorization, UAGI shall report the
incident to OPR, NMFS and to the
NMFS Alaska Regional Stranding
Coordinator as soon as feasible. The
report must include the following
information:
• Time, date, and location (latitude/
longitude) of the incident;
• Vessel’s speed during and leading
up to the incident;
• Vessel’s course/heading and what
operations were being conducted (if
applicable);
• Status of all sound sources in use;
• Description of avoidance measures/
requirements that were in place at the
time of the strike and what additional
measure were taken, if any, to avoid
strike;
• Environmental conditions (e.g.,
wind speed and direction, Beaufort sea
state, cloud cover, visibility)
immediately preceding the strike;
• Species identification (if known) or
description of the animal(s) involved;
• Estimated size and length of the
animal that was struck;
• Description of the behavior of the
animal immediately preceding and
following the strike;
• If available, description of the
presence and behavior of any other
marine mammals present immediately
preceding the strike;
• Estimated fate of the animal (e.g.,
dead, injured but alive, injured and
moving, blood or tissue observed in the
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water, status unknown, disappeared);
and
• To the extent practicable,
photographs or video footage of the
animal(s).
Negligible Impact Analysis and
Determination
NMFS has defined negligible impact
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
(50 CFR 216.103). A negligible impact
finding is based on the lack of likely
adverse effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival (i.e., populationlevel effects). An estimate of the number
of takes alone is not enough information
on which to base an impact
determination. In addition to
considering estimates of the number of
marine mammals that might be ‘‘taken’’
through harassment, NMFS considers
other factors, such as the likely nature
of any responses (e.g., intensity,
duration), the context of any responses
(e.g., critical reproductive time or
location, migration), as well as effects
on habitat, and the likely effectiveness
of the mitigation. We also assess the
number, intensity, and context of
estimated takes by evaluating this
information relative to population
status. Consistent with the 1989
preamble for NMFS’s implementing
regulations (54 FR 40338; September 29,
1989), the impacts from other past and
ongoing anthropogenic activities are
incorporated into this analysis via their
impacts on the environmental baseline
(e.g., as reflected in the regulatory status
of the species, population size and
growth rate where known, ongoing
sources of human-caused mortality, or
ambient noise levels).
To avoid repetition, our analysis
applies to all species listed in Table 1,
given that NMFS expects the anticipated
effects of the planned geophysical
survey to be similar in nature. Where
there are meaningful differences
between species or stocks, or groups of
species, in anticipated individual
responses to activities, impact of
expected take on the population due to
differences in population status, or
impacts on habitat, NMFS has identified
species-specific factors to inform the
analysis.
NMFS does not anticipate that injury,
serious injury or mortality would occur
as a result of UAGI’s planned survey,
even in the absence of mitigation, and
none would be authorized. Similarly,
non-auditory physical effects, stranding,
and vessel strike are not expected to
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occur. Although a few incidents of Level
A harassment were predicted through
the quantitative exposure estimation
process (see Estimated Take), NMFS has
determined that this is not a realistic
result due to the small estimated Level
A harassment zones for the species (no
greater than approximately 50 m) and
the proposed mitigation requirements,
and no Level A harassment is proposed
for authorization. These estimated zones
are larger than what would realistically
occur, as discussed in the Estimated
Take section. Although no Level A
harassment would be expected to occur
even absent mitigation, the extended
distance exclusion zones proposed for
bowhead whales further strengthen this
conclusion.
We expect that takes would be in the
form of short-term Level B behavioral
harassment in the form of temporary
avoidance of the area or decreased
foraging (if such activity were
occurring), reactions that are considered
to be of low severity and with no lasting
biological consequences (e.g., Southall
et al., 2007, Ellison et al., 2012). The
proposed number of takes for bowhead
whales is 2 percent of the population.
We expect this number to be even
smaller as the likelihood of
encountering these animals in deep
waters in the Northern Arctic Ocean are
slim based on recent telemetry data
(Quakenbush, Small & Citta, 2013).
Marine mammal habitat may be
impacted by elevated sound levels, but
these impacts would be temporary. Prey
species are mobile and are broadly
distributed throughout the project area;
therefore, marine mammals that may be
temporarily displaced during survey
activities are expected to be able to
resume foraging once they have moved
away from areas with disturbing levels
of underwater noise. Because of the
relatively short duration (30 days) and
temporary nature of the disturbance, the
availability of similar habitat and
resources in the surrounding area, the
impacts to marine mammals and the
food sources that they utilize are not
expected to cause significant or longterm consequences for individual
marine mammals or their populations.
No BIAs, designated critical habitat, or
other habitat of known significance
would be impacted by the planned
activities.
Negligible Impact Conclusions
The proposed survey would be of
short duration (30 days of seismic
operations), and the acoustic ‘‘footprint’’
of the proposed survey would be small
relative to the ranges of the marine
mammals that would potentially be
affected. Sound levels would increase in
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the marine environment in a relatively
small area surrounding the vessel
compared to the range of the marine
mammals within the proposed survey
area. Short term exposures to survey
operations are expected to only
temporarily affect marine mammal
behavior in the form of avoidance, and
the potential for longer-term avoidance
of important areas is limited. Short term
exposures to survey operations are not
likely to impact marine mammal
behavior, and the potential for longerterm avoidance of important areas is
limited.
The proposed mitigation measures are
expected to reduce the number and/or
severity of takes by allowing for
detection of marine mammals in the
vicinity of the vessel by visual
observers, and by minimizing the
severity of any potential exposures via
shutdowns of the airgun array.
NMFS concludes that exposures to
marine mammal species and stocks due
to UAGI’s proposed survey would result
in only short-term (temporary and short
in duration) effects to individuals
exposed, over relatively small areas of
the affected animals’ ranges. Animals
may temporarily avoid the immediate
area, but are not expected to
permanently abandon the area. Major
shifts in habitat use, distribution, or
foraging success are not expected.
NMFS does not anticipate the proposed
take estimates to impact annual rates of
recruitment or survival.
In summary and as described above,
the following factors primarily support
our preliminary determination that the
impacts resulting from this activity are
not expected to adversely affect the
species or stock through effects on
annual rates of recruitment or survival:
• No Level A harassment, serious
injury or mortality is anticipated or
proposed to be authorized;
• The proposed activity is temporary
and of relatively short duration (30
days);
• The anticipated impacts of the
proposed activity on marine mammals
would primarily be temporary
behavioral changes in the form of
avoidance of the area around the survey
vessel;
• Location of the survey is further
north in the Arctic Ocean and away
from areas where most of the species
listed in Table 1 have been observed
and is north of summer feeding areas
and migratory routes.
• The availability of alternate areas of
similar habitat value for marine
mammals to temporarily vacate the
survey area during the proposed survey
to avoid exposure to sounds from the
activity;
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• The potential adverse effects on fish
or invertebrate species that serve as prey
species for marine mammals from the
proposed survey would be temporary
and spatially limited, and impacts to
marine mammal foraging would be
minimal; and
• The proposed mitigation measures,
including visual monitoring,
shutdowns, ramp-up, and prescribed
measures based on energy size are
expected to minimize potential impacts
to marine mammals (both amount and
severity).
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
proposed monitoring and mitigation
measures, NMFS preliminarily finds
that the total marine mammal take from
the proposed activity will have a
negligible impact on all affected marine
mammal species or stocks.
Small Numbers
As noted above, only small numbers
of incidental take may be authorized
under sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of
the MMPA for specified activities other
than military readiness activities. The
MMPA does not define small numbers
and so, in practice, where estimated
numbers are available, NMFS compares
the number of individuals taken to the
most appropriate estimation of
abundance of the relevant species or
stock in our determination of whether
the take is limited to small numbers of
marine mammals. When the predicted
number of individuals to be taken is
fewer than one third of the species or
stock abundance, the take is considered
to be of small numbers (see 86 Federal
Register 5322, 5439 (January 19, 2021).
Additionally, other qualitative factors
may be considered in the analysis, such
as the temporal or spatial scale of the
activities.
There are several stocks for which
there is no currently accepted stock
abundance estimate. These include the
fin whale, minke whale, narwhal,
bearded seal, and ringed seal. In those
cases, qualitative factors are used to
inform an assessment of whether the
likely number of individual marine
mammals taken is appropriately
considered small. We discuss these in
further detail below.
For all other stocks (aside from those
without accepted abundance estimates),
the proposed take is less than 7% of the
best available stock abundance, well
less than the one-third threshold for
exceeding small numbers (and some of
those takes may be repeats of the same
individual, thus rendering the actual
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28807
percentage even lower). We also
acknowledge that, given the location of
the planned survey activity high in the
Arctic Ocean, the stock ranges
referenced in the SARs do not always
fully overlap the area of the planned
survey activity. However, given the very
small percentage of the best available
stock abundance estimates for these
species and the likelihood that the
numbers of take proposed for
authorization would be very small
relative to any reasonable population
abundance estimate, we conclude these
numbers are small.
The stock abundance estimates for fin
whale, minke whale, narwhal, bearded
seal and ringed seal stocks that occur in
the surveys area are unknown,
according to the latest SARs. Therefore,
we reviewed other scientific
information in making our small
numbers determinations for these
animals. The abundance estimate of
20,000 minke whales was taken from
the Northwest Pacific and Okhotsk Sea
(IWC 2021). In addition, as noted
previously, partial abundance estimates
of 1,233 and 2,020 minke whales are
available for shelf and nearshore waters
between the Kenai Peninsula and
Amchitka Pass and for the eastern
Bering Sea shelf, respectively. For the
minke whale, these partial abundance
estimates alone are sufficient to
demonstrate that the proposed take
number of 2 is of small numbers. The
same surveys produced partial
abundance estimates of 1,652 and 1,061
fin whales, for the same areas,
respectively, which are similarly
sufficient to demonstrate that the
proposed take number of 2 is small
numbers. The bearded seal estimate of
125,000 was estimated for the U.S.
portion of the Bering Sea (Boveng et al.,
2017) and 155,000 bearded seals for the
entire Alaska stock (Cameron et al.,
2010). These partial abundance
estimates near the proposed survey are
sufficient to demonstrate that the
proposed take number of 916 seals is
small numbers. Similarly, the ringed
seal abundance estimate of 171,418
ringed seals was based on a limited subsample from the Bering Sea (Conn et al.,
2014 in Muto et al., 2020). This minimal
abundance estimate for the Alaska
region is enough to demonstrate that a
take of 10,373 will be small numbers at
6.05% of the Bering Sea population.
There is no abundance information
available for narwhals. However, the
take number is sufficiently small (2) that
we assume that it is small relative to any
reasonable assumption of likely
population abundance for the narwhal.
Additionally, the proposed survey area
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encompasses a very small portion of the
hypothesized range of the species.
Based on the analysis contained
herein of the proposed activity
(including the proposed mitigation and
monitoring measures) and the
anticipated take of marine mammals,
NMFS preliminarily finds that small
numbers of marine mammals will be
taken relative to the population size of
the affected species or stocks.
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis
and Determination
In order to issue an IHA, NMFS must
find that the specified activity will not
have an ‘‘unmitigable adverse impact’’
on the subsistence uses of the affected
marine mammal species or stocks by
Alaskan Natives. 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.
The coast and nearshore waters of
Alaska are of cultural importance to
indigenous peoples for fishing, hunting,
gathering, and ceremonial purposes.
Marine mammals are legally hunted in
Alaskan waters by coastal Alaska
Natives. There are seven communities
in the North Slope Borough region of
Alaska (northwestern and northern
Alaska) that harvest seals, including
from west to east Point Hope, Point Lay,
Wainwright, Utqiag˙vik, Atqusak,
Nuiqsut, and Kaktovik (Ice Seal
Committee 2019). Bearded seals are the
preferred species to harvest as food and
for skin boat coverings, but ringed seals
are also commonly taken for food and
their blubber (Ice Seal Committee 2019).
Ringed seals are typically harvested
during the summer and can extend up
to 64 km from shore (Stephen R. Braund
& Associates 2010). No ribbon seals
have been harvested in any of the North
Slope Borough communities since the
1960s (Ice Seal Committee 2019).
However, the number of seals harvested
each year varies considerably.
A subsistence harvest of bowheads
and belugas is also practiced by Alaskan
Natives, providing nutritional and
cultural needs. In 2019, 36 bowhead
whales were taken during the Alaskan
subsistence hunt (Suydam et al., 2020).
Whaling near Utqiag˙vik occurs during
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spring (April and May) and autumn, and
can continue into November, depending
on the quota and conditions.
Communities that harvested bowheads
during 2019 include Utqiag˙vik, Gamgell,
Kaktovik, Nuiqsut, Point Hope, Point
Lay, and Wainwright. Bowhead whales
and gray whales are also taken in the
aboriginal subsistence hunt in the
Russian Federation (Zharikov et al.,
2020). During 2019, 135 gray whales
and one bowhead whale were harvested
at Chukotka.
Beluga whales from the eastern
Chukchi Sea stock are an important
subsistence resource for residents of the
village of Point Lay, adjacent to
Kasegaluk Lagoon, and other villages in
northwest Alaska. Each year, hunters
from Point Lay drive belugas into the
lagoon to a traditional hunting location.
The belugas have been predictably
sighted near the lagoon from late June
through mid to late July (Suydam et al.,
2001). The mean annual number of
Beaufort Sea belugas landed by Alaska
Native subsistence hunters in 2011–
2015 was 47, and an average of 92 were
taken in Canadian waters; the mean
annual number of Eastern Chukchi Sea
belugas landed by Alaska Native
subsistence hunters in 2011–2015 was
67 (Muto et al., 2020).
The proposed survey by UAGI will
occur within ∼73.5–81.0 °N, ∼139.5–168
°W and over 300 km from the Alaska
coastline. Due to the location of the
survey being far north in the Arctic and
over 200 kilometers from any hunting
area or buffer (https://www.northslope.org/assets/images/uploads/
bowhead%20migration
%20map%2021mar03
%20distribution.pdf), no impacts on the
availability of marine mammals for
subsistence uses are expected to occur.
Specifically, based on the survey
methods and location proposed, there is
no reason to believe that there will be
any behavioral disturbance of bowhead
whales that would also impact their
behavior in a manner that would
interfere with subsistence use later.
Although fishing/hunting would not be
precluded in the survey area, a safe
distance would need to be kept from
R/V Sikuliaq and the towed seismic
equipment. The principal investigator
for the survey has presented the
proposed action to the Alaska Eskimo
Whaling Commission (AEWC) at the
July 2020, October 2020, and February
2021 Triannual Meetings. As
specifically noted, during the meetings,
daily email communications with
interested community members would
be made from the vessel.
Communication may include notice of
any unusual marine mammal
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
observations during the survey. Any
potential space use conflicts would be
further avoided through direct
communication with subsistence
fishers/hunters during the surveys.
Considering the limited time that the
planned seismic surveys would take
place and the far offshore location of the
surveys, no direct interaction with
subsistence fishers/hunters would be
anticipated. However, UAGI will still be
required to remain in constant
communication with subsistence
fishers/hunters during the surveys.
Based on the description of the
specified activity, the measures
described to minimize adverse effects
on the availability of marine mammals
for subsistence purposes, and the
proposed mitigation and monitoring
measures, NMFS has preliminarily
determined that there will not be an
unmitigable adverse impact on
subsistence uses from UAGI’s proposed
activities.
Endangered Species Act
Section 7(a)(2) of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973 (ESA: 16 U.S.C.
1531 et seq.) requires that each Federal
agency insure that any action it
authorizes, funds, or carries out is not
likely to jeopardize the continued
existence of any endangered or
threatened species or result in the
destruction or adverse modification of
designated critical habitat. To ensure
ESA compliance for the issuance of
IHAs, NMFS consults internally
whenever we propose to authorize take
for endangered or threatened species.
NMFS is proposing to authorize take
of bowhead whales, fin whales, bearded
seals and ringed seals, which are listed
under the ESA.
OPR Permits and Conservation
Division has requested initiation of
Section 7 consultation with the OPR
Endangered Species Act Interagency
Cooperation Division for the issuance of
this IHA. NMFS will conclude the ESA
consultation prior to reaching a
determination regarding the proposed
issuance of the authorization.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary
determinations, NMFS proposes to issue
an IHA to UAGI for conducting
geophysical surveys in the Arctic in
August and September, 2021, provided
the previously mentioned mitigation,
monitoring, and reporting requirements
are incorporated. A draft of the
proposed IHA can be found at https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/permit/
incidental-take-authorizations-undermarine-mammal-protection-act.
E:\FR\FM\28MYN1.SGM
28MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 102 / Friday, May 28, 2021 / Notices
Request for Public Comments
We request comment on our analyses,
the proposed authorization, and any
other aspect of this notice of proposed
IHA for the proposed geophysical
surveys. We also request at this time
comment on the potential Renewal of
this proposed IHA as described in the
paragraph below. Please include with
your comments any supporting data or
literature citations to help inform
decisions on the request for this IHA or
a subsequent renewal IHA.
On a case-by-case basis, NMFS may
issue a one-time, one-year renewal IHA
following notice to the public providing
an additional 15 days for public
comments when (1) up to another year
of identical or nearly identical, or nearly
identical, activities as described in the
Description of Proposed Activity section
of this notice is planned or (2) the
activities as described in the Description
of Proposed Activity section of this
notice would not be completed by the
time the IHA expires and a renewal
would allow for completion of the
activities beyond that described in the
Dates and Duration section of this
notice, provided all of the following
conditions are met:
• A request for renewal is received no
later than 60 days prior to the needed
renewal IHA effective date (recognizing
that the renewal IHA expiration date
cannot extend beyond one year from
expiration of the initial IHA).
• The request for renewal must
include the following:
(1) An explanation that the activities
to be conducted under the requested
renewal IHA are identical to the
activities analyzed under the initial
IHA, are a subset of the activities, or
include changes so minor (e.g.,
reduction in pile size) that the changes
do not affect the previous analyses,
mitigation and monitoring
requirements, or take estimates (with
the exception of reducing the type or
amount of take).
(2) A preliminary monitoring report
showing the results of the required
monitoring to date and an explanation
showing that the monitoring results do
not indicate impacts of a scale or nature
not previously analyzed or authorized.
Upon review of the request for
renewal, the status of the affected
species or stocks, and any other
pertinent information, NMFS
determines that there are no more than
minor changes in the activities, the
mitigation and monitoring measures
will remain the same and appropriate,
and the findings in the initial IHA
remain valid.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:28 May 27, 2021
Jkt 253001
Dated: May 25, 2021.
Catherine Marzin,
Acting Director, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2021–11339 Filed 5–27–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
COMMITTEE FOR PURCHASE FROM
PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND OR
SEVERELY DISABLED
Procurement List; Proposed Additions
and Deletions
Committee for Purchase From
People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled.
ACTION: Proposed additions to and
deletions from the Procurement List.
AGENCY:
The Committee is proposing
to add product(s) and service(s) to the
Procurement List that will be furnished
by nonprofit agencies employing
persons who are blind or have other
severe disabilities, and delete products
previously furnished by such agencies.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before: June 27, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Committee for Purchase
From People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled, 1401 S Clark Street, Suite 715,
Arlington, Virginia 22202–4149.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information or to submit
comments contact: Michael R.
Jurkowski, Telephone: (703) 785–6404,
or email CMTEFedReg@AbilityOne.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice is published pursuant to 41
U.S.C. 8503 (a)(2) and 41 CFR 51–2.3. Its
purpose is to provide interested persons
an opportunity to submit comments on
the proposed actions.
SUMMARY:
Additions
If the Committee approves the
proposed additions, the entities of the
Federal Government identified in this
notice will be required to procure the
product(s) and service(s) listed below
from nonprofit agencies employing
persons who are blind or have other
severe disabilities.
The following product(s) and
service(s) are proposed for addition to
the Procurement List for production by
the nonprofit agencies listed:
Product(s)
NSN(s)—Product Name(s):
6540–00–NIB–0079—Lens Cleaning
Station, Disposable, 16 Oz. Spray Bottle
Cleaner
6540–00–NIB–0080—Lens Cleaning
Station, Disposable, 8 Oz. Spray Bottle
Cleaner
Designated Source of Supply: Chicago
PO 00000
Frm 00063
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
28809
Lighthouse Industries, Chicago, IL
Mandatory For: Total Government
Requirement
Contracting Activity: DEFENSE LOGISTICS
AGENCY, DLA TROOP SUPPORT
Distribution: A-List
Service(s)
Service Type: Facility Management
Mandatory for: US Air Force, Airmen-InTraining Dormitories, Sheppard Air
Force Base, TX
Designated Source of Supply: Work Services
Corporation, Wichita Falls, TX
Contracting Activity: DEPT OF THE AIR
FORCE, FA3020 82 CONS LGC
Deletions
The following product(s) are proposed
for deletion from the Procurement List:
Product(s)
NSN(s)—Product Name(s): 8010–01–363–
3375—Enamel, Aerosol, Type I, Flat
Gray—36081, Pint, BX/12
Designated Source of Supply: The Lighthouse
for the Blind, St. Louis, MO
Contracting Activity: DLA TROOP SUPPORT,
PHILADELPHIA, PA
Michael R. Jurkowski,
Deputy Director, Business Operations.
[FR Doc. 2021–11309 Filed 5–27–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6353–01–P
COMMITTEE FOR PURCHASE FROM
PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND OR
SEVERELY DISABLED
Procurement List; Additions and
Deletions
Committee for Purchase From
People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled.
ACTION: Additions to and deletions from
the Procurement List.
AGENCY:
This action deletes products
from the Procurement List previously
furnished by nonprofit agencies
employing persons who are blind or
have other severe disabilities.
DATES: Date added to and deleted from
the Procurement List: June 27, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Committee for Purchase
From People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled, 1401 S Clark Street, Suite 715,
Arlington, Virginia, 22202–4149.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael R. Jurkowski, Telephone: (703)
785–6404, or email CMTEFedReg@
AbilityOne.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Deletions
On 4/23/2021, the Committee for
Purchase From People Who Are Blind
or Severely Disabled published notice of
proposed deletions from the
Procurement List. This notice is
E:\FR\FM\28MYN1.SGM
28MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 102 (Friday, May 28, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 28787-28809]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-11339]
[[Page 28787]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
[RTID 0648-XB015]
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities;
Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to a Geophysical Survey in the Arctic
Ocean
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental harassment authorization; request
for comments on proposed authorization and possible renewal.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS has received a request from the University of Alaska
Geophysics Institute (UAGI) for authorization to take marine mammals
incidental to a geophysical survey in the Arctic Ocean. The proposed
survey would be funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF).
Pursuant to the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS is requesting
comments on its proposal to issue an incidental harassment
authorization (IHA) to incidentally take marine mammals during the
specified activities. NMFS is also requesting comments on a possible
one-time, one-year renewal that could be issued under certain
circumstances and if all requirements are met, as described in Request
for Public Comments at the end of this notice. NMFS will consider
public comments prior to making any final decision on the issuance of
the requested MMPA authorizations and agency responses will be
summarized in the final notice of our decision.
DATES: Comments and information must be received no later than June 28,
2021.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be addressed to Jolie Harrison, Chief,
Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service and should be submitted via email to
[email protected].
Instructions: NMFS is not responsible for comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or individual, or received after the
end of the comment period. Comments, including all attachments, must
not exceed a 25-megabyte file size. All comments received are a part of
the public record and will generally be posted online at
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/permit/incidental-take-authorizations-under-marine-mammal-protection-act without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address) voluntarily submitted by the
commenter may be publicly accessible. Do not submit confidential
business information or otherwise sensitive or protected information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kim Corcoran, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427-8401. Electronic copies of the application
and supporting documents, as well as a list of the references cited in
this document, may be obtained online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/permit/incidental-take-authorizations-under-
marine-mammal-protection-act. In case of problems accessing these
documents, or for anyone who is unable to comment via electronic mail,
please call the contact listed above.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The MMPA prohibits the ``take'' of marine mammals, with certain
exceptions. Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361
et seq.) direct the Secretary of Commerce (as delegated to NMFS) 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 incidental take authorization may be 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) and will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for taking for subsistence uses
(where relevant). Further, NMFS must prescribe the permissible methods
of taking and other means of effecting the least practicable adverse
impact on the affected species or stocks and their habitat, paying
particular attention to rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar
significance, and on the availability of the species or stocks for
taking for certain subsistence uses (referred to in shorthand as
``mitigation''); and requirements pertaining to the monitoring and
reporting of the takings.
The definitions of all applicable MMPA statutory terms cited above
are included in the relevant sections below.
National Environmental Policy Act
To comply with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA;
42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and NOAA Administrative Order (NAO) 216-6A,
NMFS must review our proposed action (i.e., the issuance of an IHA)
with respect to potential impacts on the human environment.
NMFS plans to adopt the NSF's Environmental Assessment (EA), as we
have preliminarily determined that it includes adequate information
analyzing the effects on the human environment of issuing the IHA.
NSF's EA is available at www.nsf.gov/geo/oce/envcomp/.
We will review all comments submitted in response to this notice
prior to concluding our NEPA process or making a final decision on the
IHA request.
Summary of Request
On February 12, 2021, NMFS received a request from UAGI for an IHA
to take marine mammals incidental to a geophysical survey in the Arctic
Ocean. The application was deemed adequate and complete on April 6,
2021. UAGI's request is for take of 13 species of marine mammals, by
Level B harassment only. No Level A harassment is anticipated. Neither
UAGI nor NMFS expects serious injury or mortality to result from this
activity. Therefore, an IHA is appropriate.
Description of Proposed Activity
Overview
Researchers at UAGI, with funding from NSF, propose to conduct a
seismic survey from the Research Vessel (R/V) Sikuliaq in the Arctic
Ocean to document the structure and stratigraphy of the Chukchi
Borderland and adjacent Canada basin. The proposed activity is planned
to take place in late summer 2021 (August/September) with a total of 30
days of data acquisition. The survey would include both high energy and
low energy components. High-energy ocean bottom seismometer (OBS)
refraction surveys will use a 6-airgun, 3120 cubic inches (in\3\) array
and consist of ~12 percent of total survey effort (henceforth referred
to as high-energy survey). Low-energy multi-channel seismic (MCS)
reflection surveys will use a 2-airgun array with a total discharge
volume of 1040 in\3\ and consist of ~88 percent of total survey effort
(henceforth referred to as low-energy survey).
Dates and Duration
The proposed activity will occur between August and September,
2021. The activity is planned to occur for 45 days total, with ~30 days
dedicated to seismic data acquisition (with 24-hours
[[Page 28788]]
a day operations), ~8 days devoted to transit and 7 days used for
equipment deployment and recovery.
Specific Geographic Region
The proposed surveys would occur within ~73.5-81.0[deg]N, ~139.5-
168[deg]W (>=300 kilometer (km) north of Utqia[gdot]vik).
Representative survey track lines can be seen in Figure 1. Some
deviation in track lines, including the order of survey operations,
could be necessary for reasons such as science drivers, poor data
quality, inclement weather, or mechanical issues with the research
vessel and/or equipment. Thus, the track lines could occur anywhere
within the coordinates noted above and within the study area. Four
percent of the surveys will occur within the U.S. Exclusive Economic
Zone (EEZ) with the remaining part of the survey occurring beyond the
EEZ. The activity will take place in depths ranging from 200-4,000
meters (m). The R/V Sikuliaq would likely leave and return to Nome, AK.
The low-energy survey activity will begin ~300 km from the Alaskan
coastline (North of Utqiagvik) and extend ~800 km north from the
initial survey site (i.e., the survey would occur ~300-1,100 km from
the Alaska coastline). The high-energy survey activity will only occur
~530 km from the coastline and occur only in the northeastern part of
the survey area (See Figure 1). Eighty percent of the total survey will
occur in deep waters (>1,000m) with the remainder of the survey
occurring in intermediate depth waters (100-1,000 m); no surveying will
occur in waters <100 m deep. All high-energy surveys (680 km total)
will occur in deep waters, while 67 percent of low-energy surveys will
occur in deep waters (3,981 km) with the remainder occurring in
intermediate depth waters (1,189 km or 23 percent).
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P
[[Page 28789]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN28MY21.002
BILLING CODE 3510-22-C
Detailed Description of Specific Activity
The proposed study would use low-energy two-dimensional (2-D)
seismic surveying to document the history, structure, and stratigraphy
of the Chukchi Borderland and adjacent Canada Basin, and use high-
energy seismic refraction data in the Canada Basin to characterize the
deep crustal structure associated with an extinct mid-ocean ridge in
the central basin.
The procedures to be used for the proposed marine geophysical
survey would include conventional seismic methodology. The survey would
involve one source vessel, R/V Sikuliaq, which has a cruising speed of
10 knots (kt), and would tow an array of 6 airguns (520 in\3\ (8,521.27
cm\3\) each) and a total possible discharge volume of ~3,120 in\3\
during high-energy surveys. During low-energy reflection surveys, a 2-
airgun array (at 520 in\3\ each) would be used with a total discharge
volume of 1,040 in\3\. Both arrays will be towed at a depth of 9m.
During low-energy surveys (~88 percent of total line km), a 1-3 km long
hydrophone streamer (depending on ice conditions) would be employed as
the receiving system, and high-energy surveys (~12 percent of total
line km) would employ nine OBSs as the receiving system. As the airgun
arrays
[[Page 28790]]
are towed along the survey lines, the OBSs would receive and store the
returning acoustic signals internally for later analysis, and the
hydrophone streamer would transfer the data to the on-board processing
system. The airguns would fire at a shot interval of 35 m (~15 seconds
(s)) during the low-energy surveys and at a 139-m (~60 s) interval
during the high-energy refraction surveys. The airguns would operate at
a firing pressure of 2,540 pounds per square inch (psi).
In addition to the aforementioned planned survey lines, some lines,
as indicated in Figure 1, will be surveyed twice: Once for low-energy
reflection and again for high energy refraction. These surveys would
take place near the end of operations in the northeastern part of the
survey area (Fig. 1); however, the location of these surveys could
shift slightly to ensure one survey occurs over the extinct ridge axis
and the other on hyper-extended continental crust. A total of nine OBSs
would be deployed twice for a total of 18 deployment sites during high
energy survey effort. Nine OBSs would be deployed during low-energy
surveying, then high-energy refraction data would be acquired along
these same lines, followed by retrieval of the OBS equipment, before R/
V Sikuliaq would travel to the next site to deploy all nine OBSs again.
Approximately 5,850 total line km would be surveyed, including 5,170 km
of low-energy surveys, and 680 km of high-energy surveys. There could
be additional seismic operations associated with turns, airgun testing,
and repeat coverage of any areas where initial data quality is sub-
standard. As a result, a 25 percent buffer has been added in the form
of operational days, which is equivalent to adding 25 percent to the
proposed line km to be surveyed. Most of the survey (80 percent) would
occur in deep water (>1,000 m), and 20 percent would occur in
intermediate water (100-1,000 m deep); there would be no effort in
shallow water <100 m deep.
In addition to the operations of the airgun array, a multibeam
echosounder (MBES), a sub-bottom profiler (SBP), and an Acoustic
Doppler Current Profiler (ADCP) would be operated from R/V Sikuliaq
continuously during the seismic surveys, but not during transit to and
from the survey area. Take of marine mammals is not expected to occur
incidental to use of the MBES, SBP, or ADCP because they will be
operated only during seismic acquisition, and it is assumed that,
during simultaneous operations of the airgun array and the other
sources, any marine mammals close enough to be affected by the MBES,
SBP, and ADCP would already be affected by the airguns. However,
whether or not the airguns are operating simultaneously with the other
sources, given their characteristics (e.g., narrow downward-directed
beam), marine mammals would experience no more than one or two brief
ping exposures, if any exposure were to occur.
Proposed mitigation, monitoring, and reporting measures are
described in detail later in this document (please see Proposed
Mitigation and Proposed Monitoring and Reporting).
Description of Marine Mammals in the Area of Specified Activities
Sections 3 and 4 of the application summarize available information
regarding status and trends, distribution and habitat preferences, and
behavior and life history of the potentially affected species.
Additional information regarding population trends and threats may be
found in NMFS's Stock Assessment Reports (SARs; https://www.fisheries.noaa. gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-
mammal-stock-assessments) and more general information about these
species (e.g., physical and behavioral descriptions) may be found on
NMFS's website (https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/find-species).
Additional information may be found in the Aerial Survey of Arctic
Marine Mammals (ASAMM) reports, which are available online at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/alaska/marine-mammal-protection/aerial-surveys-
arctic-marine-mammals.
Table 1 lists all species or stocks for which take is expected and
proposed to be authorized for this action, and summarizes information
related to the population or stock, including regulatory status under
the MMPA and Endangered Species Act (ESA) and potential biological
removal (PBR), where known. For taxonomy, we follow Committee on
Taxonomy (2020). PBR is defined by the MMPA as the maximum number of
animals, not including natural mortalities, that may be removed from a
marine mammal stock while allowing that stock to reach or maintain its
optimum sustainable population (as described in NMFS's SARs). While no
mortality is anticipated or authorized here, PBR and annual serious
injury and mortality from anthropogenic sources are included here as
gross indicators of the status of the species and other threats.
Marine mammal abundance estimates presented in this document
represent the total number of individuals that make up a given stock or
the total number estimated within a particular study or survey area.
NMFS's stock abundance estimates for most species represent the total
estimate of individuals within the geographic area, if known, that
comprises that stock. For most species, stock abundance estimates are
based on sightings within the U.S. EEZ, however for some species, this
geographic area may extend beyond U.S. waters. Other species may use
survey abundance estimates. Survey abundance (as compared to stock or
species abundance) is the total number of individuals estimated within
the survey area, which may or may not align completely with a stock's
geographic range as defined in the SARs. These surveys may also extend
beyond U.S. waters. In this case, the proposed survey area outside of
the U.S. EEZ does not necessarily overlap with the ranges for stocks
managed by NMFS. However, we assume that individuals of these species
that may be encountered during the survey would be part of those
stocks. Additionally, six species listed in Table 1 indicate Unknown
abundance estimates. This may be due to outdated data and population
estimates or data is not representative of the entire stock.
All managed stocks in this region are assessed in NMFS's U.S.
Alaska and Pacific SARs (e.g., Muto et al., 2020, Carretta et al.,
2020). All values presented in Table 1 are the most recent available at
the time of publication and are available in the 2019 SARs (Muto et
al., 2020, Carretta et al., 2020) and draft 2020 SARs (available online
at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/
draft-marine-mammal-stock-assessment-reports).
In addition, the Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) and
the Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) may be found in the Arctic. However,
Pacific walruses and Polar bears are managed by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service and are not considered further in this document.
[[Page 28791]]
Table 1--Marine Mammals Expected To Occur in the Survey Area
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ESA/MMPA status; Stock abundance (CV,
Common name Scientific name Stock strategic (Y/N) Nmin, most recent PBR Annual M/SI
\1\ abundance survey) \2\ \3\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Order Cetartiodactyla--Cetacea--Superfamily Mysticeti (baleen whales)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Eschrichtiidae:
Gray whale..................... Eschrichtius robustus. Eastern N Pacific..... -, -, N 26,960 (0.05, 25,849, 801 131
2016).
Family Balaenidae:
Bowhead whale.................. Balaena mysticetus.... Western Arctic........ E, D, Y 16,820 161 56
(0.052,16,100,2011).
Family Balaenopteridae (rorquals):
Fin whale...................... Balaenoptera physalus. Northeast Pacific \4\ E, D, Y Unknown.............. UND 0.6
*.
Humpback whale................. Megaptera novaeangliae Western N Pacific *... E, D, Y 1,107 (0.3, 865, 3 2.8
2006).
Minke whale.................... Balaenoptera Alaska \4\ *.......... -, -, N Unknown.............. UND 0
acutorostrata.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Superfamily Odontoceti (toothed whales, dolphins, and porpoises)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Delphinidae:
Beluga whale................... Delphinapterus leucas. Beaufort Sea \4\...... -, -, N 39,258 (0.229, N/A. UND 102
1992).
Eastern Chukchi....... -, -, N 13,305 (0.51, 8,875, 178 55
2017).
Killer whale................... Orcinus orca.......... Alaska resident....... -, -, N 2,347 c (N/A, 2347, 24 1
2012).
Narwhal........................ Monodon Monoceros..... Unidentified \4\ *.... -, -, N Unknown.............. UND 0
Family Phocoenidae (porpoises):
Harbor Porpoise................ Phocoena phocoena..... Bering Sea \4\ *...... -, -, Y Unknown.............. UND 0.4
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Order Carnivora--Superfamily Pinnipedia
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Phocidae (earless seals):
Bearded Seal................... Erignathus barbatus... Beringia \4\ *........ T, D, Y Unknown.............. UND 6,709
Ribbon Seal.................... Histriophoca fasciata. Unidentified *........ -, -, N 184,687 (see SAR, 9,785 163
163,086, 2013).
Ringed Seal.................... Pusa hispida.......... Arctic................ T, D, Y Unknown.............. 5,100 6,459
Spotted Seal................... Phoca largha.......... Bering................ -, -, N 461,625 (see SAR, 25,394 5,254
423,237, 2013).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Stocks marked with an asterisk are addressed in further detail in the text below.
\1\ Endangered Species Act (ESA) status: Endangered (E), Threatened (T)/MMPA status: Depleted (D). A dash (-) indicates that the species is not listed
under the ESA or designated as depleted under the MMPA. Under the MMPA, a strategic stock is one for which the level of direct human-caused mortality
exceeds PBR or which is determined to be declining and likely to be listed under the ESA within the foreseeable future. Any species or stock listed
under the ESA is automatically designated under the MMPA as depleted and as a strategic stock.
\2\ NMFS marine mammal stock assessment reports online at: www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/. CV is coefficient of variation; Nmin is the minimum estimate of
stock abundance. In some cases, CV is not applicable. For most stocks of killer whales, the abundance values represent direct counts of individually
identifiable animals; therefore there is only a single abundance estimate with no associated CV. For certain stocks of pinnipeds, abundance estimates
are based upon observations of animals (often pups) ashore multiplied by some correction factor derived from knowledge of the species' (or similar
species') life history to arrive at a best abundance estimate; therefore, there is no associated CV. In these cases, the minimum abundance may
represent actual counts of all animals ashore.
\3\ These values, found in NMFS's SARs, represent annual levels of human-caused mortality plus serious injury from all sources combined (e.g.,
commercial fisheries, ship strike).
\4\ Abundance estimates for these stocks are not considered current. PBR is therefore considered undetermined for these stocks, as there is no current
minimum abundance estimate for use in calculation. We nevertheless present the most recent abundance estimates, as these present the best available
information for use in this document.
As indicated above, all 13 species (with 14 managed stocks) in
Table 1 could temporally and spatially co-occur with the activity to
the degree that take is reasonably likely to occur, and we have
proposed authorizing it. All species that could potentially occur in
the proposed survey areas are included in Table 4 of the IHA
application.
Beluga whales and ringed seals are the marine mammal species most
likely to be encountered during this survey, with bowhead whales and
bearded seals also having a higher likelihood of co-occuring in the
survey area over the other proposed species in Table 1. However, these
four species (beluga whales, ringed seals, bowhead whales and bearded
seals) are most common within 100 km of shore, whereas the proposed
survey would occur no closer than 300 km from shore, with most effort
further north. Thus, despite their prevalence in Arctic waters north of
Alaska, we expect there to be a low likelihood of encountering even
beluga whales, ringed seals, bowhead whales and bearded seals during
the proposed survey given the proposed activity's distance from shore.
Humpbacks, fin and minke whales have rarely been observed as far
north in the Arctic Ocean as the planned survey location but have been
spotted on rare occasions in areas coinciding with the lower latitudes
of the proposed survey area during previous aerial surveys. Similar
sightings during the proposed activity are expected to be limited
during the proposed survey as the majority of the proposed survey area
occurs in higher latitudes and outside typical migratory patterns for
these species (Brueggeman, 2009; Haley et al. 2010; Clarke et al.,
2011; Schuck et al., 2017). However, Brower et al. (2018) suggest that
sightings of these sub-Arctic species are increasing in the eastern
Chukchi Sea as of recent years due to climate change. Killer whales,
gray whales, humpback whales, fin whales, minke whales and harbor
porpoises are minimally sighted in the Chukchi Sea based on ASAMM data
and are primarily coastal species, however recent monitoring activities
in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas during industry seismic surveys also
suggests that some of these species may be increasing in numbers in the
Arctic but are still expected to be south of the proposed survey area
(Funk et al., 2010). Additionally, there are scattered records of
narwhal in Alaskan waters, where the species is considered to be
extralimital. However, we do not expect the species to be encountered
far north in the proposed survey area (Reeves et al., 2002). Although
we do not expect
[[Page 28792]]
the proposed survey area to coincide with expected ranges of the
species described in this paragraph, takes equivalent to the average
group size for the species are proposed for authorization at the
applicant's request as a precaution due to the potential that they
could be encountered.
Prior to 2016, humpback whales were listed under the ESA as an
endangered species worldwide. Following a 2015 global status review
(Bettridge et al., 2015), NMFS delineated 14 distinct population
segments (DPS) with different listing statuses (81 FR 62259; September
8, 2016) pursuant to the ESA. The DPSs that occur in U.S. waters do not
necessarily equate to the existing stocks designated under the MMPA.
Within Alaska waters, four humpback whale DPSs may occur: The
Western North Pacific (WNP) DPS (endangered), Hawaii DPS (not listed),
Mexico DPS (threatened), and Central America DPS (endangered).
According to Wade (2017), in the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas,
encountered whales are most likely to be from the Hawaii DPS (86.8
percent), but could be from the Mexico DPS (11.0 percent) or WNP DPS
(2.1 percent). Note that these probabilities reflect the upper limit of
the 95 percent confidence interval of the probability of occurrence;
therefore, numbers may not sum to 100 percent for a given area. Because
this project occurs north of the Chukchi and Beaufort Sea and in the
Arctic, we hypothesize that the Western North Pacific Stock of humpback
whales will overlap with the proposed survey area, and thus include
animals from the WNP DPS, Hawaii DPS and Mexico DPS as previously
mentioned.
At this time, there is no comprehensive abundance estimate
available in the SARs for the Alaska stock of minke whales. However,
the International Whaling Commission (IWC) reports an abundance
estimate of 20,000 minke whales in the North Pacific (North West
Pacific and Okhotsk Sea) (2003), which is the figure used for analysis.
This estimate encompasses the distribution of minke whales throughout
the North Pacfic extending to 80 degrees North. 20,000 is the most
recent abundance estimate available for minke whales in the North
Pacific provided by IWC. In 2017, the IWC Scientific Committee
established a new group to review all abundance estimates and ensure
quality and consistency across estimates used by IWC. According to the
IWC website and the criteria established by this group, the 20,000
whale estimate in the North Pacific from 2003 is considered to be the
`best' estimate at this time.
Similarly, although a comprehensive abundance estimate is not
available for the northeast Pacific stock of fin whales, provisional
estimates representing portions of the range are available. The same
2010 survey of the eastern Bering sea shelf provided an estimate of
1,061 (CV = 0.38) fin whales (Friday et al. 2013). The estimate is not
corrected for missed animals, but is expected to be robust as previous
studies have shown that only small correction factors are needed for
fin whales (Barlow, 1995). Zerbini et al. (2006) produced an estimate
of 1,652 (95 percent Confidence Interval (CI): 1,142-2,389) fin whales
for the area described above.
Narwhals are found year-round in the Arctic but rarely occur in the
western Arctic, in areas including the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort
Seas (COSEWIC, 2004). There are three populations of narwhals
recognized internationally based on geographic separation, which
include the Baffin Bay population, Hudson Bay population, and the East
Greenland population. Currently, very little is known about these
populations. The primary source for data and knowledge of narwhals in
Alaska waters is local observations and traditional ecological
knowledge dating back to the 1800s (Noogwook et al., 2007). Individual
sightings have occurred in Russian waters of the northern Chukchi Sea
(Yablokov and Bel'kovich, 1968; Reeves and Tracey, 1980). Additionally,
Alaska Native hunters recorded seven sightings of narwhals between 1989
and 2008, four of which consisted of mixed groups of narwhals and
belugas (George and Suydam, unpublished manuscript). Records of
narwhals in the Beaufort, Chukchi, and Bering Seas are hypothesized to
be whales from the Baffin Bay population, migrating into the Canadian
Arctic as ice conditions permit (COSEWIC, 2004). At this time, there
are no reliable estimates of abundance for narwhals in Alaskan waters.
Based on previous industry-sponsored monitoring in the Beaufort
Sea, harbor porpoises regularly occur in both the Chukchi and Beaufort
Seas (Funk et al., 2011). They have been sighted during several seismic
surveys, both nearshore and offshore, between July and November (Funk
et al., 2010, 2011; Reiser et al., 2011; Aerts et al., 2013). After
gray whales and bowhead whales, they are the most frequently sighted
cetacean in the Chukchi Sea (Funk et al., 2011; Reiser et al., 2011).
Shipboard visual line-transect surveys occurred biannually from 1999 to
2010, resulting in harbor porpoise abundance estimates for each survey.
These surveys demonstrate the distribution of harbor porpoises
throughout the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas but are not reliable for
estimating abundance estimates in this region.
Bearded seals are widely distributed throughout the summer and
fall, following ice coverage northward, while juvenile seals remain
near the coasts of the Bering and Chukchi Seas (Burns, 1967, 1981;
Heptner et al., 1976; Nelson, 1981; Cameron et al., 2018). At this
time, there is no reliable population estimate available for the entire
Alaska stock of bearded seals. Recent aerial abundance surveys (Conn et
al., 2014) used a sub-sample of data collected in the U.S. portion of
the Bering Sea to calculate a partial abundance estimate of 301,836
seals (95 percent CI: 238,195-371,147). Future studies plan to combine
spring survey results of the Chukchi Sea and Beaufort Sea.
Similarly, ringed seals also lack a reliable population estimate
for the entire stock. Conn et al. (2014) calculated an abundance
estimate of 171,418 ringed seals (95 percent CI: 141,588-201,090) using
a sub-sample of data collected from the U.S. portion of the Bering Sea
in 2012. Researchers plan to combine these results with those from
spring surveys of the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas once complete. During
the summer months, ringed seals forage along ice edges or in open water
areas of high productivity and have been observed in the northern
Beaufort Sea during summer months (Harwood and Stirling, 1992; Freitas
et al., 2008; Kelly et al., 2010b; Harwood et al., 2015). This open
water movement becomes limited with the onset of ice in the fall
forcing the seals to move west and south as ice packs advance,
dispersing the animals throughout the Chukchi and Bering Seas, with
only a portion remaining in the Beaufort Sea (Frost and Lowry, 1984;
Crawford et al., 2012; Harwood et al., 2012).
In addition to ringed and bearded seals, other pinniped species
that could be encountered during the proposed survey include the ribbon
seal and spotted seal. The ribbon seal is uncommon in the Chukchi Sea,
and there are few sightings in the Beaufort Sea. From late March to
early May, ribbon seals inhabit the Bering Sea ice front. They are most
abundant in the northern part of the ice front in the central and
western parts of the Bering Sea. As the ice recedes in May to mid-July,
the seals move farther north in the Bering Sea, where they haul out on
the receding ice edge and remnant ice. Spotted seals are more abundant
in the Chukchi Sea and occur in small numbers in the Beaufort Sea. As
the ice melts, seals become more concentrated,
[[Page 28793]]
with part of the Bering Sea population moving to the Bering Strait and
the southern part of the Chukchi Sea. The distribution of spotted seals
is seasonally related to specific life-history events that can be
broadly divided into two periods: Late-fall through spring, when
whelping, nursing, breeding, and molting occur in association with the
presence of sea ice on which the seals haul out, and summer through
fall when seasonal sea ice has melted and most spotted seals use land
for hauling out. Satellite-tagging studies showed that seals tagged in
the northeastern Chukchi Sea moved south in October and passed through
the Bering Strait in November. Seals overwintered in the Bering Sea
along the ice edge and made east-west movements along the edge. In
summer and fall, spotted seals use coastal haul-out sites regularly and
may be found as far north as 69-72[deg] N in the Chukchi and Beaufort
seas. Neither of these species would likely be encountered during the
proposed activity other than perhaps during transit periods to or from
the survey area. Although their encounters this far north in the Arctic
are rare, authorization of take has been proposed at the request of the
applicant. Clarke et al. (2015) described Biological Important Areas
(BIAs) for cetaceans in the Arctic. BIAs were delineated for two baleen
whale species, bowhead whales and gray whales, and one toothed whale,
the beluga whale. The proposed UAGI survey areas do not coincide with
any of the three Arctic BIAs.
Unusual Mortality Events (UME)
A UME is defined under the MMPA as ``a stranding that is
unexpected; involves a significant die-off of any marine mammal
population; and demands immediate response.'' For more information on
UMEs, please visit: www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-unusual-mortality-events. Currently recognized
UMEs in Alaska involving species under NMFS' jurisdiction include those
affecting ice seals in the Bering and Chukchi Seas and gray whales.
Since June 1, 2018, elevated strandings for bearded, ringed and spotted
seals have occurred in the Bering and Chukchi seas in Alaska, with
causes undetermined. Through 2020, there were 315 recorded seal
strandings. For more information, please visit: www.fisheries.noaa.gov/alaska/marine-life-distress/2018-2020-ice-seal-unusual-mortality-event-alaska.
Since January 1, 2019, elevated gray whale strandings have occurred
along the west coast of North America from Mexico through Alaska. As of
April 5, 2021, there have been a total of 430 whales reported in the
event, with approximately 205 dead whales in Mexico, 209 whales in the
United States (including 93 in Alaska), and 16 whales in British
Columbia, Canada. For the United States, the historical 18-year 5-month
average (Jan-May) is 14.8 whales for this same time-period. Several
dead whales have been emaciated with moderate to heavy whale lice
(cyamid) loads. Necropsies have been conducted on a subset of whales
with additional findings of vessel strike in three whales and
entanglement in one whale. In Mexico, 50-55 percent of the free-ranging
whales observed in the lagoons in winter have been reported as
``skinny'' compared to the annual average of 10-12 percent ``skinny''
whales normally seen. The cause of the UME is as yet undetermined. For
more information, please visit: www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-life-distress/2019-2020-gray-whale-unusual-mortality-event-along-west-coast-and.
Marine Mammal Hearing
Hearing is the most important sensory modality for marine mammals
underwater, and exposure to anthropogenic sound can have deleterious
effects. To appropriately assess the potential effects of exposure to
sound, it is necessary to understand the frequency ranges marine
mammals are able to hear. Current data indicate that not all marine
mammal species have equal hearing capabilities (e.g., Richardson et al.
1995; Wartzok and Ketten, 1999; Au and Hastings, 2008). To reflect
this, Southall et al. (2007) recommended that marine mammals be divided
into functional hearing groups based on directly measured or estimated
hearing ranges on the basis of available behavioral response data,
audiograms derived using auditory evoked potential techniques,
anatomical modeling, and other data. Note that no direct measurements
of hearing ability have been successfully completed for mysticetes
(i.e., low-frequency cetaceans). Subsequently, NMFS' 2018 Revision to
its Technical Guidance for Assessing the Effects of Anthropogenic Sound
on Marine Mammal Hearing (Technical Guidance) (NMFS, 2018) described
generalized hearing ranges for these marine mammal hearing groups.
Generalized hearing ranges were chosen based on the approximately 65
decibel (dB) threshold from the normalized composite audiograms, with
the exception for lower limits for low-frequency cetaceans where the
lower bound was deemed to be biologically implausible and the lower
bound from Southall et al. (2007) retained. Marine mammal hearing
groups and their associated hearing ranges are provided in Table 2.
Table 2--Marine Mammal Hearing Groups
[NMFS, 2018]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hearing group Generalized hearing range *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low-frequency (LF) cetaceans (baleen 7 Hz to 35 kHz.
whales).
Mid-frequency (MF) cetaceans 150 Hz to 160 kHz.
(dolphins, toothed whales, beaked
whales, bottlenose whales).
High-frequency (HF) cetaceans (true 275 Hz to 160 kHz.
porpoises, Kogia, river dolphins,
cephalorhynchid, Lagenorhynchus
cruciger & L. australis).
Phocid pinnipeds (PW) (underwater) 50 Hz to 86 kHz.
(true seals).
Otariid pinnipeds (OW) (underwater) 60 Hz to 39 kHz.
(sea lions and fur seals).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Represents the generalized hearing range for the entire group as a
composite (i.e., all species within the group), where individual
species' hearing ranges are typically not as broad. Generalized
hearing range chosen based on ~65 dB threshold from normalized
composite audiogram, with the exception for lower limits for LF
cetaceans (Southall et al., 2007) and PW pinniped (approximation).
The pinniped functional hearing group was modified from Southall et
al. (2007) on the basis of data indicating that phocid species have
consistently demonstrated an extended frequency range of hearing
compared to otariids, especially in the higher frequency range
(Hemil[auml] et al., 2006; Kastelein et al., 2009; Reichmuth and Holt,
2013).
For more detail concerning these groups and associated frequency
ranges,
[[Page 28794]]
please see NMFS (2018) for a review of available information. Thirteen
marine mammal species (9 cetacean and 4 pinniped (all phocid) species)
have the reasonable potential to co-occur with the proposed survey
activities. Please refer to Table 1. Of the cetacean species that may
be present, 5 are classified as low-frequency cetaceans (i.e., all
mysticete species), 3 are classified as mid-frequency cetaceans (i.e.,
all delphinid species), and 1 is classified as high-frequency cetacean
(i.e., harbor porpoise).
Potential Effects of Specified Activities on Marine Mammals and Their
Habitat
This section includes a summary of the ways that UAGI's specified
activity may impact marine mammals and their habitat. Detailed
descriptions of the potential effects of similar specified activities
have been provided in other recent Federal Register notices, including
for survey activities using the same methodology and over a similar
amount of time, and affecting similar species (e.g., 83 FR 29212, June
22, 2018; 84 FR 14200, April 9, 2019; 85 FR 19580, April 7, 2020). No
significant new information is available, and we refer the reader to
these documents for additional detail. The Estimated Take section
includes a quantitative analysis of the number of individuals that are
expected to be taken by UAGI's activity. The Negligible Impact Analysis
and Determination section considers the potential effects of the
specified activity, the Estimated Take section, and the Proposed
Mitigation section, to draw conclusions regarding the likely impacts of
these activities on the reproductive success or survivorship of
individuals and how those impacts on individuals are likely to impact
marine mammal species or stocks.
Background on Active Acoustic Sound Sources and Acoustic Terminology
This section contains a brief technical background on sound, on the
characteristics of certain sound types, and on metrics used in this
proposal inasmuch as the information is relevant to the specified
activity and to the discussion of the effects of the specified activity
on marine mammals in this document. For general information on sound
and its interaction with the marine environment, please see, e.g., Au
and Hastings (2008); Richardson et al. (1995); Urick (1983).
Sound travels in waves, the basic components of which are
frequency, wavelength, velocity, and amplitude. Frequency is the number
of pressure waves that pass by a reference point per unit of time and
is measured in hertz or cycles per second. Wavelength is the distance
between two peaks or corresponding points of a sound wave (length of
one cycle). Higher frequency sounds have shorter wavelengths than lower
frequency sounds, and typically attenuate (decrease) more rapidly,
except in certain cases in shallower water. Amplitude is the height of
the sound pressure wave or the ``loudness'' of a sound and is typically
described using the relative unit of the decibel. A sound pressure
level (SPL) in dB is described as the ratio between a measured pressure
and a reference pressure (for underwater sound, this is 1 microPascal
([mu]Pa)), and is a logarithmic unit that accounts for large variations
in amplitude. Therefore, a relatively small change in dB corresponds to
large changes in sound pressure. The source level (SL) represents the
SPL referenced at a distance of 1 m from the source (referenced to 1
[mu]Pa), while the received level is the SPL at the listener's position
(referenced to 1 [mu]Pa).
Root mean square (rms) is the quadratic mean sound pressure over
the duration of an impulse. Root mean square is calculated by squaring
all of the sound amplitudes, averaging the squares, and then taking the
square root of the average (Urick, 1983). Root mean square accounts for
both positive and negative values; squaring the pressures makes all
values positive so that they may be accounted for in the summation of
pressure levels (Hastings and Popper, 2005). This measurement is often
used in the context of discussing behavioral effects, in part because
behavioral effects, which often result from auditory cues, may be
better expressed through averaged units than by peak pressures.
Sound exposure level (SEL; represented as dB re 1 [mu]Pa\2\-s)
represents the total energy in a stated frequency band over a stated
time interval or event and considers both intensity and duration of
exposure. The per-pulse SEL is calculated over the time window
containing the entire pulse (i.e., 100 percent of the acoustic energy).
SEL is a cumulative metric; it can be accumulated over a single pulse,
or calculated over periods containing multiple pulses. Cumulative SEL
represents the total energy accumulated by a receiver over a defined
time window or during an event. Peak sound pressure (also referred to
as zero-to-peak sound pressure or 0-pk) is the maximum instantaneous
sound pressure measurable in the water at a specified distance from the
source and is represented in the same units as the rms sound pressure.
When underwater objects vibrate or activity occurs, sound-pressure
waves are created. These waves alternately compress and decompress the
water as the sound wave travels. Underwater sound waves radiate in a
manner similar to ripples on the surface of a pond and may be either
directed in a beam or beams or may radiate in all directions
(omnidirectional sources), as is the case for sound produced by the
pile driving activity considered here. The compressions and
decompressions associated with sound waves are detected as changes in
pressure by aquatic life and man-made sound receptors such as
hydrophones.
Even in the absence of sound from the specified activity, the
underwater environment is typically loud due to ambient sound, which is
defined as environmental background sound levels lacking a single
source or point (Richardson et al., 1995). The sound level of a region
is defined by the total acoustical energy being generated by known and
unknown sources. These sources may include physical (e.g., wind and
waves, earthquakes, ice, atmospheric sound), biological (e.g., sounds
produced by marine mammals, fish, and invertebrates), and anthropogenic
(e.g., vessels, dredging, construction) sound. A number of sources
contribute to ambient sound, including wind and waves, which are a main
source of naturally occurring ambient sound for frequencies between 200
hertz (Hz) and 50 kilohertz (kHz) (Mitson, 1995). In general, ambient
sound levels tend to increase with increasing wind speed and wave
height. Precipitation can become an important component of total sound
at frequencies above 500 Hz, and possibly down to 100 Hz during quiet
times. Marine mammals can contribute significantly to ambient sound
levels, as can some fish and snapping shrimp. The frequency band for
biological contributions is from approximately 12 Hz to over 100 kHz.
Sources of ambient sound related to human activity include
transportation (surface vessels), dredging and construction, oil and
gas drilling and production, geophysical surveys, sonar, and
explosions. Vessel noise typically dominates the total ambient sound
for frequencies between 20 and 300 Hz. In general, the frequencies of
anthropogenic sounds are below 1 kHz and, if higher frequency sound
levels are created, they attenuate rapidly.
The sum of the various natural and anthropogenic sound sources that
comprise ambient sound at any given location and time depends not only
on the source levels (as determined by current weather conditions and
levels of
[[Page 28795]]
biological and human activity) but also on the ability of sound to
propagate through the environment. In turn, sound propagation is
dependent on the spatially and temporally varying properties of the
water column and sea floor, and is frequency-dependent. As a result of
the dependence on a large number of varying factors, ambient sound
levels can be expected to vary widely over both coarse and fine spatial
and temporal scales. Sound levels at a given frequency and location can
vary by 10-20 dB from day to day (Richardson et al., 1995). The result
is that, depending on the source type and its intensity, sound from the
specified activity may be a negligible addition to the local
environment or could form a distinctive signal that may affect marine
mammals. Details of source types are described in the following text.
Sounds are often considered to fall into one of two general types:
Pulsed and non-pulsed (defined in the following). The distinction
between these two sound types is important because they have differing
potential to cause physical effects, particularly with regard to
hearing (e.g., Ward, 1997 in Southall et al., 2007). Please see
Southall et al. (2007) for an in-depth discussion of these concepts.
The distinction between these two sound types is not always obvious, as
certain signals share properties of both pulsed and non-pulsed sounds.
A signal near a source could be categorized as a pulse, but due to
propagation effects as it moves farther from the source, the signal
duration becomes longer (e.g., Greene and Richardson, 1988).
Pulsed sound sources (e.g., airguns, explosions, gunshots, sonic
booms, impact pile driving) produce signals that are brief (typically
considered to be less than one second), broadband, atonal transients
(ANSI, 1986, 2005; Harris, 1998; NIOSH, 1998; ISO, 2003) and occur
either as isolated events or repeated in some succession. Pulsed sounds
are all characterized by a relatively rapid rise from ambient pressure
to a maximal pressure value followed by a rapid decay period that may
include a period of diminishing, oscillating maximal and minimal
pressures, and generally have an increased capacity to induce physical
injury as compared with sounds that lack these features.
Non-pulsed sounds can be tonal, narrowband, or broadband, brief or
prolonged, and may be either continuous or intermittent (ANSI, 1995;
NIOSH, 1998). Some of these non-pulsed sounds can be transient signals
of short duration but without the essential properties of pulses (e.g.,
rapid rise time). Examples of non-pulsed sounds include those produced
by vessels, aircraft, machinery operations such as drilling or
dredging, vibratory pile driving, and active sonar systems. The
duration of such sounds, as received at a distance, can be greatly
extended in a highly reverberant environment.
Airgun arrays produce pulsed signals with energy in a frequency
range from about 10-2,000 Hz, with most energy radiated at frequencies
below 200 Hz. The amplitude of the acoustic wave emitted from the
source is equal in all directions (i.e., omnidirectional), but airgun
arrays do possess some directionality due to different phase delays
between guns in different directions. Airgun arrays are typically tuned
to maximize functionality for data acquisition purposes, meaning that
sound transmitted in horizontal directions and at higher frequencies is
minimized to the extent possible.
Summary on Specific Potential Effects of Acoustic Sound Sources
Underwater sound from active acoustic sources can include one or
more of the following: Temporary or permanent hearing impairment, non-
auditory physical or physiological effects, behavioral disturbance,
stress, and masking. The degree of effect is intrinsically related to
the signal characteristics, received level, distance from the source,
and duration of the sound exposure. Marine mammals exposed to high-
intensity sound, or to lower-intensity sound for prolonged periods, can
experience hearing threshold shift (TS), which is the loss of hearing
sensitivity at certain frequency ranges (Finneran, 2015). TS can be
permanent (PTS), in which case the loss of hearing sensitivity is not
fully recoverable, or temporary (TTS), in which case the animal's
hearing threshold would recover over time (Southall et al., 2007).
Animals in the vicinity of UAGI's proposed seismic survey activity
are unlikely to incur PTS due to the small estimated auditory injury
zones, in conjunction with the anticipated efficacy of the proposed
mitigation requirements. Please see Estimated Take and Proposed
Mitigation for further discussion.
Behavioral disturbance may include a variety of effects, including
subtle changes in behavior (e.g., minor or brief avoidance of an area
or changes in vocalizations), more conspicuous changes in similar
behavioral activities, and more sustained and/or potentially severe
reactions, such as displacement from or abandonment of high-quality
habitat. Behavioral responses to sound are highly variable and context-
specific and any reactions depend on numerous intrinsic and extrinsic
factors (e.g., species, state of maturity, experience, current
activity, reproductive state, auditory sensitivity, time of day), as
well as the interplay between factors. Available studies show wide
variation in response to underwater sound; therefore, it is difficult
to predict specifically how any given sound in a particular instance
might affect marine mammals perceiving the signal.
In addition, sound can disrupt behavior through masking, or
interfering with, an animal's ability to detect, recognize, or
discriminate between acoustic signals of interest (e.g., those used for
intraspecific communication and social interactions, prey detection,
predator avoidance, navigation). Masking occurs when the receipt of a
sound is interfered with by another coincident sound at similar
frequencies and at similar or higher intensity, and may occur whether
the sound is natural (e.g., snapping shrimp, wind, waves,
precipitation) or anthropogenic (e.g., shipping, sonar, seismic
exploration) in origin.
Sound may affect marine mammals through impacts on the abundance,
behavior, or distribution of prey species (e.g., crustaceans,
cephalopods, fish, zooplankton) (i.e., effects to marine mammal
habitat). Prey species exposed to sound might move away from the sound
source, experience TTS, experience masking of biologically relevant
sounds, or show no obvious direct effects. The most likely impacts (if
any) for most prey species in a given area would be temporary avoidance
of the area. Surveys using active acoustic sound sources move through
an area relatively quickly, limiting exposure to multiple pulses. In
all cases, sound levels would return to ambient once a survey ends and
the noise source is shut down and, when exposure to sound ends,
behavioral and/or physiological responses are expected to end
relatively quickly. Finally, the survey equipment will not have
significant impacts to the seafloor and does not represent a source of
pollution.
Vessel Strike
Vessel collisions with marine mammals, or ship strikes, can result
in death or serious injury of the animal. These interactions are
typically associated with large whales, which are less maneuverable
than are smaller cetaceans or pinnipeds in relation to large vessels.
The severity of injuries typically depends on the size and speed of the
vessel, with the probability of
[[Page 28796]]
death or serious injury increasing as vessel speed increases (Knowlton
and Kraus, 2001; Laist et al., 2001; Vanderlaan and Taggart, 2007; Conn
and Silber, 2013). Impact forces increase with speed, as does the
probability of a strike at a given distance (Silber et al., 2010; Gende
et al., 2011). The chances of a lethal injury decline from
approximately 80 percent at 15 kn to approximately 20 percent at 8.6
kn. At speeds below 11.8 kn, the chances of lethal injury drop below 50
percent (Vanderlaan and Taggart, 2007).
Ship strikes generally involve commercial shipping, which is much
more common in both space and time than is geophysical survey activity
and which typically involves larger vessels moving at faster speeds.
Jensen and Silber (2004) summarized ship strikes of large whales
worldwide from 1975-2003 and found that most collisions occurred in the
open ocean and involved large vessels (e.g., commercial shipping).
Commercial fishing vessels were responsible for three percent of
recorded collisions, while no such incidents were reported for
geophysical survey vessels during that time period.
For vessels used in geophysical survey activities, vessel speed
while towing gear is typically only 4-5 knots. At these speeds, both
the possibility of striking a marine mammal and the possibility of a
strike resulting in serious injury or mortality are so low as to be
discountable. At average transit speed for geophysical survey vessels
(approximately 10 kn), the probability of serious injury or mortality
resulting from a strike (if it occurred) is less than 50 percent
(Vanderlaan and Taggart, 2007; Conn and Silber, 2013). However, the
likelihood of a strike actually happening is again low given the
smaller size of these vessels and generally slower speeds. We
anticipate that vessel collisions involving seismic data acquisition
vessels towing gear, while not impossible, represent unlikely,
unpredictable events for which there are no preventive measures. Given
the required mitigation measures, the relatively slow speeds of vessels
towing gear, the presence of bridge crew watching for obstacles at all
times (including marine mammals), the presence of marine mammal
observers, and the small number of seismic survey cruises relative to
commercial ship traffic, we believe that the possibility of ship strike
is discountable and, further, that were a strike of a large whale to
occur, it would be unlikely to result in serious injury or mortality.
No incidental take resulting from ship strike is anticipated or
proposed for authorization, and this potential effect of the specified
activity will not be discussed further in the following analysis.
The potential effects of UAGI's specified survey activity are
expected to be limited to Level B behavioral harassment. No permanent
auditory effects, or significant impacts to marine mammal habitat,
including prey, are expected.
Estimated Take
This section provides an estimate of the number of incidental takes
proposed for authorization through this IHA, which will inform both
NMFS' consideration of ``small numbers'' and the negligible impact
determination.
Harassment is the only type of take expected to result from these
activities. Except with respect to certain activities not pertinent
here, section 3(18) of 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).
Authorized takes would be by Level B harassment, as use of seismic
airguns may result, either directly or as a result of TTS, in
disruption of behavioral patterns of marine mammals. The proposed
mitigation and monitoring measures are expected to minimize the
severity of such taking to the extent practicable. Moreover, based on
the nature of the activity and the anticipated effectiveness of the
mitigation measures (i.e., implementation of extended shutdown
distances for certain species)--discussed in detail below in the
Proposed Mitigation section--Level A harassment is neither anticipated
nor proposed to be authorized.
As described previously, no mortality is anticipated or proposed to
be authorized for this activity. Below we describe how the take is
estimated.
Generally speaking, we estimate take by considering: (1) Acoustic
thresholds above which NMFS believes the best available science
indicates marine mammals will be behaviorally harassed or incur some
degree of permanent hearing impairment; (2) the area or volume of water
that will be ensonified above these levels in a day; (3) the density or
occurrence of marine mammals within these ensonified areas; and, (4)
and the number of days of activities. We note that while these basic
factors can contribute to a basic calculation to provide an initial
prediction of takes, additional information that can qualitatively
inform take estimates is also sometimes available (e.g., previous
monitoring results or average group size). Below, we describe the
factors considered here in more detail and present the proposed take
estimate.
Acoustic Thresholds
NMFS recommends the use of acoustic thresholds that identify the
received level of underwater sound above which exposed marine mammals
would be reasonably expected to be behaviorally harassed (equated to
Level B harassment) or to incur PTS of some degree (equated to Level A
harassment).
Level B Harassment for non-explosive sources--Though significantly
driven by received level, the onset of behavioral disturbance from
anthropogenic noise exposure is also informed to varying degrees by
other factors related to the source (e.g., frequency, predictability,
duty cycle), the environment (e.g., bathymetry), the receiving animals
(hearing, motivation, experience, demography, behavioral context), and
the distance between the sound source and the animal, and can be
difficult to predict (Southall et al., 2007, Ellison et al., 2012).
NMFS uses a generalized acoustic threshold based on received level to
estimate the onset of behavioral harassment. NMFS predicts that marine
mammals may be behaviorally harassed (i.e., Level B harassment) when
exposed to underwater anthropogenic noise above received levels 160 dB
re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) for the impulsive sources (i.e., seismic airguns)
evaluated here.
Level A harassment for non-explosive sources--NMFS' Technical
Guidance for Assessing the Effects of Anthropogenic Sound on Marine
Mammal Hearing (Version 2.0) (Technical Guidance, 2018) identifies dual
criteria to assess auditory injury (Level A harassment) to five
different marine mammal groups (based on hearing sensitivity) as a
result of exposure to noise from two different types of sources
(impulsive or non-impulsive). UAGI's proposed seismic survey includes
the use of impulsive sources (seismic airgun).
These thresholds are provided in Table 3 below. The references,
analysis, and methodology used in the development of the thresholds are
described in NMFS 2018 Technical Guidance, which may be accessed at
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/
marine-mammal-acoustic-technical-guidance.
[[Page 28797]]
Table 3--Thresholds Identifying the Onset of Permanent Threshold Shift
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PTS onset acoustic thresholds * (received level)
Hearing group -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impulsive Non-impulsive
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low-Frequency (LF) Cetaceans.......... Cell 1: Lpk,flat: 219 dB; Cell 2: LE,LF,24h: 199 dB.
LE,LF,24h: 183 dB.
Mid-Frequency (MF) Cetaceans.......... Cell 3: Lpk,flat: 230 dB; Cell 4: LE,MF,24h: 198 dB.
LE,MF,24h: 185 dB.
High-Frequency (HF) Cetaceans......... Cell 5: Lpk,flat: 202 dB; Cell 6: LE,HF,24h: 173 dB.
LE,HF,24h: 155 dB.
Phocid Pinnipeds (PW) (Underwater).... Cell 7: Lpk,flat: 218 dB; Cell 8: LE,PW,24h: 201 dB.
LE,PW,24h: 185 dB.
Otariid Pinnipeds (OW) (Underwater)... Cell 9:Lpk,flat: 232 dB; Cell 10:LE,OW,24h: 219 dB.
LE,OW,24h: 203 dB.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Dual metric acoustic thresholds for impulsive sounds: Use whichever results in the largest isopleth for
calculating PTS onset. If a non-impulsive sound has the potential of exceeding the peak sound pressure level
thresholds associated with impulsive sounds, these thresholds should also be considered.
Note: Peak sound pressure (Lpk) has a reference value of 1 [micro]Pa, and cumulative sound exposure level (LE)
has a reference value of 1[micro]Pa\2\s. In this Table, thresholds are abbreviated to reflect American
National Standards Institute standards (ANSI 2013). However, peak sound pressure is defined by ANSI as
incorporating frequency weighting, which is not the intent for this Technical Guidance. Hence, the subscript
``flat'' is being included to indicate peak sound pressure should be flat weighted or unweighted within the
generalized hearing range. The subscript associated with cumulative sound exposure level thresholds indicates
the designated marine mammal auditory weighting function (LF, MF, and HF cetaceans, and PW and OW pinnipeds)
and that the recommended accumulation period is 24 hours. The cumulative sound exposure level thresholds could
be exceeded in a multitude of ways (i.e., varying exposure levels and durations, duty cycle). When possible,
it is valuable for action proponents to indicate the conditions under which these acoustic thresholds will be
exceeded.
Ensonified Area
Here, we describe operational and environmental parameters of the
activity that will feed into identifying the area ensonified above the
acoustic thresholds, which include source levels and acoustic
propagation modeling.
The acoustic propagation modeling methodologies are described in
greater detail in Appendix A of UAGI's IHA application. The proposed
survey would primarily acquire data using the 2-airgun array with a
total discharge volume of 1,040 in\3\ and an approximately 15-second
shot interval. During approximately 12 percent of the planned survey
tracklines, the 6-airgun, 3,120 in\3\ array would be used with a 60-
second shot interval. All tracklines would be surveyed with a maximum
tow depth of 9 m. The modeling assumed an airgun firing pressure of
2,540 psi. Propagation modeling for UAGI's application follows the
approach used by the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (L-DEO) for
other, similar IHA applications. L-DEO uses ray tracing for the direct
wave traveling from the array to the receiver and its associated source
ghost (reflection at the air-water interface in the vicinity of the
array), in a constant-velocity half-space (infinite homogeneous ocean
layer, unbounded by a seafloor). To validate the model results, L-DEO
measured propagation of pulses from a 36-airgun array at a tow depth of
6 m in the Gulf of Mexico, for deep water (~1,600 m), intermediate
water depth on the slope (~600-1,100 m), and shallow water (~50 m)
(Tolstoy et al., 2009; Diebold et al., 2010).
L-DEO collected a MCS data set from R/V Marcus G. Langseth (with
the same 36-airgun array referenced above) on an 8 km streamer in 2012
on the shelf of the Cascadia Margin off of Washington in water up to
200 m deep that allowed Crone et al. (2014) to analyze the hydrophone
streamer (>1,100 individual shots). These empirical data were then
analyzed to determine in situ sound levels for shallow and upper
intermediate water depths. These data suggest that modeled radii were
2-3 times larger than the measured radii in shallow water. Similarly,
data collected by Crone et al. (2017) during a survey off New Jersey in
2014 and 2015 confirmed that in situ measurements collected by R/V
Langseth hydrophone streamer were 2-3 times smaller than the predicted
radii.
L-DEO model results are used to determine the assumed radial
distance to the 160-dB rms threshold for these arrays in deep water
(>1,000 m) (down to a maximum water depth of 2,000 m) (see Table 4).
Water depths in the project area may be up to 4,000 m, but marine
mammals in the region are generally not anticipated to dive below 2,000
m (Costa and Williams, 1999). The radii for intermediate water depths
(100-1000 m) are derived from the deep-water ones by applying a
correction factor (multiplication) of 1.5. No survey effort would occur
in water depths <100 m.
The area expected to be ensonified was determined by entering the
planned survey lines into a GIS and then ``buffering'' the lines by the
applicable 160-dB distance (see Appendix B in IHA application). The
resulting ensonified areas were then increased by 25% to allow for any
necessary additional operations, such as re-surveying segments where
data quality was insufficient. This approach assumes that no marine
mammals would move away or toward the trackline in response to
increasing sound levels before the levels reach the threshold as R/V
Sikuliaq approaches.
Table 4--Predicted Radial Distances to Isopleths Corresponding to Level B Harassment Threshold
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Level B
Source and volume Tow depth (m) Water depth (m) harassment
zone (m)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6 airgun array; 3,120 in\3\................... 9 >1,000.......................... \1\ 4,640
100-1,000....................... \3\ 6,960
2 airgun array; 1,040 in\3\................... 9 >1,000.......................... \1\ 1,604
100-1,000....................... \2\ 2,406
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Distance based on L-DEO model results.
\2\ Based on L-DEO model results with 1.5x correction factor applied.
[[Page 28798]]
Predicted distances to Level A harassment isopleths, which vary
based on marine mammal hearing groups, were calculated based on L-DEO
modeling performed using the NUCLEUS source modeling software program
and the NMFS User Spreadsheet, described below. The acoustic thresholds
for impulsive sounds (e.g., airguns) contained in the Technical
Guidance were presented as dual metric acoustic thresholds using both
SELcum and peak sound pressure metrics (NMFS 2018). As dual
metrics, NMFS considers onset of PTS (Level A harassment) to have
occurred when either one of the two metrics is exceeded (i.e., metric
resulting in the largest isopleth). The SELcum metric
considers both level and duration of exposure, as well as auditory
weighting functions by marine mammal hearing group. In recognition of
the fact that the requirement to calculate Level A harassment
ensonified areas could be more technically challenging to predict due
to the duration component and the use of weighting functions in the new
SELcum thresholds, NMFS developed an optional User
Spreadsheet that includes tools to help predict a simple isopleth that
can be used in conjunction with marine mammal density or occurrence to
facilitate the estimation of take numbers.
The values for SELcum and peak SPL were derived from
calculating the modified far-field signature. The farfield signature is
often used as a theoretical representation of the source level. To
compute the farfield signature, the source level is estimated at a
large distance below the array (e.g., 9 km), and this level is back
projected mathematically to a notional distance of 1 m from the array's
geometrical center. However, when the source is an array of multiple
airguns separated in space, the source level from the theoretical
farfield signature is not necessarily the best measurement of the
source level that is physically achieved at the source (Tolstoy et al.,
2009). Near the source (at short ranges, distances <1 km), the pulses
of sound pressure from each individual airgun in the source array do
not stack constructively, as they do for the theoretical farfield
signature. The pulses from the different airguns spread out in time
such that the source levels observed or modeled are the result of the
summation of pulses from a few airguns, not the full array (Tolstoy et
al., 2009). At larger distances, away from the source array center,
sound pressure of all the airguns in the array stack coherently, but
not within one time sample, resulting in smaller source levels (a few
dB) than the source level derived from the farfield signature. Because
the farfield signature does not take into account the large array
effect near the source and is calculated as a point source, the
modified farfield signature is a more appropriate measure of the sound
source level for distributed sound sources, such as airgun arrays. The
acoustic modeling methodology as used for estimating Level B harassment
distances with a small grid step of 1 m in both the inline and depth
directions. The propagation modeling takes into account all airgun
interactions at short distances from the source, including interactions
between subarrays, which are modeled using the NUCLEUS software to
estimate the notional signature and MATLAB software to calculate the
pressure signal at each mesh point of a grid.
In order to more realistically incorporate the Technical Guidance's
weighting functions over the seismic array's full acoustic band,
unweighted spectrum data (modeled in 1 Hz bands) were used to make
adjustments (dB) to the unweighted spectrum levels, by frequency,
according to the weighting functions for each relevant marine mammal
hearing group. These adjusted/weighted spectrum levels were then
converted to pressures ([mu]Pa) in order to integrate them over the
entire broadband spectrum, resulting in broadband weighted source
levels by hearing group that could be directly incorporated within the
User Spreadsheet (i.e., to override the Spreadsheet's more simple
weighting factor adjustment). Using the User Spreadsheet's ``safe
distance'' methodology for mobile sources (described by Sivle et al.,
2014) with the hearing group-specific weighted source levels, and
inputs assuming spherical spreading propagation and source velocities
and shot intervals specific to the planned survey, potential radial
distances to auditory injury zones were then calculated for
SELcum thresholds. For full detail of the modeling
methodology used for estimating distance to Level A harassment peak
pressure and cumulative SEL criteria, please see Appendix A of UAGI's
application.
Inputs to the User Spreadsheets in the form of estimated source
levels are shown in Appendix A of UAGI's application. User Spreadsheets
used by UAGI to estimate distances to Level A harassment isopleths for
the airgun arrays are also provided in Appendix A of the application.
Outputs from the User Spreadsheets in the form of estimated distances
to Level A harassment isopleths for the survey are shown in Table 5. As
described above, NMFS considers onset of PTS (Level A harassment) to
have occurred when either one of the dual metrics (SELcum
and Peak SPLflat) is exceeded (i.e., metric resulting in the
largest isopleth).
Table 5--Modeled Radial Distances (m) to Isopleths Corresponding to Level A Harassment Thresholds
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Level A harassment zone (m)
Source (volume) Threshold ---------------------------------------------------------------
LF cetaceans MF cetaceans HF cetaceans Phocids
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6-airgun array (3,120 in\3\).. SELcum.......... 51 0 0 0
Peak............ 30 7 212 34
2-airgun array (1,040 in\3\).. SELcum.......... 17 0 0 0
Peak............ 10 3 73 2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note that because of some of the assumptions included in the
methods used (e.g., stationary receiver with no vertical or horizontal
movement in response to the acoustic source), isopleths produced may be
overestimates to some degree, which will ultimately result in some
degree of overestimation of Level A harassment. However, these tools
offer the best way to predict appropriate isopleths when more
sophisticated modeling methods are not available. NMFS continues to
develop ways to quantitatively refine these tools and will
qualitatively address the output where appropriate. For mobile sources,
such as the proposed seismic survey, the User
[[Page 28799]]
Spreadsheet predicts the closest distance at which a stationary animal
would not incur PTS if the sound source traveled by the animal in a
straight line at a constant speed.
Auditory injury is unlikely to occur for mid-frequency and low-
frequency cetaceans given very small modeled zones of injury for those
species (all estimated zones less than 10 m for mid-frequency
cetaceans, up to a maximum of 51 m for low-frequency cetaceans and 34 m
for phocid pinnipeds), in context of distributed source dynamics.
Similarly, for high-frequency cetaceans, the maximum modeled injury
zone for the low-energy array (88 percent of survey effort) is 73 m and
auditory injury would be unlikely to occur during use of that array.
The source level of the array is a theoretical definition assuming a
point source and measurement in the far-field of the source
(MacGillivray, 2006). As described by Caldwell and Dragoset (2000), an
array is not a point source, but one that spans a small area. In the
far-field, individual elements in arrays will effectively work as one
source because individual pressure peaks will have coalesced into one
relatively broad pulse. The array can then be considered a ``point
source.'' For distances within the near-field, i.e., approximately 2-3
times the array dimensions, pressure peaks from individual elements do
not arrive simultaneously because the observation point is not
equidistant from each element. The effect is destructive interference
of the outputs of each element, so that peak pressures in the near-
field will be significantly lower than the output of the largest
individual element. Here, the estimated Level A harassment isopleth
distances would in all cases (other than for high-frequency cetaceans)
be expected to be within the near-field of the array where the
definition of source level breaks down. Therefore, actual locations
within this distance of the array center where the sound level exceeds
relevant harassment criteria would not necessarily exist.
In consideration of the received sound levels in the near-field as
described above, we expect the potential for Level A harassment of low-
and mid-frequency cetaceans and phocid pinnipeds to be de minimis, even
before the likely moderating effects of aversion and/or other
compensatory behaviors (e.g., Nachtigall et al., 2018) are considered.
A similar conclusion may be drawn for high-frequency cetaceans relative
to use of the low-energy airgun array. We do not believe that Level A
harassment is a likely outcome for any low- or mid-frequency cetacean
or phocid pinniped and do not propose to authorize any Level A
harassment for these species. For high-frequency cetaceans, the larger
estimated Level A harassment zone associated with the high-energy array
would be present for only 12 percent of total survey effort, and given
the expected rarity of occurrence for harbor porpoise, no incidents of
Level A harassment are expected.
Marine Mammal Occurrence
In this section we provide the information about the presence,
density, or group dynamics of marine mammals that will inform the take
calculations. Density values are shown in Table 6.
Cetacean densities in the U.S. Arctic were published by Schick et
al. (2017). This study used line-transect aerial survey data from ASAMM
collected in the U.S. Chukchi and Beaufort seas from 2000-2016 and
associated habitat covariates to estimate abundance monthly within 10
km x 10 km grid cells (equivalent to a density in units of individuals/
100km\2\). Estimates were produced for bowhead, gray, and beluga
whales, as well as other baleen whales such as fin, humpback, and minke
whales. The spatial extent of the model predictions differed by
species, but for all species other than bowhead whale and beluga whale
was further south than the planned location of the UAGI survey. In
general, marine mammals are expected to be encountered more frequently
to the south of the proposed survey location. Therefore, estimated take
numbers produced through use of the density model products are expected
to be a very conservative estimate. Previous monitoring reports from
recent Arctic surveys using the same research vessel saw a total of
three humpback whales, 1 spotted seal, 4 unknown seals (Please see the
following link for more detailed information on this monitoring report:
https://media.fisheries.noaa.gov/dam-migration/onr_arcticresearch_2018iha_monrep_opr1.pdf). Furthermore, based on
tagged surveys from the summer and fall, bowhead whales migrate across
the continental shelf of Alaska in the Beaufort Sea to the central
Chukchi Sea in September and remain in this area for the fall
(Quakenbush, Small & Citta, 2013). Only one whale was reported to
travel north towards the proposed survey area. With this information in
mind, NMFS believes that the proposed take numbers conservatively
estimate the number of bowhead whales that will be encountered during
the proposed activity.
For all species, except for beluga whales, UAGI extended the Schick
et al. (2017) density values to calculate predictions for areas farther
north. The spatial coverage of density estimates for bowhead whales
extends northward to ~74 [deg]N, which overlaps with the southern-most
survey lines by ~25 km. However, the majority of the survey lines do
not overlap with spatial coverage of the Schick et al. (2017) density
estimates, so the following method was used to produce a conservative
estimate of average bowhead density farther north. The two northern-
most rows of 10km x 10km grid cells (ie., northern 20 km of estimates)
and the two additional cells overlapped by the southern-most survey
lines were selected from the bowhead whale GIS raster files for August
and September between 140[deg]W and 165[deg]W, the approximate east-
west extent of the survey lines. Density estimates within those cells
were then evaluated and cells east of ~157[deg]W were excluded as they
contained densities that were effectively zero which would reduce the
calculated average. The mean of the remaining cells (west of 157[deg]W)
was then calculated.
The same process was used to calculate densities for gray whales,
fin whales, humpback whales, and minke whales. However the northern
survey coverage from Schick et al. (2017) for these species extends
only to ~73[deg]N. This meant that there was no overlap with any of the
survey lines and no additional cells beyond the two northernmost rows
(20km) were used in the calculations. The resulting density estimates
were extremely small.
For beluga whales, the spatial coverage of the Schick et al. (2017)
density estimates overlapped the full extent of the survey lines and
associated ensonified areas. To calculate an average beluga whale
density in areas that may be exposed above threshold levels, UAGI
selected all grid cells from the August and September estimates that
overlapped (wholly or partially) with estimated the 160 dB ensonified
area around the planned tracklines and calculated the mean.
During ASAMM, sightings of pinnipeds were recorded when possible
and the resulting data were used by Schick et al. (2017) to produce
habitat-based estimates in the same manner as cetaceans. However, given
ASAMM was designed for large whales, including typically being flown at
altitudes above 304.8 feet (ft) ASL, and small pinniped sightings may
not have been recorded as consistently, the Schick et al (2017)
pinniped densities were not used in this analysis. Instead, bearded and
ringed seal densities from NMFS's Biological Opinion for the Navy's
Arctic Research
[[Page 28800]]
Activities 2018-2021 were used (NMFS 2019b), which were based on
habitat-based modeling by Kaschner et al. (2006) and Kaschner (2004).
Spotted and ribbon seals were not included in NMFS (2019b). Thus,
spotted seal densities were estimated by multiplying the ringed seal
density by the ratio of the estimated Chukchi Sea populations of the
two species. The best estimate of the Alaskan population of spotted
seals is 461,625 (Muto et al., 2020), and ~8% of the population
(~37,000) is estimated to be present in the Chukchi Sea during the
summer and fall (Rugh et al., 1997). As the best estimate of the
population of ringed seals in the Alaskan Chukchi Sea is ~208,000
animals (Bengtson et al., 2005), this resulted in a ratio of 0.18.
Based on Hartin et al., (2013), four ribbon seal sightings were
reported during vessel operations in the Chukchi Sea from 2006 through
2010, resulting in a density estimate of 0.0007/km\2\.
Highly variable oceanographic and atmospheric conditions determine
the distribution of sea ice in the Arctic, which heavily influences the
species and number of marine mammals potentially present at these high
latitudes. Thus, there is considerable year-to-year variation in the
distribution and abundance of the marine mammal species in the survey
area. For some species, the densities derived from past surveys may not
be representative of the densities that would be encountered during the
proposed seismic surveys. However, the approach used here is based on
the best available data.
Table 6--Density Values Used for Take Analysis, Calculated by UAGI
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Species Density (individuals/km\2\)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bowhead whale........................ 0.0124.
Gray whale........................... 0.
Fin whale............................ 0.
Humpback whale....................... 0.
Minke whale.......................... 0.
Beluga whale......................... 0.0255.
Killer whale......................... Unknown.
Narwhal.............................. Unknown.
Harbor porpoise...................... Unknown.
Bearded seal......................... 0.0332.
Ribbon seal.......................... 0.0677.
Ringed seal.......................... 0.376.
Spotted seal......................... 0.0007.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Take Calculation and Estimation
Here we describe how the information provided above is brought
together to produce a quantitative take estimate. In order to estimate
the number of marine mammals predicted to be exposed to sound levels
that would result in Level A or Level B harassment, radial distances
from the airgun array to predicted isopleths corresponding to the Level
A harassment and Level B harassment thresholds are calculated, as
described above. Those radial distances are then used to calculate the
area(s) around the airgun array predicted to be ensonified to sound
levels that exceed the Level A and Level B harassment thresholds. The
distance for the 160-dB threshold (based on L-DEO model results) was
used to draw a buffer around every transect line in GIS to determine
the total ensonified area in each depth category. Estimated incidents
of exposure above Level A and Level B harassment criteria are presented
in Table 7. As noted previously, UAGI has added 25 percent in the form
of operational days, which is equivalent to adding 25 percent to the
proposed line-kilometers to be surveyed. This accounts for the
possibility that additional operational days are required, and is
included in the estimates of actual exposures.
The number of individual marine mammals potentially exposed to
airgun sounds with received levels >= 160 dB re 1
[micro]Parms (Level B) was estimated following NSF's take
calculation method by multiplying the estimated densities by the total
area expected to be ensonified above the Level threshold. The total
ensonified area was multiplied by 25 percent to account for any
necessary additional operations, such as re-surveying segments where
data quality was insufficient. This approach assumes that no marine
mammals would move away or toward the trackline in response to
increasing sound levels before the levels reach the threshold as R/V
Sikuliaq approaches. This value was then multiplied by the estimated
densities for each species to produce estimated Level B takes. Given
the location of the survey being far north in the Arctic, we expect
that the density values, and thus estimated take numbers, are
conservative estimates of what is likely to be encountered during the
survey.
Table 7--Estimated Taking by Level A and Level B Harassment, and Percentage of Population
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated Estimated
Species Stock \1\ Level B Level A Proposed Level Proposed Level Total take Percent of
harassment harassment B harassment A harassment stock \1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bowhead whale..................... Western Arctic...... 339 3 342 0 342 2.03
Humpback whale \2\................ WN Pacific.......... 0 0 2 0 2 0.00
Fin whale \2\ \4\................. NE Pacific.......... 0 0 2 0 2 0.00
Gray whale \2\.................... EN Pacific.......... 0 0 2 0 2 0.00
Minke whale \2\ \4\............... Alaska.............. 0 0 2 0 2 0.00
Beluga whale...................... Beaufort Sea........ 696 7 703 0 703 1.34
Eastern Chukchi.....
Killer whale \2\.................. Alaska Resident..... 0 0 6 0 6 0.00
Narwhal \3\ \4\................... Unidentified........ 0 0 2 0 2 n/a
Harbor porpoise \2\ \4\........... Bering Sea.......... 0 0 2 0 2 0.00
Bearded seal...................... Beringia............ 907 9 916 0 916 0.73
Ringed seal....................... Arctic.............. 10,268 105 10,373 0 10,373 6.05
Spotted seal...................... Bering.............. 19 0 19 0 19 0.00
Ribbon seal....................... Unidentified........ 1849 19 1868 0 1868 1.01
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In most cases, where multiple stocks are being affected, for the purposes of calculating the percentage of the stock impacted, the take is being
analyzed as if all proposed takes occurred within each stock. Where necessary, additional discussion is provided in the ``Small Numbers Analysis''
section.
\2\ UAGI requests authorization of gray whale, humpback whale, fin whale, minke whale, killer whale, and harbor porpoise take equivalent to exposure of
one group (Clarke et al., 2016; Clarke et al., 2017; Clarke et al., 2018; Clarke et al., 2019).
\3\ UAGI requests authorization of two takes of narwhals.
\4\ As noted in Table 1, there is no estimate of abundance available for these species. See ``Small Numbers Analysis'' section for further discussion.
[[Page 28801]]
Although, gray whales, fin whales, humpback whales, minke whales,
narwhals and harbor porpoises are not expected to occur this far north
in the Arctic, we agree with NSF that there is possibility that the
proposed activity might encounter these species and thus a conservative
number of takes based on average group size from yearly Aerial Surveys
of Arctic Marine Mammals (ASAMM) (Clark et al., 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019)
has been proposed.
Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an IHA under section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA,
NMFS must set forth the permissible methods of taking pursuant to the
activity, and other means of effecting the least practicable impact on
the species or stock and its habitat, paying particular attention to
rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar significance, and on
the availability of the species or stock for taking for certain
subsistence uses. NMFS regulations require applicants for incidental
take authorizations to include information about the availability and
feasibility (economic and technological) of equipment, methods, and
manner of conducting the activity or other means of effecting the least
practicable adverse impact upon the affected species or stocks and
their habitat (50 CFR 216.104(a)(11)).
In evaluating how mitigation may or may not be appropriate to
ensure the least practicable adverse impact on species or stocks and
their habitat, as well as subsistence uses where applicable, we
carefully consider two primary factors:
(1) The manner in which, and the degree to which, the successful
implementation of the measure(s) is expected to reduce impacts to
marine mammals, marine mammal species or stocks, and their habitat, as
well as subsistence uses. This considers the nature of the potential
adverse impact being mitigated (likelihood, scope, range). It further
considers the likelihood that the measure will be effective if
implemented (probability of accomplishing the mitigating result if
implemented as planned), the likelihood of effective implementation
(probability implemented as planned), and;
(2) The practicability of the measures for applicant
implementation, which may consider such things as cost and impact on
operations.
In order to satisfy the MMPA's least practicable adverse impact
standard, NMFS has evaluated a suite of basic mitigation protocols for
seismic surveys that are required regardless of the status of a stock.
Additional or enhanced protections may be required for species whose
stocks are in particularly poor health and/or are subject to some
significant additional stressor that lessens that stock's ability to
weather the effects of the specified activities without worsening its
status. We reviewed seismic mitigation protocols required or
recommended elsewhere (e.g., HESS, 1999; DOC, 2013; IBAMA, 2018; Kyhn
et al., 2011; JNCC, 2017; DEWHA, 2008; BOEM, 2016; DFO, 2008; GHFS,
2015; MMOA, 2016; Nowacek et al., 2013; Nowacek and Southall, 2016),
recommendations received during public comment periods for previous
actions, and the available scientific literature. We also considered
recommendations given in a number of review articles (e.g., Weir and
Dolman, 2007; Compton et al., 2008; Parsons et al., 2009; Wright and
Cosentino, 2015; Stone, 2015b). This exhaustive review and
consideration of public comments regarding previous, similar activities
has led to development of the protocols included here.
Due to the use of high- and low-energy airgun arrays used within
this survey, two separate mitigation protocols are proposed for use
throughout the activity depending on which array is in use (Table 8).
Vessel-Based Visual Mitigation Monitoring
Visual monitoring requires the use of trained observers (herein
referred to as visual Protected Species Observers (PSOs)) to scan the
ocean surface for the presence of marine mammals. The area to be
scanned visually includes primarily the EZ, within which observation of
certain marine mammals requires shutdown of the acoustic source, but
also a buffer zone. The buffer zone means an area beyond the EZ to be
monitored for the presence of marine mammals that may enter the EZ.
During pre-clearance monitoring (i.e., before ramp-up begins), the
buffer zone also acts as an extension of the EZ in that observations of
marine mammals within the buffer zone would also prevent airgun
operations from beginning (i.e., ramp-up). The standard EZ is 500 m
from the edges of the airgun array for high energy surveys and 100 m
for low energy surveys. For high energy surveys, the buffer zone
encompasses the area at and below the sea surface from the edge of the
0-500 m EZ, out to a radius of 1,000 m from the edges of the airgun
array (500-1,000 m). For low energy surveys, the buffer zone
encompasses the area at and below the sea surface from the edge of the
0-100 m EZ, out to a radius of 200 m from the edges of the airgun array
(100-200 m).
Visual monitoring of the EZ and buffer zones is intended to
establish and, when visual conditions allow, maintain zones around the
sound source that are clear of marine mammals, thereby reducing or
eliminating the potential for injury and minimizing the potential for
more severe behavioral reactions for animals occurring closer to the
vessel. Visual monitoring of the buffer zone is intended to (1) provide
additional protection to na[iuml]ve marine mammals that may be in the
area during pre-clearance, and (2) during airgun use, aid in
establishing and maintaining the EZ by alerting the visual observer and
crew of marine mammals that are outside of, but may approach and enter,
the EZ.
UAGI must use dedicated, trained, NMFS-approved PSOs. The PSOs must
have no tasks other than to conduct observational effort, record
observational data, and communicate with and instruct relevant vessel
crew with regard to the presence of marine mammals and mitigation
requirements. PSO resumes shall be provided to NMFS for approval.
At least one of the visual PSOs aboard the vessel must have a
minimum of 90 days at-sea experience working in the roles, with no more
than 18 months elapsed since the conclusion of the at-sea experience.
One visual PSO with such experience shall be designated as the lead for
the entire protected species observation team. The lead PSO shall serve
as primary point of contact for the vessel operator and ensure all PSO
requirements per the IHA are met. To the maximum extent practicable,
the experienced PSOs should be scheduled to be on duty with those PSOs
with appropriate training but who have not yet gained relevant
experience.
During survey operations (e.g., any day on which use of the
acoustic source is planned to occur, and whenever the acoustic source
is in the water, whether activated or not), a minimum of two visual
PSOs must be on duty and conducting visual observations at all times
during daylight hours (i.e., from 30 minutes prior to sunrise through
30 minutes following sunset). Visual monitoring of the EZ and buffer
zone must begin no less than 30 minutes prior to ramp-up and must
continue until one hour after use of the acoustic source ceases or
until 30 minutes past sunset. Visual PSOs shall coordinate to ensure
360[deg] visual coverage around the vessel from the most appropriate
observation posts, and shall conduct visual observations using
binoculars and the naked eye while free from distractions and in a
consistent, systematic, and diligent manner.
[[Page 28802]]
PSOs shall establish and monitor the EZ and buffer zone. These
zones shall be based upon the radial distance from the edges of the
acoustic source (rather than being based on the center of the array or
around the vessel itself). During use of the acoustic source (i.e.,
anytime airguns are active, including ramp-up), detections of marine
mammals within the buffer zone (but outside the EZ) shall be
communicated to the operator to prepare for the potential shutdown of
the acoustic source.
During use of the airgun (i.e., anytime the acoustic source is
active, including ramp-up), detections of marine mammals within the
buffer zone (but outside the EZ) should be communicated to the operator
to prepare for the potential shutdown of the acoustic source. Visual
PSOs will immediately communicate all observations to the on duty
acoustic PSO(s), including any determination by the PSO regarding
species identification, distance, and bearing and the degree of
confidence in the determination. Any observations of marine mammals by
crew members shall be relayed to the PSO team. During good conditions
(e.g., daylight hours; Beaufort sea state (BSS) 3 or less), visual PSOs
shall conduct observations when the acoustic source is not operating
for comparison of sighting rates and behavior with and without use of
the acoustic source and between acquisition periods, to the maximum
extent practicable.
Visual PSOs may be on watch for a maximum of four consecutive hours
followed by a break of at least one hour between watches and may
conduct a maximum of 12 hours of observation per 24-hour period.
Combined observational duties (visual and acoustic but not at same
time) may not exceed 12 hours per 24-hour period for any individual
PSO.
Establishment of Exclusion and Buffer Zones
An EZ is a defined area within which occurrence of a marine mammal
triggers mitigation action intended to reduce the potential for certain
outcomes, e.g., auditory injury, disruption of behavioral patterns. The
PSOs would establish a minimum EZ with a 500- or 100-m radius, during
use of the high energy and low energy arrays, respectively, for all
species except bowhead whales. The EZ would be based on radial distance
from the edge of the airgun array (rather than being based on the
center of the array or around the vessel itself).
The EZs are intended to be precautionary in the sense that they
would be expected to contain sound exceeding the injury criteria for
all cetacean hearing groups, (based on the dual criteria of
SELcum and peak SPL), while also providing a consistent,
reasonably observable zone within which PSOs would typically be able to
conduct effective observational effort. Additionally, the EZs are
expected to minimize the likelihood that marine mammals will be exposed
to levels likely to result in more severe behavioral responses.
Although significantly greater distances may be observed from an
elevated platform under good conditions, we believe that these
distances are likely regularly attainable for PSOs using the naked eye
during typical conditions.
An extended EZ of 1,500/500 m must be implemented for all bowhead
whales during high energy and low energy survey effort, respectively,
because of their importance to subsistence hunters and protected
status. No buffer of this extended EZ is required.
Pre-Clearance and Ramp-Up
Ramp-up (sometimes referred to as ``soft start'') means the gradual
and systematic increase of emitted sound levels from an airgun array.
Ramp-up begins by first activating a single airgun of the smallest
volume, followed by doubling the number of active elements in stages
until the full complement of an array's airguns are active. Each stage
should be approximately the same duration, and the total duration
should not be less than approximately 20 minutes for high energy airgun
arrays. Ramp-up for the low energy array, which includes only two
elements, may be shorter. The intent of pre-clearance observation (30
minutes) is to ensure no protected species are observed within the
buffer zone prior to the beginning of ramp-up. During pre-clearance is
the only time observations of protected species in the buffer zone
would prevent operations (i.e., the beginning of ramp-up). The intent
of ramp-up is to warn protected species of pending seismic operations
and to allow sufficient time for those animals to leave the immediate
vicinity. A ramp-up procedure, involving a step-wise increase in the
number of airguns firing and total array volume until all operational
airguns are activated and the full volume is achieved, is required at
all times as part of the activation of the acoustic source. All
operators must adhere to the following pre-clearance and ramp-up
requirements:
The operator must notify a designated PSO of the planned
start of ramp-up as agreed upon with the lead PSO; the notification
time should not be less than 60 minutes prior to the planned ramp-up in
order to allow the PSOs time to monitor the EZ and buffer zone for 30
minutes prior to the initiation of ramp-up (pre-clearance);
Ramp-ups shall be scheduled so as to minimize the time
spent with the source activated prior to reaching the designated run-
in;
One of the PSOs conducting pre-clearance observations must
be notified again immediately prior to initiating ramp-up procedures
and the operator must receive confirmation from the PSO to proceed;
Ramp-up may not be initiated if any marine mammal is
within the applicable EZ or buffer zone. If a marine mammal is observed
within the applicable EZ or the buffer zone during the 30 minute pre-
clearance period, ramp-up may not begin until the animal(s) has been
observed exiting the zones or until an additional time period has
elapsed with no further sightings (15 minutes for small odontocetes and
pinnipeds, and 30 minutes for all mysticetes and all other odontocetes,
including large delphinids, such as beluga whales and killer whales);
Ramp-up shall begin by activating a single airgun of the
smallest volume in the array and shall continue in stages by doubling
the number of active elements at the commencement of each stage, with
each stage of approximately the same duration. Duration shall not be
less than 20 minutes for high energy arrays. The operator must provide
information to the PSO documenting that appropriate procedures were
followed;
PSOs must monitor the relevant EZ and buffer zone during
ramp-up, and ramp-up must cease and the source must be shut down upon
detection of a marine mammal within the applicable EZ. Once ramp-up has
begun, detections of marine mammals within the buffer zone do not
require shutdown, but such observation shall be communicated to the
operator to prepare for the potential shutdown;
Ramp-up may occur at times of poor visibility, including
nighttime, if appropriate acoustic monitoring has occurred with no
detections in the 30 minutes prior to beginning ramp-up. Acoustic
source activation may only occur at times of poor visibility where
operational planning cannot reasonably avoid such circumstances;
If the acoustic source is shut down for brief periods
(i.e., less than 30 minutes) for reasons other than that described for
shutdown (e.g., mechanical difficulty), it may be activated again
without ramp-up if PSOs have maintained constant visual and/or acoustic
observation and no visual or acoustic detections of marine mammals
[[Page 28803]]
have occurred within the applicable EZ. For any longer shutdown, pre-
clearance observation and ramp-up are required. For any shutdown at
night or in periods of poor visibility (e.g., BSS 4 or greater), ramp-
up is required, but if the shutdown period was brief and constant
observation was maintained, pre-clearance watch of 30 minutes is not
required; and
Testing of the acoustic source involving all elements
requires ramp-up. Testing limited to individual source elements or
strings does not require ramp-up but does require pre-clearance of 30
min.
Shutdown
The shutdown of an airgun array requires the immediate de-
activation of all individual airgun elements of the array. Any PSO on
duty will have the authority to delay the start of survey operations or
to call for shutdown of the acoustic source if a marine mammal is
detected within the applicable EZ. The operator must also establish and
maintain clear lines of communication directly between PSOs on duty and
crew controlling the acoustic source to ensure that shutdown commands
are conveyed swiftly while allowing PSOs to maintain watch. When the
airgun array is active (i.e., anytime one or more airguns is active,
including during ramp-up) and a marine mammal appears within or enters
the applicable EZ, the acoustic source will be shut down. When shutdown
is called for by a PSO, the acoustic source will be immediately
deactivated and any dispute resolved only following deactivation.
Following a shutdown, airgun activity would not resume until the
marine mammal has cleared the EZ. The animal would be considered to
have cleared the EZ if it is visually observed to have departed the EZ,
or it has not been seen within the EZ for 15 min in the case of small
odontocetes and pinnipeds, or 30 min in the case of mysticetes and
large odontocetes, including beluga whales and killer whales.
Upon implementation of shutdown, the source may be reactivated
after the marine mammal(s) has been observed exiting the applicable EZ
(i.e., animal is not required to fully exit the buffer zone where
applicable) or following 15 minutes for small odontocetes and
pinnipeds, and 30 minutes for mysticetes and all other odontocetes,
including beluga whales and killer whales, with no further observation
of the marine mammal(s).
UAGI must implement shutdown if a marine mammal species for which
take was not authorized, or a species for which authorization was
granted but the takes have been met, approaches the Level A or Level B
harassment zones. L-DEO must also implement shutdown if any of the
following are observed at any distance:
Any large whale (defined as any mysticete species) with a
calf (defined as an animal less than two-thirds the body size of an
adult observed to be in close association with an adult); and/or
An aggregation of six or more large whales.
Passive Acoustic Monitoring (PAM)
NMFS does not propose to require use of PAM for this activity. NMFS
typically recommends use of PAM as part of prescribed mitigation
requirements for high energy surveys, but not for low energy surveys,
which here comprise approximately 88 percent of the planned survey.
Therefore, PAM would only be applicable to the small portion of the
proposed survey (12 percent) using the high-energy array. In addition,
use of towed PAM is not generally expected to be effective in detecting
mysticetes, due to overlap in the frequencies of mysticete
vocalizations with the noise from the airgun array as well as from the
vessel itself and flow noise around the towed PAM receiver. Species of
greatest interest in prescribing use of towed PAM (e.g., sperm whales,
beaked whales) are not present in the planned survey area. Further,
UAGI has indicated that it would not be practicable to carry the
additional monitoring personnel required for implementation of towed
PAM. The R/V Sikuliaq is a smaller research vessel with limited space.
Table 8--Proposed Mitigation Protocols for High- and Low-Energy Arrays
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mitigation Protocols
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sources..................... High Energy (6- Low Energy (2-airgun
airgun array with array with 1040
3120 in\3\ total in\3\ total
discharge volume). discharge volume).
Visual PSOs................. Minimum of 2 NMFS- Minimum of 2 NMFS-
approved PSOs on approved PSOs on
duty during duty during
daylight hours (30 daylight hours (30
minutes before minutes before
sunrise through 30 sunrise through 30
minutes after minutes after
sunset); Limit of 2 sunset); Limit of 2
consecutive hours consecutive hours
on watch followed on watch followed
by a break of at by a break of at
least 1 hour; least 1 hour;
Maximum of 12 hours Maximum of 12 hours
on watch per 24- on watch per 24-
hour period. hour period.
Passive acoustic monitoring. Not Required........ Not required.
Exclusion zones............. 500 m (all 100 m (all
marine mammals). marine mammals).
1,500 m 500 m
(Bowhead whales). (Bowhead whales).
Pre-start clearance......... Required; 30-minute Required; 30-minute
clearance period of clearance period of
the following the following
zones: zones:
1,000 m 200 m (all
(all marine marine mammals).
mammals).
1,500 m 500 m
(Bowhead whales). (Bowhead whales).
Following detection Following detection
within zone, animal within zone, animal
must be observed must be observed
exiting or exiting or
additional period additional period
of 15 or 30 minutes. of 15 or 30
minutes.
Ramp-up..................... Required; duration Required; duration
>=20 minutes. not more than 20
minutes.
Shutdown.................... Shutdown required Shutdown required
for marine mammal for marine mammal
detected within detected within
defined EZs; Re- defined EZs; Re-
start allowed start allowed
following clearance following clearance
period of 15 or 30 period of 15 or 30
minutes. minutes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vessel Strike Avoidance
1. Vessel operators and crews must maintain a vigilant watch for
all protected species and slow down, stop their vessel, or alter
course, as appropriate and regardless of vessel size, to avoid striking
any protected species. A visual observer aboard the vessel must monitor
a vessel strike avoidance zone around the vessel (distances stated
below). Visual observers monitoring the vessel strike avoidance zone
may be third-party observers (i.e., PSOs) or crew members, but crew
members responsible for these
[[Page 28804]]
duties must be provided sufficient training to 1) distinguish marine
mammals from other phenomena, and 2) broadly identify a marine mammal
as a bowhead whale, other whale (defined in this context as baleen
whales other than bowhead whales), or other marine mammal.
2. Vessel speeds must also be reduced to 10 knots or less when
mother/calf pairs, pods, or large assemblages of cetaceans are observed
near a vessel.
3. All vessels must maintain a minimum separation distance of 500 m
from bowhead whales. If a whale is observed but cannot be confirmed as
a species other than a bowhead whale, the vessel operator must assume
that it is a bowhead whale and take appropriate action.
4. All vessels must maintain a minimum separation distance of 100 m
from all other baleen whales.
5. All vessels must, to the maximum extent practicable, attempt to
maintain a minimum separation distance of 50 m from all other marine
mammals, with an understanding that at times this may not be possible
(e.g., for animals that approach the vessel).
6. When marine mammals are sighted while a vessel is underway, the
vessel shall take action as necessary to avoid violating the relevant
separation distance (e.g., attempt to remain parallel to the animal's
course, avoid excessive speed or abrupt changes in direction until the
animal has left the area). If protected species are sighted within the
relevant separation distance, the vessel must reduce speed and shift
the engine to neutral, not engaging the engines until animals are clear
of the area. This does not apply to any vessel towing gear or any
vessel that is navigationally constrained.
7. These requirements do not apply in any case where compliance
would create an imminent and serious threat to a person or vessel or to
the extent that a vessel is restricted in its ability to maneuver and,
because of the restriction, cannot comply.
We did not identify any mitigation specifically appropriate for
habitat. Marine mammal habitat may be impacted by elevated sound
levels, but these impacts would be temporary. Prey species are mobile
and are broadly distributed throughout the project area; therefore,
marine mammals that may be temporarily displaced during survey
activities are expected to be able to resume foraging once they have
moved away from areas with disturbing levels of underwater noise. The
specified activity is if relatively short duration (30 days) and the
disturbance will be temporary in nature, similar habitat and resources
are available in the surrounding area, the impacts to marine mammals
and the food sources that they utilize are not expected to cause
significant or long-term consequences for individual marine mammals or
their populations. No BIAs, designated critical habitat, or other
habitat of known significance would be impacted by the planned
activities.
We have carefully evaluated the suite of mitigation measures
described here and considered a range of other measures in the context
of ensuring that we prescribe the means of effecting the least
practicable adverse impact on the affected marine mammal species and
stocks and their habitat. Based on our evaluation of the proposed
measures, as well as other measures considered by NMFS described above,
NMFS has preliminarily determined that the mitigation measures provide
the means of effecting the least practicable impact on the affected
species or stocks and their habitat, paying particular attention to
rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar significance, and on
the availability of such species or stock for subsistence uses (see
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis and Determination).
Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an IHA 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
authorizations 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. Effective reporting is critical both to
compliance as well as ensuring that the most value is obtained from the
required monitoring.
Monitoring and reporting requirements prescribed by NMFS should
contribute to improved understanding of one or more of the following:
Occurrence of marine mammal species or stocks in the area
in which take is anticipated (e.g., presence, abundance, distribution,
density).
Nature, scope, or context of likely marine mammal exposure
to potential stressors/impacts (individual or cumulative, acute or
chronic), through better understanding of: (1) Action or environment
(e.g., source characterization, propagation, ambient noise); (2)
affected species (e.g., life history, dive patterns); (3) co-occurrence
of marine mammal species with the action; or (4) biological or
behavioral context of exposure (e.g., age, calving or feeding areas).
Individual marine mammal responses (behavioral or
physiological) to acoustic stressors (acute, chronic, or cumulative),
other stressors, or cumulative impacts from multiple stressors.
How anticipated responses to stressors impact either: (1)
Long-term fitness and survival of individual marine mammals; or (2)
populations, species, or stocks.
Effects on marine mammal habitat (e.g., marine mammal prey
species, acoustic habitat, or other important physical components of
marine mammal habitat).
Mitigation and monitoring effectiveness.
Vessel-Based Visual Monitoring
As described above, PSO observations would take place during
daytime airgun operations. During seismic operations, at least five
visual PSOs would be based aboard the R/V Sikuliaq. Two visual PSOs
would be on duty at all time during daytime hours. Monitoring shall be
conducted in accordance with the following requirements:
The operator shall provide PSOs with bigeye binoculars
(e.g., 25 x 150; 2.7 view angle; individual ocular focus; height
control) of appropriate quality (i.e., Fujinon or equivalent) solely
for PSO use. These shall be pedestal-mounted on the deck at the most
appropriate vantage point that provides for optimal sea surface
observation, PSO safety, and safe operation of the vessel; and
The operator will work with the selected third-party
observer provider to ensure PSOs have all equipment (including backup
equipment) needed to adequately perform necessary tasks, including
accurate determination of distance and bearing to observed marine
mammals.
PSOs must have the following requirements and qualifications:
PSOs shall be independent, dedicated, trained visual and
acoustic PSOs and must be employed by a third-party observer provider;
PSOs shall have no tasks other than to conduct
observational effort, collect data, and communicate with and instruct
relevant vessel crew with regard to the presence of protected species
and mitigation requirements (including brief alerts regarding maritime
hazards);
[[Page 28805]]
PSOs shall have successfully completed an approved PSO
training course;
NMFS must review and approve PSO resumes accompanied by a
relevant training course information packet that includes the name and
qualifications (i.e., experience, training completed, or educational
background) of the instructor(s), the course outline or syllabus, and
course reference material as well as a document stating successful
completion of the course;
NMFS shall have one week to approve PSOs from the time
that the necessary information is submitted, after which PSOs meeting
the minimum requirements shall automatically be considered approved;
PSOs must successfully complete relevant training,
including completion of all required coursework and passing (80 percent
or greater) a written and/or oral examination developed for the
training program;
PSOs must have successfully attained a bachelor's degree
from an accredited college or university with a major in one of the
natural sciences, a minimum of 30 semester hours or equivalent in the
biological sciences, and at least one undergraduate course in math or
statistics; and
The educational requirements may be waived if the PSO has
acquired the relevant skills through alternate experience. Requests for
such a waiver shall be submitted to NMFS and must include written
justification. Requests shall be granted or denied (with justification)
by NMFS within one week of receipt of submitted information. Alternate
experience that may be considered includes, but is not limited to (1)
secondary education and/or experience comparable to PSO duties; (2)
previous work experience conducting academic, commercial, or
government-sponsored protected species surveys; or (3) previous work
experience as a PSO; the PSO should demonstrate good standing and
consistently good performance of PSO duties. Traditional ecological
knowledge is also a relevant consideration.
For data collection purposes, PSOs shall use standardized data
collection forms, whether hard copy or electronic. PSOs shall record
detailed information about any implementation of mitigation
requirements, including the distance of animals to the acoustic source
and description of specific actions that ensued, the behavior of the
animal(s), any observed changes in behavior before and after
implementation of mitigation, and if shutdown was implemented, the
length of time before any subsequent ramp-up of the acoustic source. If
required mitigation was not implemented, PSOs should record a
description of the circumstances. At a minimum, the following
information must be recorded:
Vessel names (source vessel and other vessels associated
with survey) and call signs;
PSO names and affiliations;
Dates of departures and returns to port with port name;
Date and participants of PSO briefings;
Dates and times (Greenwich Mean Time) of survey effort and
times corresponding with PSO effort;
Vessel location (latitude/longitude) when survey effort
began and ended and vessel location at beginning and end of visual PSO
duty shifts;
Vessel heading and speed at beginning and end of visual
PSO duty shifts and upon any line change;
Environmental conditions while on visual survey (at
beginning and end of PSO shift and whenever conditions changed
significantly), including BSS and any other relevant weather conditions
including cloud cover, fog, sun glare, and overall visibility to the
horizon;
Factors that may have contributed to impaired observations
during each PSO shift change or as needed as environmental conditions
changed (e.g., vessel traffic, equipment malfunctions); and
Survey activity information, such as acoustic source power
output while in operation, number and volume of airguns operating in
the array, tow depth of the array, and any other notes of significance
(i.e., pre-clearance, ramp-up, shutdown, testing, shooting, ramp-up
completion, end of operations, streamers, etc.).
The following information should be recorded upon visual
observation of any protected species:
Watch status (sighting made by PSO on/off effort,
opportunistic, crew, alternate vessel/platform);
PSO who sighted the animal;
Time of sighting;
Vessel location at time of sighting;
Water depth;
Direction of vessel's travel (compass direction);
Direction of animal's travel relative to the vessel;
Pace of the animal;
Estimated distance to the animal and its heading relative
to vessel at initial sighting;
Identification of the animal (e.g., genus/species, lowest
possible taxonomic level, or unidentified) and the composition of the
group if there is a mix of species;
Estimated number of animals (high/low/best);
Estimated number of animals by cohort (adults, yearlings,
juveniles, calves, group composition, etc.);
Description (as many distinguishing features as possible
of each individual seen, including length, shape, color, pattern, scars
or markings, shape and size of dorsal fin, shape of head, and blow
characteristics);
Detailed behavior observations (e.g., number of blows/
breaths, number of surfaces, breaching, spyhopping, diving, feeding,
traveling; as explicit and detailed as possible; note any observed
changes in behavior);
Animal's closest point of approach (CPA) and/or closest
distance from any element of the acoustic source;
Platform activity at time of sighting (e.g., deploying,
recovering, testing, shooting, data acquisition, other); and
Description of any actions implemented in response to the
sighting (e.g., delays, shutdown, ramp-up) and time and location of the
action.
Reporting
A report would be submitted to NMFS within 90 days after the end of
the cruise. The report would describe the operations that were
conducted and sightings of marine mammals near the operations. The
report would provide full documentation of methods, results, and
interpretation pertaining to all monitoring. The 90-day report would
summarize the dates and locations of seismic operations, and all marine
mammal sightings (dates, times, locations, activities, associated
seismic survey activities).
The draft report shall also include geo-referenced time-stamped
vessel tracklines for all time periods during which airguns were
operating. Tracklines should include points recording any change in
airgun status (e.g., when the airguns began operating, when they were
turned off, or when they changed from full array to single gun or vice
versa). GIS files shall be provided in ESRI shapefile format and
include the UTC date and time, latitude in decimal degrees, and
longitude in decimal degrees. All coordinates shall be referenced to
the WGS84 geographic coordinate system. In addition to the report, all
raw observational data shall be made available to NMFS. The report must
summarize the data collected as described above and in the IHA. A final
report must be submitted within 30 days following resolution of any
comments on the draft report.
[[Page 28806]]
Reporting Injured or Dead Marine Mammals
Discovery of injured or dead marine mammals--In the event that
personnel involved in survey activities covered by the authorization
discover an injured or dead marine mammal, the UAGI shall report the
incident to the Office of Protected Resources (OPR), NMFS and to the
NMFS Alaska Regional Stranding Coordinator as soon as feasible. The
report must include the following information:
Time, date, and location (latitude/longitude) of the first
discovery (and updated location information if known and applicable);
Species identification (if known) or description of the
animal(s) involved;
Condition of the animal(s) (including carcass condition if
the animal is dead);
Observed behaviors of the animal(s), if alive;
If available, photographs or video footage of the
animal(s); and
General circumstances under which the animal was
discovered.
Vessel strike--In the event of a ship strike of a marine mammal by
any vessel involved in the activities covered by the authorization,
UAGI shall report the incident to OPR, NMFS and to the NMFS Alaska
Regional Stranding Coordinator as soon as feasible. The report must
include the following information:
Time, date, and location (latitude/longitude) of the
incident;
Vessel's speed during and leading up to the incident;
Vessel's course/heading and what operations were being
conducted (if applicable);
Status of all sound sources in use;
Description of avoidance measures/requirements that were
in place at the time of the strike and what additional measure were
taken, if any, to avoid strike;
Environmental conditions (e.g., wind speed and direction,
Beaufort sea state, cloud cover, visibility) immediately preceding the
strike;
Species identification (if known) or description of the
animal(s) involved;
Estimated size and length of the animal that was struck;
Description of the behavior of the animal immediately
preceding and following the strike;
If available, description of the presence and behavior of
any other marine mammals present immediately preceding the strike;
Estimated fate of the animal (e.g., dead, injured but
alive, injured and moving, blood or tissue observed in the water,
status unknown, disappeared); and
To the extent practicable, photographs or video footage of
the animal(s).
Negligible Impact Analysis and Determination
NMFS has defined negligible impact 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 (50 CFR 216.103). A
negligible impact finding is based on the lack of likely adverse
effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival (i.e., population-
level effects). An estimate of the number of takes alone is not enough
information on which to base an impact determination. In addition to
considering estimates of the number of marine mammals that might be
``taken'' through harassment, NMFS considers other factors, such as the
likely nature of any responses (e.g., intensity, duration), the context
of any responses (e.g., critical reproductive time or location,
migration), as well as effects on habitat, and the likely effectiveness
of the mitigation. We also assess the number, intensity, and context of
estimated takes by evaluating this information relative to population
status. Consistent with the 1989 preamble for NMFS's implementing
regulations (54 FR 40338; September 29, 1989), the impacts from other
past and ongoing anthropogenic activities are incorporated into this
analysis via their impacts on the environmental baseline (e.g., as
reflected in the regulatory status of the species, population size and
growth rate where known, ongoing sources of human-caused mortality, or
ambient noise levels).
To avoid repetition, our analysis applies to all species listed in
Table 1, given that NMFS expects the anticipated effects of the planned
geophysical survey to be similar in nature. Where there are meaningful
differences between species or stocks, or groups of species, in
anticipated individual responses to activities, impact of expected take
on the population due to differences in population status, or impacts
on habitat, NMFS has identified species-specific factors to inform the
analysis.
NMFS does not anticipate that injury, serious injury or mortality
would occur as a result of UAGI's planned survey, even in the absence
of mitigation, and none would be authorized. Similarly, non-auditory
physical effects, stranding, and vessel strike are not expected to
occur. Although a few incidents of Level A harassment were predicted
through the quantitative exposure estimation process (see Estimated
Take), NMFS has determined that this is not a realistic result due to
the small estimated Level A harassment zones for the species (no
greater than approximately 50 m) and the proposed mitigation
requirements, and no Level A harassment is proposed for authorization.
These estimated zones are larger than what would realistically occur,
as discussed in the Estimated Take section. Although no Level A
harassment would be expected to occur even absent mitigation, the
extended distance exclusion zones proposed for bowhead whales further
strengthen this conclusion.
We expect that takes would be in the form of short-term Level B
behavioral harassment in the form of temporary avoidance of the area or
decreased foraging (if such activity were occurring), reactions that
are considered to be of low severity and with no lasting biological
consequences (e.g., Southall et al., 2007, Ellison et al., 2012). The
proposed number of takes for bowhead whales is 2 percent of the
population. We expect this number to be even smaller as the likelihood
of encountering these animals in deep waters in the Northern Arctic
Ocean are slim based on recent telemetry data (Quakenbush, Small &
Citta, 2013).
Marine mammal habitat may be impacted by elevated sound levels, but
these impacts would be temporary. Prey species are mobile and are
broadly distributed throughout the project area; therefore, marine
mammals that may be temporarily displaced during survey activities are
expected to be able to resume foraging once they have moved away from
areas with disturbing levels of underwater noise. Because of the
relatively short duration (30 days) and temporary nature of the
disturbance, the availability of similar habitat and resources in the
surrounding area, the impacts to marine mammals and the food sources
that they utilize are not expected to cause significant or long-term
consequences for individual marine mammals or their populations. No
BIAs, designated critical habitat, or other habitat of known
significance would be impacted by the planned activities.
Negligible Impact Conclusions
The proposed survey would be of short duration (30 days of seismic
operations), and the acoustic ``footprint'' of the proposed survey
would be small relative to the ranges of the marine mammals that would
potentially be affected. Sound levels would increase in
[[Page 28807]]
the marine environment in a relatively small area surrounding the
vessel compared to the range of the marine mammals within the proposed
survey area. Short term exposures to survey operations are expected to
only temporarily affect marine mammal behavior in the form of
avoidance, and the potential for longer-term avoidance of important
areas is limited. Short term exposures to survey operations are not
likely to impact marine mammal behavior, and the potential for longer-
term avoidance of important areas is limited.
The proposed mitigation measures are expected to reduce the number
and/or severity of takes by allowing for detection of marine mammals in
the vicinity of the vessel by visual observers, and by minimizing the
severity of any potential exposures via shutdowns of the airgun array.
NMFS concludes that exposures to marine mammal species and stocks
due to UAGI's proposed survey would result in only short-term
(temporary and short in duration) effects to individuals exposed, over
relatively small areas of the affected animals' ranges. Animals may
temporarily avoid the immediate area, but are not expected to
permanently abandon the area. Major shifts in habitat use,
distribution, or foraging success are not expected. NMFS does not
anticipate the proposed take estimates to impact annual rates of
recruitment or survival.
In summary and as described above, the following factors primarily
support our preliminary determination that the impacts resulting from
this activity are not expected to adversely affect the species or stock
through effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival:
No Level A harassment, serious injury or mortality is
anticipated or proposed to be authorized;
The proposed activity is temporary and of relatively short
duration (30 days);
The anticipated impacts of the proposed activity on marine
mammals would primarily be temporary behavioral changes in the form of
avoidance of the area around the survey vessel;
Location of the survey is further north in the Arctic
Ocean and away from areas where most of the species listed in Table 1
have been observed and is north of summer feeding areas and migratory
routes.
The availability of alternate areas of similar habitat
value for marine mammals to temporarily vacate the survey area during
the proposed survey to avoid exposure to sounds from the activity;
The potential adverse effects on fish or invertebrate
species that serve as prey species for marine mammals from the proposed
survey would be temporary and spatially limited, and impacts to marine
mammal foraging would be minimal; and
The proposed mitigation measures, including visual
monitoring, shutdowns, ramp-up, and prescribed measures based on energy
size are expected to minimize potential impacts to marine mammals (both
amount and severity).
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 proposed monitoring and
mitigation measures, NMFS preliminarily finds that the total marine
mammal take from the proposed activity will have a negligible impact on
all affected marine mammal species or stocks.
Small Numbers
As noted above, only small numbers of incidental take may be
authorized under sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA for
specified activities other than military readiness activities. The MMPA
does not define small numbers and so, in practice, where estimated
numbers are available, NMFS compares the number of individuals taken to
the most appropriate estimation of abundance of the relevant species or
stock in our determination of whether the take is limited to small
numbers of marine mammals. When the predicted number of individuals to
be taken is fewer than one third of the species or stock abundance, the
take is considered to be of small numbers (see 86 Federal Register
5322, 5439 (January 19, 2021). Additionally, other qualitative factors
may be considered in the analysis, such as the temporal or spatial
scale of the activities.
There are several stocks for which there is no currently accepted
stock abundance estimate. These include the fin whale, minke whale,
narwhal, bearded seal, and ringed seal. In those cases, qualitative
factors are used to inform an assessment of whether the likely number
of individual marine mammals taken is appropriately considered small.
We discuss these in further detail below.
For all other stocks (aside from those without accepted abundance
estimates), the proposed take is less than 7% of the best available
stock abundance, well less than the one-third threshold for exceeding
small numbers (and some of those takes may be repeats of the same
individual, thus rendering the actual percentage even lower). We also
acknowledge that, given the location of the planned survey activity
high in the Arctic Ocean, the stock ranges referenced in the SARs do
not always fully overlap the area of the planned survey activity.
However, given the very small percentage of the best available stock
abundance estimates for these species and the likelihood that the
numbers of take proposed for authorization would be very small relative
to any reasonable population abundance estimate, we conclude these
numbers are small.
The stock abundance estimates for fin whale, minke whale, narwhal,
bearded seal and ringed seal stocks that occur in the surveys area are
unknown, according to the latest SARs. Therefore, we reviewed other
scientific information in making our small numbers determinations for
these animals. The abundance estimate of 20,000 minke whales was taken
from the Northwest Pacific and Okhotsk Sea (IWC 2021). In addition, as
noted previously, partial abundance estimates of 1,233 and 2,020 minke
whales are available for shelf and nearshore waters between the Kenai
Peninsula and Amchitka Pass and for the eastern Bering Sea shelf,
respectively. For the minke whale, these partial abundance estimates
alone are sufficient to demonstrate that the proposed take number of 2
is of small numbers. The same surveys produced partial abundance
estimates of 1,652 and 1,061 fin whales, for the same areas,
respectively, which are similarly sufficient to demonstrate that the
proposed take number of 2 is small numbers. The bearded seal estimate
of 125,000 was estimated for the U.S. portion of the Bering Sea (Boveng
et al., 2017) and 155,000 bearded seals for the entire Alaska stock
(Cameron et al., 2010). These partial abundance estimates near the
proposed survey are sufficient to demonstrate that the proposed take
number of 916 seals is small numbers. Similarly, the ringed seal
abundance estimate of 171,418 ringed seals was based on a limited sub-
sample from the Bering Sea (Conn et al., 2014 in Muto et al., 2020).
This minimal abundance estimate for the Alaska region is enough to
demonstrate that a take of 10,373 will be small numbers at 6.05% of the
Bering Sea population. There is no abundance information available for
narwhals. However, the take number is sufficiently small (2) that we
assume that it is small relative to any reasonable assumption of likely
population abundance for the narwhal. Additionally, the proposed survey
area
[[Page 28808]]
encompasses a very small portion of the hypothesized range of the
species.
Based on the analysis contained herein of the proposed activity
(including the proposed mitigation and monitoring measures) and the
anticipated take of marine mammals, NMFS preliminarily finds that small
numbers of marine mammals will be taken relative to the population size
of the affected species or stocks.
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis and Determination
In order to issue an IHA, NMFS must find that the specified
activity will not have an ``unmitigable adverse impact'' on the
subsistence uses of the affected marine mammal species or stocks by
Alaskan Natives. 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.
The coast and nearshore waters of Alaska are of cultural importance
to indigenous peoples for fishing, hunting, gathering, and ceremonial
purposes. Marine mammals are legally hunted in Alaskan waters by
coastal Alaska Natives. There are seven communities in the North Slope
Borough region of Alaska (northwestern and northern Alaska) that
harvest seals, including from west to east Point Hope, Point Lay,
Wainwright, Utqia[gdot]vik, Atqusak, Nuiqsut, and Kaktovik (Ice Seal
Committee 2019). Bearded seals are the preferred species to harvest as
food and for skin boat coverings, but ringed seals are also commonly
taken for food and their blubber (Ice Seal Committee 2019). Ringed
seals are typically harvested during the summer and can extend up to 64
km from shore (Stephen R. Braund & Associates 2010). No ribbon seals
have been harvested in any of the North Slope Borough communities since
the 1960s (Ice Seal Committee 2019). However, the number of seals
harvested each year varies considerably.
A subsistence harvest of bowheads and belugas is also practiced by
Alaskan Natives, providing nutritional and cultural needs. In 2019, 36
bowhead whales were taken during the Alaskan subsistence hunt (Suydam
et al., 2020). Whaling near Utqia[gdot]vik occurs during spring (April
and May) and autumn, and can continue into November, depending on the
quota and conditions. Communities that harvested bowheads during 2019
include Utqia[gdot]vik, Gamgell, Kaktovik, Nuiqsut, Point Hope, Point
Lay, and Wainwright. Bowhead whales and gray whales are also taken in
the aboriginal subsistence hunt in the Russian Federation (Zharikov et
al., 2020). During 2019, 135 gray whales and one bowhead whale were
harvested at Chukotka.
Beluga whales from the eastern Chukchi Sea stock are an important
subsistence resource for residents of the village of Point Lay,
adjacent to Kasegaluk Lagoon, and other villages in northwest Alaska.
Each year, hunters from Point Lay drive belugas into the lagoon to a
traditional hunting location. The belugas have been predictably sighted
near the lagoon from late June through mid to late July (Suydam et al.,
2001). The mean annual number of Beaufort Sea belugas landed by Alaska
Native subsistence hunters in 2011-2015 was 47, and an average of 92
were taken in Canadian waters; the mean annual number of Eastern
Chukchi Sea belugas landed by Alaska Native subsistence hunters in
2011-2015 was 67 (Muto et al., 2020).
The proposed survey by UAGI will occur within ~73.5-81.0 [deg]N,
~139.5-168 [deg]W and over 300 km from the Alaska coastline. Due to the
location of the survey being far north in the Arctic and over 200
kilometers from any hunting area or buffer (https://www.north-slope.org/assets/images/uploads/bowhead%20migration%20map%2021mar03%20distribution.pdf), no impacts on
the availability of marine mammals for subsistence uses are expected to
occur. Specifically, based on the survey methods and location proposed,
there is no reason to believe that there will be any behavioral
disturbance of bowhead whales that would also impact their behavior in
a manner that would interfere with subsistence use later. Although
fishing/hunting would not be precluded in the survey area, a safe
distance would need to be kept from R/V Sikuliaq and the towed seismic
equipment. The principal investigator for the survey has presented the
proposed action to the Alaska Eskimo Whaling Commission (AEWC) at the
July 2020, October 2020, and February 2021 Triannual Meetings. As
specifically noted, during the meetings, daily email communications
with interested community members would be made from the vessel.
Communication may include notice of any unusual marine mammal
observations during the survey. Any potential space use conflicts would
be further avoided through direct communication with subsistence
fishers/hunters during the surveys. Considering the limited time that
the planned seismic surveys would take place and the far offshore
location of the surveys, no direct interaction with subsistence
fishers/hunters would be anticipated. However, UAGI will still be
required to remain in constant communication with subsistence fishers/
hunters during the surveys.
Based on the description of the specified activity, the measures
described to minimize adverse effects on the availability of marine
mammals for subsistence purposes, and the proposed mitigation and
monitoring measures, NMFS has preliminarily determined that there will
not be an unmitigable adverse impact on subsistence uses from UAGI's
proposed activities.
Endangered Species Act
Section 7(a)(2) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA: 16
U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) requires that each Federal agency insure that any
action it authorizes, funds, or carries out is not likely to jeopardize
the continued existence of any endangered or threatened species or
result in the destruction or adverse modification of designated
critical habitat. To ensure ESA compliance for the issuance of IHAs,
NMFS consults internally whenever we propose to authorize take for
endangered or threatened species.
NMFS is proposing to authorize take of bowhead whales, fin whales,
bearded seals and ringed seals, which are listed under the ESA.
OPR Permits and Conservation Division has requested initiation of
Section 7 consultation with the OPR Endangered Species Act Interagency
Cooperation Division for the issuance of this IHA. NMFS will conclude
the ESA consultation prior to reaching a determination regarding the
proposed issuance of the authorization.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary determinations, NMFS proposes to
issue an IHA to UAGI for conducting geophysical surveys in the Arctic
in August and September, 2021, provided the previously mentioned
mitigation, monitoring, and reporting requirements are incorporated. A
draft of the proposed IHA can be found at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/permit/incidental-take-authorizations-under-
marine-mammal-protection-act.
[[Page 28809]]
Request for Public Comments
We request comment on our analyses, the proposed authorization, and
any other aspect of this notice of proposed IHA for the proposed
geophysical surveys. We also request at this time comment on the
potential Renewal of this proposed IHA as described in the paragraph
below. Please include with your comments any supporting data or
literature citations to help inform decisions on the request for this
IHA or a subsequent renewal IHA.
On a case-by-case basis, NMFS may issue a one-time, one-year
renewal IHA following notice to the public providing an additional 15
days for public comments when (1) up to another year of identical or
nearly identical, or nearly identical, activities as described in the
Description of Proposed Activity section of this notice is planned or
(2) the activities as described in the Description of Proposed Activity
section of this notice would not be completed by the time the IHA
expires and a renewal would allow for completion of the activities
beyond that described in the Dates and Duration section of this notice,
provided all of the following conditions are met:
A request for renewal is received no later than 60 days
prior to the needed renewal IHA effective date (recognizing that the
renewal IHA expiration date cannot extend beyond one year from
expiration of the initial IHA).
The request for renewal must include the following:
(1) An explanation that the activities to be conducted under the
requested renewal IHA are identical to the activities analyzed under
the initial IHA, are a subset of the activities, or include changes so
minor (e.g., reduction in pile size) that the changes do not affect the
previous analyses, mitigation and monitoring requirements, or take
estimates (with the exception of reducing the type or amount of take).
(2) A preliminary monitoring report showing the results of the
required monitoring to date and an explanation showing that the
monitoring results do not indicate impacts of a scale or nature not
previously analyzed or authorized.
Upon review of the request for renewal, the status of the affected
species or stocks, and any other pertinent information, NMFS determines
that there are no more than minor changes in the activities, the
mitigation and monitoring measures will remain the same and
appropriate, and the findings in the initial IHA remain valid.
Dated: May 25, 2021.
Catherine Marzin,
Acting Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2021-11339 Filed 5-27-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P