Dear colleagues,
We are pleased to announce the publication of a new paper in JASA-Express 
Letters that may be of interest to members of the marine mammal research 
community.

Erbe, C., A. MacGillivray, and R. Williams. 2012. Mapping cumulative noise from 
shipping to inform marine spatial planning. The Journal of the Acoustical 
Society of America 132:EL423-EL428.

Abstract:

Including ocean noise in marine spatial planning requires predictions of noise 
levels on large spatiotemporal scales. Based on a simple sound transmission 
model and ship track data (Automatic Identification System, AIS), cumulative 
underwater acoustic energy from shipping was mapped throughout 2008 in the west 
Canadian Exclusive Economic Zone, showing high noise levels in critical 
habitats for endangered resident killer whales, exceeding limits of “good 
conservation status” under the EU Marine Strategy Framework Directive. Error 
analysis proved that rough calculations of noise occurrence and propagation can 
form a basis for management processes, because spending resources on 
unnecessary detail is wasteful and delays remedial action.

The paper is available from:
http://asadl.org/jasa/resource/1/jasman/v132/i5/pEL423_s1

Apologies for cross-posting.

Sincerely,
Rob Williams



---
Dr Rob Williams
Marie Curie Research Fellow
Sea Mammal Research Unit
School of Biology
University of St Andrews

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