We are pleased to report publication of our paper:

Southall et al. (2026). Behavioral responses of goose-beaked whales (Ziphius 
cavirostris) to simulated military. Ecosphere 
https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70501.

The paper is open-access, and you can find it here: 
https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ecs2.70501

Abstract

We report direct measurements of changes in diving and movement behavior for 53 
goose-beaked whales (Ziphius cavirostris) in relation to experimentally 
controlled mid-frequency (3–4 kHz) active sonar (MFAS) signals. These signals 
simulate powerful Navy sources that have been associated with multiple mortal 
stranding events for this species. We deployed a multi-scale combination of 
tags to monitor individual whales, including 50 long-duration (weeks), 
coarse-resolution satellite-transmitting tags and 3 short-duration (hours), 
high-resolution archival depth, orientation, and acoustic tags. We evaluated 
behavioral responses during 13 experimental trials (9 MFAS; 4 no-MFAS 
controls), resulting in 72 exposure events; some individuals were exposed in 
multiple trials. Whales were exposed at known and modeled horizontal ranges 
from ~2 to >200 km and from below ambient noise levels to received levels (RLs) 
up to ~142 dB re: 1μPa (root-mean-square [RMS]). We investigated changes in 
diving and movement behavior separately, with a suite of metrics, descriptive 
evaluations, and statistical tests. We observed similar patterns and 
probabilities of behavioral changes for control trials and the lowest RL 
conditions (<100 dB). Above 100 dB RLs, increasingly prevalent and consistent 
responses occurred, including extended deep dives, prolonged periods between 
deep dives, directed spatial movement away from the source, and cessation of 
echolocation. Aspects of these cryptic responses typically persisted for hours 
following exposure but did not result in broad-scale habitat abandonment. Our 
study builds upon experimental and observational studies conducted on sonar 
testing ranges and expands our understanding of the response of this species to 
MFAS in a region where operational sonar use occurs far less commonly than on 
Navy testing ranges. These data are directly applicable in the conservation and 
effective management of this sensitive, protected species.

Andy Read ([email protected])
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