Marine mammals and sonar: Dose-response studies, the risk-disturbance hypothesis and the role of exposure context Article

Harris, Catriona M, Thomas, Len, Falcone, Erin A et al. (2018). Marine mammals and sonar: Dose-response studies, the risk-disturbance hypothesis and the role of exposure context . JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 55(1), 396-404. 10.1111/1365-2664.12955

Open Access International Collaboration

cited authors

  • Harris, Catriona M; Thomas, Len; Falcone, Erin A; Hildebrand, John; Houser, Dorian; Kvadsheim, Petter H; Lam, Frans-Peter A; Miller, Patrick JO; Moretti, David J; Read, Andrew J; Slabbekoorn, Hans; Southall, Brandon L; Tyack, Peter L; Wartzok, Douglas; Janik, Vincent M

sustainable development goals

publication date

  • January 1, 2018

published in

keywords

  • BEAKED-WHALE
  • BEHAVIORAL-RESPONSES
  • Biodiversity & Conservation
  • Biodiversity Conservation
  • Ecology
  • Environmental Sciences & Ecology
  • FINNED PILOT WHALES
  • FORAGING BEHAVIOR
  • GLOBICEPHALA-MELAS
  • KILLER WHALES
  • Life Sciences & Biomedicine
  • PORPOISE PHOCOENA-PHOCOENA
  • SOUND EXPOSURE
  • SPERM-WHALES
  • STARTLE REFLEX
  • Science & Technology
  • anthropogenic noise
  • anti-predator response
  • behavioural response
  • cetaceans
  • dose-response
  • human disturbance
  • impact assessment
  • marine mammals
  • sonar

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

publisher

  • WILEY

start page

  • 396

end page

  • 404

volume

  • 55

issue

  • 1