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- W3031991570 abstract "Much of the current regulation and mitigation of the effects of anthropogenic sound is based on a very limited dataset. Future regulation and mitigation must be approached from the perspective of the animals. Which sounds affect the animals adversely, and what is the nature of these effects? Considerable data (and funding to get that data) is needed, particularly for fishes and invertebrates, before regulation and mitigation can be properly applied. Regulators and investigators should work together to develop a plan of action that focuses on the most important questions, to inform ways to protect animals and develop appropriate mitigation and regulation, and to inform the most effective way(s) to answer those questions. Future work should focus on a limited number of species, key research questions, and experimental approaches that allow easy comparison of data across studies, species, and sound sources. Anthropogenic (man-made) sound has the potential to harm marine biota. Increasing concerns about these effects have led to regulation and mitigation, despite there being few data on which to base environmental management, especially for fishes and invertebrates. We argue that regulation and mitigation should always be developed by looking at potential effects from the perspectives of the animals and ecosystems exposed to the sounds. We contend that there is currently a need for far more data on which to base regulation and mitigation, as well as for deciding on future research priorities. This will require a process whereby regulators and researchers come together to identify and implement a strategy that links key scientific and regulatory questions. Anthropogenic (man-made) sound has the potential to harm marine biota. Increasing concerns about these effects have led to regulation and mitigation, despite there being few data on which to base environmental management, especially for fishes and invertebrates. We argue that regulation and mitigation should always be developed by looking at potential effects from the perspectives of the animals and ecosystems exposed to the sounds. We contend that there is currently a need for far more data on which to base regulation and mitigation, as well as for deciding on future research priorities. This will require a process whereby regulators and researchers come together to identify and implement a strategy that links key scientific and regulatory questions. the relationship between the sound exposure level and the magnitude of the response (e.g., effect). changes caused by sound exposure that are a departure from a prior state, condition, or situation, which is called the ‘baseline’ condition (from [39.Hawkins A.D. et al.How to set sound exposure criteria for fishes.J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 2020; 147: 1762-1777Crossref PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar]). biologically significant effects (see definition) that reflect a change whose direction, magnitude, and/or duration is sufficient to have consequences for the fitness of individual fish or populations of fishes (from [39.Hawkins A.D. et al.How to set sound exposure criteria for fishes.J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 2020; 147: 1762-1777Crossref PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar]). when an event or situation has a knock-on effect, it causes other events or situations, but not directly. the effect whereby an unwanted sound (the masker) decreases the ability to detect a wanted sound. For example, background sound in a restaurant decreases the ability of one person to hear the speech of another. the act of reducing harmful effects, in this case from exposure to underwater sound. an action that is done to prevent something unpleasant or dangerous happening. the systematic process of evaluating the potential risks imposed by an activity or project. changes to the characteristics and levels of the sounds that are emitted, either directly at the source or between the source and marine life (e.g., using gas bubbles to absorb sound)." @default.
- W3031991570 created "2020-06-05" @default.
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- W3031991570 date "2020-09-01" @default.
- W3031991570 modified "2023-10-09" @default.
- W3031991570 title "Taking the Animals’ Perspective Regarding Anthropogenic Underwater Sound" @default.
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- W3031991570 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2020.05.002" @default.
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