Oil and gas exploration surveys use air gun arrays towed behind vessels. To penetrate ocean waters and deep into the seafloor, multiple sound devices are blasted at the same time.
Seismic Surveys like those proposed by the federal federal government this week will be used exclusively for finding oil and gas deposits in the Atlantic Ocean.
Here’s a map that shows an 115,000 square mile area (small circle) wherein noise intensities can be increased by 20 decibels (more than 100x more intense sound) when surveying is happening.
That's quite a lot.
That's quite a lot.
The larger circle represents the farthest distance (1,864 miles
(3,000 km)) away from a survey vessel that seismic surveys have been recorded. In other words, you can record seismic survey blasts in Virginia as far away as Venezuela.
So, over that area, what are the impacts on the ecosystem?
So, over that area, what are the impacts on the ecosystem?
Over 700 fish species produce low frequency sounds: sea turtles, Squid, octopus, shrimp, crab, and even coral and fish
larvae have been found to respond to sound. In the ocean, hearing and sound are
vital to life as sound is used for everything from migration to reproduction and feeding.
Noise pollution from seismic surveys can interfere with
communication, stress, cause loss of hearing and disorientation, injure, and in
severe cases be fatal to sealife. Air gun blasts can disrupt animal behavior
such as mating, nursing or migration, and affect their ability to detect prey
and avoid being eaten. The industrial noise rising in many coastal regions has
been compared by scientists to a continuous fog that is shrinking the sensory
range of marine animals
The North Atlantic right whale is one of the most vulnerable
endangered species, as the small population is already under pressure from ship
strikes and traffic noise. Proposed seismic surveys could impact the right
whale’s calving grounds off Florida and Georgia and migration route through the
Mid-Atlantic. Endangered whales have been found to stop vocalizing in response
to seismic surveys in a 100,000 sq mile area.
Commercial fishing catch rates have been decreased by 40-80
% over thousands of square kilometers around a single airgun array. Fishermen
in some parts of the world are seeking and getting industry compensation for
their losses.
Air gun surveys used in oil exploration have
devastating environmental impacts and harm marine life and are inconsistent
with national ocean policies and laws to protect marine life.
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