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Blue whale response to earthquakes supplementary figures and tables from Shaken, not stirred: blue whales show no acoustic response to earthquake events

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Version 2 2022-07-15, 15:30
Version 1 2022-06-29, 07:53
journal contribution
posted on 2022-07-15, 15:30 authored by Dawn R. Barlow, Mateo Estrada Jorge, Holger Klinck, Leigh G. Torres
Quantifying how animals respond to disturbance events bears relevance for understanding consequences to population health. We investigate whether blue whales respond acoustically to naturally occurring episodic noise by examining calling before and after earthquakes (27 040 calls, 32 earthquakes; 27 January–29 June 2016). Two vocalization types were evaluated: New Zealand blue whale song and D calls. Blue whales did not alter the number of D calls, D call received level or song intensity following earthquakes (paired t-tests, p > 0.7 for all). Linear models accounting for earthquake strength and proximity revealed significant relationships between change in calling activity surrounding earthquakes and prior calling activity (D calls: R2 = 0.277, p < 0.0001; song: R2 = 0.080, p = 0.028); however, this same relationship was true for ‘null’ periods without earthquakes (D calls: R2 = 0.262, p < 0.0001; song: R2 = 0.149, p = 0.0002), indicating that the pattern is driven by blue whale calling context regardless of earthquake presence. Our findings that blue whales do not respond to episodic natural noise provide context for interpreting documented acoustic responses to anthropogenic noise sources, including shipping traffic and petroleum development, indicating that they potentially evolved tolerance for natural noise sources but not novel noise from anthropogenic origins.

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