Journal article
Underwater noise from airplanes An overlooked source of ocean noise
Christine Erbe Rob Williams Miles Parsons Sylvia K Parsons I Gede Hendrawan I Made Iwan Dewantama
Volume : 137 Nomor : 0 Published : 2018, December
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Abstrak
The effects of underwater noise pollution on marine life are of increasing concern. Research and management have focussed on the strongest underwater sound sources. Aerial sound sources have understandably been ignored as sound transmits poorly across the air-water interface. However, there might be situations when air-borne noise cannot be dismissed. Commercial passenger airplanes were recorded in a coastal underwater soundscape exhibiting broadband received levels of 84–132?dB re 1??Pa rms. Power spectral density levels of airplane noise underwater exceeded ambient levels between 12?Hz and 2 or 10?kHz (depending on site) by up to 36?dB. Underwater noise from airplanes is expected to be audible to a variety of marine fauna, including seals, manatees, and dolphins. With many of the world's airports lying close to the coast, it is cautioned that airplane noise not be ignored, in particular in the case of at-risk species in small, confined habitats.