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Animals exposed to anthropogenic disturbance make trade-offs between perceived risk and the cost of leaving disturbed areas. Impact assessments tend to focus on overt behavioural responses leading to displacement, but trade-offs may also impact individual energy budgets through reduced foraging performance. Previous studies found no evidence for broad-scale displacement of harbour porpoises exposed to impulse noise from a 10 day two-dimensional seismic survey. Here, we used an array of passive acoustic loggers coupled with calibrated noise measurements to test whether the seismic survey influenced the activity patterns of porpoises remaining in the area. We showed that the probability of recording a buzz declined by 15% in the ensonified area and was positively related to distance from the source vessel. We also estimated received levels at the hydrophones and characterized the noise response curve. Our results demonstrate how environmental impact assessments can be developed to assess more subtle effects of noise disturbance on activity patterns and foraging efficiency.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2013.1090 | DOI Listing |
Sci Data
August 2025
School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Short-term seismicity forecasting models are increasingly developed and deployed for Operational Earthquake Forecasting (OEF) by government agencies and research institutions worldwide. To ensure their reliability, these forecasts must be rigorously tested against future observations in a fully prospective manner, allowing researchers to quantify model performance and build confidence in their predictive capabilities. The Collaboratory for the Study of Earthquake Predictability (CSEP) operated twenty-five fully automated M ≥ 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIsotopes Environ Health Stud
August 2025
Department of Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Radon (Rn), a naturally occurring radioactive gas, is the byproduct of the uranium decay series. As a naturally radioactive gas, radon is frequently used as a geophysical tracer to find underground faults and geological formations, in uranium surveys, and to forecast seismic events. Abnormalities in radon time-series (RTS) data have been studied before seismic events, indicating that it may act as an earthquake precursor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnergy extraction and development are fragmenting the landscape in Canada's oil sands region, creating patches of boreal forest connected by millions of kilometers of cleared linear features. The impacts of oil and gas disturbance on some wildlife species, like caribou and wolves, have been a topic of much research; yet, the influence of energy development on other species, like coyotes-which have recently expanded into the boreal forest and established strong populations-is not well understood. Here, we assessed the effects of linear features on coyote distribution and interspecific interactions by deploying camera traps across multiple landscapes of varying energy disturbance intensities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEntropy (Basel)
June 2025
Departamento de Física, Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, Avenida España 01680, Valparaíso 2390123, Chile.
We introduce a novel entropy-related function, non-repeatability, designed to capture dynamical behaviors in complex systems. Its normalized form, mutability, has been previously applied in statistical physics as a dynamical entropy measure associated with any observable stored in a sequential file. We now extend this concept by calculating the sorted mutability for the same data file previously ordered by increasing or decreasing value.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
July 2025
Universidad Industrial de Santander, Carrera 27 Calle 9, Bucaramanga, 680002 Santander, Colombia.
The factors controlling the spatial distribution and temporal evolution of earthquake swarms in volcanic systems remain unclear. We leverage leading-edge deep learning algorithms and a detailed three-dimensional velocity model to construct a 15-year high-resolution earthquake catalog of the Yellowstone caldera region. More than half of the region's earthquakes are clustered into swarm-like families characterized by episodes of hypocenter expansion and migration.
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