Research finds that Navy Growler jet noise can reach endangered orca pods at least 100 feet underwater!

The peer-reviewed study, “Above and below: Military aircraft noise in air and under water at Whidbey Island,” was published in the Journal of Marine Science and Engineering on Nov. 16. The researchers placed a sound monitoring device in 100 feet of water off the end of a Naval Air Station Whidbey Island runway, as well as an above-ground instrument at a park next to the base.

The Research:

“Above and below: Military aircraft noise in air and under water at Whidbey Island”

Lauren M. Kuehne, Christine Erbe, Erin Ashe, Laura T. Bogaard, Marena Salerno Collins, & Rob Williams

Published November 16, 2020 to the Journal of Marine Science and Engineering

READ THE STUDY

Abstract

Military operations may result in noise impacts on surrounding communities and wildlife. A recent transition to more powerful military aircraft and a national consolidation of training operations to Whidbey Island, WA, USA, provided a unique opportunity to measure and assess both in-air and underwater noise associated with military aircraft. In-air noise levels (110 ± 4 dB re 20 µPa rms and 107 ± 5 dBA) exceeded known thresholds of behavioral and physiological impacts for humans, as well as terrestrial birds and mammals. Importantly, we demonstrate that the number and cumulative duration of daily overflights exceed those in a majority of studies that have evaluated impacts of noise from military aircraft worldwide. Using a hydrophone deployed near one runway, we also detected sound signatures of aircraft at a depth of 30 m below the sea surface, with noise levels (134 ± 3 dB re 1 µPa rms) exceeding thresholds known to trigger behavioral changes in fish, seabirds, and marine mammals, including Endangered Southern Resident killer whales. Our study highlights challenges and problems in evaluating the implications of increased noise pollution from military operations, and knowledge gaps that should be prioritized with respect to understanding impacts on people and sensitive wildlife.

Learn more about Growler impacts on endangered Southern Resident Orcas:

ZINE: Orcas & Growlers
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