SMRU Consulting, Scottish Oceans Institute, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, UK.
Southeast Asia Marine Mammal Research, Hong Kong, Hong Kong.
J Anim Ecol. 2022 Oct;91(10):1948-1960. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13787. Epub 2022 Aug 9.
The assessment of behavioural disturbance in cetacean species (e.g. resulting from exposure to anthropogenic sources such as military sonar, seismic surveys, or pile driving) is important for effective conservation and management. Disturbance effects can be informed by Behavioural Response Studies (BRSs), involving either controlled exposure experiments (CEEs) where noise exposure conditions are presented deliberately to meet experimental objectives or in opportunistic contexts where ongoing activities are monitored in a strategic manner. In either context, animal-borne sensors or in situ observations can provide information on individual exposure and disturbance responses. The past 15 years of research have greatly expanded our understanding of behavioural responses to noise, including hundreds of experiments in nearly a dozen cetacean species. Many papers note limited sample sizes, required knowledge of baseline behaviour prior to exposure and the importance of contextual factors modulating behavioural responses, all of which in combination can lead to sampling biases, even for well-designed research programs. It is critical to understand these biases to robustly identify responses. This ensures outcomes of BRSs help inform predictions of how anthropogenic disturbance impacts individuals and populations. Our approach leverages concepts from the animal behaviour literature focused on helping to avoid sampling bias by considering what shapes an animal's response. These factors include social, experience, genetic and natural changes in responsiveness. We developed and applied a modified version of this framework to synthesise current knowledge on cetacean response in the context of effects observed across marine and terrestrial taxa. This new 'Sampling, Exposure, Receptor' framework (SERF) identifies 43 modulating factors, highlights potential biases, and assesses how these vary across selected focal species. In contrast to studies that identified variation in 'Exposure' factors as a key concern, our analysis indicated that factors relating to 'Sampling' (e.g. deploying tags on less evasive individuals, which biases selection of subjects), and 'Receptor' (e.g. health status or coping style) have the greatest potential for weakening the desired broad representativeness of BRSs. Our assessment also highlights how potential biases could be addressed with existing datasets or future developments.
评估鲸目动物物种(例如,由于暴露于人为源,如军事声纳、地震调查或打桩)的行为干扰非常重要,这有助于有效的保护和管理。行为反应研究(BRS)可以提供干扰效应信息,涉及到有控制的暴露实验(CEE)或机会性监测,前者是指故意呈现噪声暴露条件以满足实验目标,后者是指以战略性的方式监测正在进行的活动。在这两种情况下,动物携带的传感器或现场观察都可以提供关于个体暴露和干扰反应的信息。过去 15 年的研究极大地扩展了我们对噪声行为反应的理解,包括近 12 种鲸目动物的数百项实验。许多论文都指出样本量有限、在暴露前需要了解基线行为以及调节行为反应的上下文因素的重要性,所有这些因素结合起来都会导致采样偏差,即使是对于设计良好的研究计划也是如此。了解这些偏差对于稳健地识别反应至关重要。这确保了 BRS 的结果有助于预测人为干扰如何影响个体和种群。我们的方法利用了动物行为文献中的概念,这些概念侧重于通过考虑影响动物反应的因素来帮助避免采样偏差。这些因素包括社会、经验、遗传和响应的自然变化。我们开发并应用了该框架的一个修改版本,以综合当前关于鲸目动物反应的知识,同时考虑到海洋和陆地生物分类群中观察到的影响。这个新的“采样、暴露、受体”框架(SERF)确定了 43 个调节因素,突出了潜在的偏差,并评估了这些因素在选定的重点物种中如何变化。与那些将“暴露”因素的变化视为关键问题的研究不同,我们的分析表明,与“采样”(例如,将标签贴在不易回避的个体上,这会偏向于选择研究对象)和“受体”(例如,健康状况或应对方式)相关的因素最有可能削弱 BRS 所需的广泛代表性。我们的评估还强调了如何利用现有数据集或未来的发展来解决潜在的偏差问题。