INDICE: 1. Noise and Marine Life: Progress From Nyborg to Cork in Science and Technology to Inform Decision Making. Brandon L. Southall. 2. Listening Backward – Early Days of Marine Bioacoustics. William N. Tavolga. Section 2 – Sound Detection by Aquatic Animals. 3. Effects of Underwater Noise on Marine Mammals. Christine Erbe. 4. Psychophysical Studies of Auditory Masking in Marine Mammals: Key Concepts and New Directions. Colleen Reichmuth. 5. On the Relationship Between Environmental Noise, Critical Ratios, and Comodulation Masking Release in the Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus). Brian K. Branstetter, Jennifer S. Trickey, and James J. Finneran. 6. Direct Measurements of SubjectiveLoudness in a Bottlenose Dolphin. Carolyn E. Schlundt and James J. Finneran. 7. High Auditory Time Resolution in Bottlenose Dolphins Is Effective Protection Against Reverberation. Gennadi Zaslavski. 8. Frequency Selectivity in the Bottlenose Dolphin Auditory System. Gennadi Zaslavski. 9. Auditory Brain Stem Responses Associated with Echolocation in an Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus). Songhai Li, Paul E. Nachtigall, and Marlee Breese. 10. Hearing,Noise, and Echolocating Odontocetes. Paul E.Nachtigall, Alexander Y. Supin, and Marlee Breese. 11. Evoked Potential Audiometry in Aquatic Mammals. Alexander Y. Supin. 12. Prediction of a Mysticete Audiogram via Finite Element Analysis of the Middle Ear. Andrew Tubelli, Aleks Zosuls, Darlene Ketten, and David C. Mountain. 13. Reverse Engineering the Cetacean Ear to Extract Audiograms. Aleks Zosuls, Seth O. Newburg, Darlene R. Ketten, and David C. Mountain. 14. Validation of a Vibroacoustic Finite Element Model Using Bottlenose Dolphin Experiments. Petr Krysl, Vanessa Trijoulet, and Ted W. Cranford. 15. Acoustic Function in the Peripheral Auditory System of Cuvier’s Beaked Whale (Ziphius cavirostris). Ted W. Cranford and Petr Krysl. 16. Auditory Evoked Potential Measurement of Hearing Sensitivity in Pinnipeds. Jason Mulsow, Colleen Reichmuth, Dorian Houser, and James J. Finneran. 17. Hearing in Birds: What Changes From Air to Water . Robert J. Dooling and Sara C. Therrien. 18. Amphibious Hearing in Sea Turtles. Wendy E. Dow Piniak, David A. Mann, Scott A. Eckert, and Craig A. Harms. 19. Hearing Capabilities of Loggerhead Sea Turtles (Caretta caretta) Throughout Ontogeny. Ashley L. Lavender, Soraya M. Bartol, and Ian K. Bartol. 20. Are Sharks Even Bothered by a Noisy Environment?. Brandon M. Casper, MicheleB. Halvorsen, and Arthur N. Popper. 21. Optimal Auditory Sensitivity Under Variable Background Noise Conditions: A Theoretical Model. Marco Lugli. 22. A Critical Reevaluation of the Role of Acoustic Pressure in Source Localization byFish. Peter H. Rogers, James S. Martin, and John R. Bogle. 23. Vibration of the Otoliths in a Teleost. Carl R. Schilt, Ted W. Cranford, Petr Krysl, Robert E. Shadwick, and Anthony D. Hawkins. 24. Hearing Sensitivity of the Painted Goby, Pomatoschistus pictus. Marta Bolgan, Silvia S. Pedroso, Raquel O. Vasconcelos, Joana M. Jordão, M. Clara P. Amorim, and Paulo J. Fonseca. 25. Acoustic Communication in Pomatoschistus spp.: A Comparison Between Closely Related Species. Silvia S. Pedroso, Marta Bolgan, Joana M. Jordão, Paulo J. Fonseca, and M. Clara P. Amorim. 26. The Importance of Hearing for Survival of Danio rerio (Zebrafish) in an Experimental Predator/Prey Environment . Rikke Agner Jørgensen, Christian Brandt, Magnus Wahlberg, and Jakob Christensen-Dalsgaard. 27. Lateral Line Canal Morphology and Noise Reduction. Adrian T. Klein and Horst Bleckmann. 28. Potential for Sound Sensitivity in Cephalopods . T. Aran Mooney, Roger Hanlon, Peter T. Madsen, Jakob Christensen-Dalsgaard, Darlene R. Ketten, and Paul E. Nachtigall. 29. Listening in Noise. Richard R. Fay. 30. Discovery of Sound in the Sea: An On-line Resource. Kathleen J. Vigness-Raposa, Gail Scowcroft, James H. Miller, and Darlene Ketten. Section 3 - Sound Production by Aquatic Animals. 31. Whistles of Bottlenose Dolphins: Group Repertoires and Geographic Variations in Brazilian Waters. Lisa S. Hoffmann, Elton Ferlin, Pedro F. Fruet, Rodrigo C. Genovês, Fernanda P. Valdez, Juliana Di Tullio, Glauco Caon, and Thales R. Freitas. 32. Detection and Classification of Vocalizations for the Study of Marine Mammal Distributions in the Chukchi Sea. David Hannay. 33. Acoustic Ecology and Behavior of Minke Whales in the Hawaiian and Marianas Islands: Localization, Abundance Estimation and Characterization of Minke Whale ”Boings”. Thomas Norris, Stephen Martin, Len Thomas, Tina Yack, Julie N. Oswald, Eva-Marie Nosal, and Vincent Janik. 34. What You See Is Not What You Hear: The Relationship Between Odontocete Echolocation Click Production and Hearing. Laura N. Kloepper, Paul E. Nachtigall, and Marlee Breese. 35. Sound Production and Reception in Southern Sea Otters (Enhydra lutris nereis). Asila Ghoul and Colleen Reichmuth. 36. Nocturnal Acoustic Activity in the Shallow Waters of the WWF-Miramare Natural Marine Reserve (Trieste, Italy) . Antonio Codarin, Marta Picciulin, Linda Sebastianutto, Giuliana Calcagno, Maurizio Spoto, and Enrico A. Ferrero. 37. Acoustic Ecology of the California Mantis Shrimp (Hemisquilla californiensis). Erica R. Staaterman, Christopher W. Clark, Austin J. Gallagher, Thomas Claverie, Maya S. deVries, and Sheila N. Patek. 38. Influence of Turbidity on the Incidence of Sound Production in Atlantic Croaker (Micropogonias undulatus) in Pamlico Sound, North Carolina. Cecilia S. Krahforst, JohnP. Walsh, Mark W. Sprague, Devon O. Eulie, D. Reide Corbett, and Joseph J. Luczkovich. 39. Propagation of Lusitanian Toadfish Sounds in Estuarine Shallow Waters. Andreia Ramos, M. Clara P. Amorim, and Paulo J. Fonseca. 40. Sound Production in Some Physostomous Fish Species and Effects of Biological Sounds on Fish. Michail Y. Kuznetsov and Yury A. Kuznetsov. 41. Is Biological Sound Production Important in the Deep Sea?. Rodney A. Rountree, Francis Juanes, CliffordA. Goudey, and Kenneth E. Ekstrom. 42. Unusual and Unexpected Biological Noisemakers in the Irish Sea and St. George’s Channel. Rodney Coates, Gillian A. Coates, Rachel Porter, Andrew Davies, and Dylan Evans. Section 4 - Physiological Effects of Sounds . 43. Noise-Induced Hearing Loss: From Animal Models to Human Trials . Colleen G. Le Prell. 44. Auditory Effects of Underwater Noise in Odontocetes. James J. Finneran. 45. Implementation of Acoustic Dosimeters WithRecoverable Month-Long GPS/TDR Tags to Interpret Controlled-Exposure Experiments for Large Whales. Bruce R. Mate. 46. Marine Mammal Auditory System Noise Impacts: Evidence and Incidence. Darlene R. Ketten. 47. Effect of Broadband Sounds on the Auditory Evoked Potential Thresholds in the Beluga Whale. Vladimir V. Popov and Alexander Y. Supin. 48. The ESME Workbench: Simulating the Impactof Anthropogenic Sound on Marine Mammals. David C. Mountain, David Anderson, Andrew Brughera, Matthew Cross, Dorian S. Houser, Nael Musleh, Michael Porter,and Martin Siderius. 49. Using EarLab to Study Masking Due to Anthropogenic Sound. David C. Mountain, David Anderson, and Andrew Brughera. 50. Portable Auditory Evoked Potential System to Assess Odontocete Hearing. Aude F. Pacini, Paul E. Nachtigall, and Laura N. Kloepper. 51. Barotrauma in Fish and BarotraumaMetrics. Thomas J. Carlson. 52. Assessment of Barotrauma Injury and Cumulative Sound Exposure Level on Salmon After Exposure to Impulsive Sound. Michele B.Halvorsen, Brandon M. Casper, Thomas J. Carlson, Christa M. Woodley, and Arthur N. Popper. 53. Shipboard Assessment of Hearing Sensitivity of Tropical Fishes Immediately After Exposure to Seismic Air Gun Emissions at Scott Reef. Mardi C. Hastings and Jennifer Miksis-Olds. 54. A Lack of Correlation Between Air Gun Signal Pressure Waveforms and Fish Hearing Damage. Robert D. McCauley and Chandra Salgado Kent. 55. Effects of Short- and Long-Term Exposure to Boat Noise on Cortisol Levels in Juvenile Fish. Ilaria Spiga, Joe Fox, and Robert Benson. 56. Potential Effects of Long-Term Exposure to Boat Noise on the Growth, Survival, and Nutrient Retention in Juvenile Fish. Ilaria Spiga, Joe Fox, and Robert Benson. 57. Predicting Hearing Loss in Fishes. Michael E. Smith. 58. Effects of Pile-Driving Noise on Oncorhynchus mykiss (Steelhead Trout). Richard Oestman and Christopher J. Earle. Section 5 - Anthropogenic Sounds and Behavior. 59. Controlled Exposure Study of Dolphins and Sea Lions to Midfrequency Sonarlike Signals. Dorian Houser, Laura Yeates, Daniel Crocker, Stephen W. Martin,and James J. Finneran. 60. A Direct Comparison of Bottlenose Dolphin and Common Dolphin Behavior During Seismic Surveys When Air Guns Are and Are Not BeingUtilized . Sarah B. Barry, Anna C. Cucknell, and Nicola Clark. 61. BehavioralReactions of Harbor Porpoise to Pile-Driving Noise. Jakob Tougaard, Line A. Kyhn, Mats Amundin, Daniel Wennerberg, and Carolina Bordin. 62. Effects of Offshore Pile Driving on Harbor Porpoises (Phocoena phocoena). Miriam J. Brandt, Ansgar Diederichs, Klaus Betke, and Georg Nehls. 63. Evaluating the Effects of Offshore Pile Driving on Phocoena phocoena (Harbor Porpoise) by Using Passive Acoustic Monitoring. Klaus Lucke, Michael Dähne, Sven Adler, Anja Brandecker, Kathrin Krügel, Janne K. Sundermeyer, and Ursula Siebert. 64. Effects of Underwater Explosions on Presence and Habitat Use of Harbor Porpoises in the GermanBaltic Sea. Janne K. Sundermeyer, Klaus Lucke, Michael Dähne, Anja Gallus, Kathrin Krügel, and Ursula Siebert. 65. Behavioral-Response Studies: Problems With Statistical Power. Rebecca A. Dunlop, Michael J. Noad, and Douglas H. Cato.66. Detection and Tracking of Whales Using a Shipborne, 360° Thermal-Imaging System. Elke Burkhardt, Lars Kindermann, Daniel Zitterbart, and Olaf Boebel. 67. Distribution of Bowhead Whale Calls Near an Oil Production Island With Fluctuating Underwater Sound. W. John Richardson, Trent L. McDonald, Charles R. Greene
- ISBN: 978-1-4419-7310-8
- Editorial: Springer New York
- Encuadernacion: Cartoné
- Páginas: 678
- Fecha Publicación: 28/11/2011
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés