2001 Strategic Environmental Assessment SEA2 Technical report - Background information on marine mammals in the North Sea

This report is a contribution to the Department of Trade and Industry's (now Department of Energy and Climate Change) Strategic Environmental Assessment SEA2. Eight marine mammal species occur regularly over large parts the North Sea: harbour seal, grey seal, harbour porpoise, bottlenose dolphin, white-beaked dolphin, Atlantic white-sided dolphin, killer whale and minke whale. A further 15 cetacean species and five pinniped species are reported less frequently in the region. This report describes the distribution and abundance of these mammals and their ecological importance. The harbour porpoise is the most numerous marine mammal in the North Sea, with a population estimated at 268,000 in summer 1994. The northern and central SEA2 areas are particularly important areas for the harbour porpoise. Marine mammals make use of sound for a variety of purposes: finding prey, detecting predators, communication and probably navigation. The offshore oil and gas industry generates underwater noise at every stage of the process: during exploration seismic surveys, drilling, production and decommissioning. The effects of these different sources of underwater noise on marine mammals are discussed. The use of explosives for underwater cutting and demolition during the decommissioning of platforms and installations may pose a serious threat to some marine mammals. The effects of pollution on seals and cetaceans are discussed, including the effects of oil spills. Large whales can be killed by being struck by ships; increased shipping traffic in an area would increase this threat.
dataset
Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) data portal - The Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) data portal provides free access to available data and reports which have been produced through the UK Department of Energy and Climate Change SEA process. The site is run and managed by BGS on behalf of the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC). Many files can be downloaded directly from this website. Those that are too large to download can be ordered via the website for postal delivery from BGS.
British Geological Survey : BGS_SEA_21
English
Biota
Environment
Oceans
Utilities/Communication
SeaDataNet Parameter Discovery Vocabulary: GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0:
Species distribution
SeaVoX Vertical Co-ordinate Coverages:
Free:
-1.90, 52.80, 3.30, 61.80
publication: 2001-08-01
2001-01-01 - 2001-01-01
British Geological Survey (BGS)
Paul Henni
Murchison House, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3LA, UK
tel: +44 (0)131 667 1000
email: offshoredata@bgs.ac.uk
Role: custodian
Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC)
Admiralty Way, London, SW1A 2HD, UK
tel: +44 0300 060 4000
email: enquiries@decc.gsi.gov.uk
Role: originator

Data Quality

The report was prepared by scientists from the Sea Mammal Research Unit (SMRU) Gatty Marine Laboratory, University of St Andrews in August 2001 using a variety of sources as part of the UK Department of Energy and Climate Change's Offshore Energy Strategic Environmental Assessment programme. There is extensive information on the distribution and abundance of grey seals around Britain from annual aerial surveys of breeding colonies and from over 100 animals fitted with satellite-relayed data loggers. Information on harbour seals is available from aerial surveys and VHF telemetry. There is also extensive information on distribution in the North Sea from a number of summer sightings surveys (SCANS-94, NASS-89 and NILS-95). Estimates of abundance are available from these surveys for some species. There are also many records from year round surveys by the European Seabirds at Sea Consortium (ESAS) since 1979, from cetacean observations made during seismic surveys in 1996-98, and sightings by voluntary observers compiled by the Sea Watch Foundation.
Minimal Distance: 5 http://standards.iso.org/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/ISO_19139_Schemas/resources/uom/gmxUom.xml#m

Constraints

Metadata about metadata

aba64100-c10b-4de3-e044-0003ba6f30bd
British Geological Survey (BGS)
Mary Mowat
tel: +44 (0)131 667 1000
email: offshoredata@bgs.ac.uk
Role: point of contact
2011-08-30

Coupled Resource