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Keep Dangerous Sonar Testing Out of Critical Whale and Dolphin Habitat
Final signature count: 5,158
5,158 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: Free The Ocean
Military readiness should not come at the cost of injured, deafened, or stranded whales and dolphins.
Whales and dolphins depend on sound to feed, communicate, migrate, and survive. Powerful military sonar can disrupt those essential behaviors, and federal records show the Navy has sought repeated authorization to incidentally “take” marine mammals during training and testing activities.1
NOAA Fisheries has active or proposed military readiness authorizations across major ocean training areas, including Hawaii-California, the Atlantic, the Mariana Islands, and the western and central North Pacific. These approvals can last seven years and may allow Level A and Level B harassment of protected marine mammals.1
The Risk Is Not Theoretical
NOAA-linked research found a strong connection between sonar activity and beaked whale strandings in the Mariana Archipelago. Researchers identified multiple stranding events and reported that some occurred during or shortly after anti-submarine training activity.2,5
Scientific research has also found that whales, dolphins, and porpoises can be affected by military sound at lower levels than previously expected. The absence of visible strandings does not mean animals were unharmed, especially in remote areas where dead or injured animals may never be found.3
Safer Training Is Possible
NOAA’s own incidental take process requires mitigation, monitoring, and reporting to reduce harm. Recent federal notices already discuss geographic limits, passive acoustic monitoring, visual monitoring, and adaptive management for Navy sonar activities.4
Those safeguards should be stronger. The Navy and NOAA should expand sonar-free areas in sensitive habitat, use real-time acoustic monitoring, avoid high-risk seasons, reduce sonar intensity where possible, and require transparent public reporting when protected animals are injured, stranded, or killed.
Sign the petition urging the Navy and NOAA Fisheries to adopt stronger protections before more whales and dolphins are harmed by military sonar.
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