Frontiers in Marine Science (Jun 2024)

The Brazilian Santos basin underwater soundscape monitoring project (PMPAS-BS)

  • José Antonio Moreira Lima,
  • William Soares Filho,
  • Fabio C. Xavier,
  • Thiago Pires de Paula,
  • Angela Spengler,
  • Fernando Gonçalves de Almeida,
  • Diogo Peregrino Correa Pereira,
  • Valéria Souza Rego,
  • Cátia Galotta,
  • Carlos Corrêa Junior,
  • Alexandre Bazyl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2024.1416590
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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This paper describes the Santos Basin Underwater Soundscape Monitoring Project (PMPAS-BS), a Brazilian ocean soundscape monitoring initiative. The main objective of the project is to quantify and assess hydroacoustic noise of anthropogenic origin in a large sedimentary basin extending from 23° S to 28° S on the southeastern Brazilian continental margin of the South Atlantic Ocean. Noise associated with oil and gas (O&G) exploration and production activities is the primary target, but this oceanic region also has busy shipping lanes for commercial, military, and fishing vessels. The two main hubs of Brazil’s export and import of goods by sea are located in this region: Santos and Rio de Janeiro ports. The project has three measurement components: mobile monitoring based on gliders and drifting acoustic profilers, fixed shallow-water monitoring based on acoustic measurements at coastal stations near shipping lanes associated with exploration and production activities in the Santos Basin, and fixed oceanic monitoring based on deep-water mooring lines equipped with passive autonomous acoustic recorders near production units, shipping lanes, and areas with lower intensity of O&G activities (pristine or reference sites). Numerical modeling of anthropogenic underwater acoustic noise has also been included as a fourth project component. The PMPAS-BS covers an area of more than 251,000 km2 and uses several instruments with different methods and sensors for acoustic measurements. Its results provide current sound levels over a very large region of the western South Atlantic, both in areas more and less affected by anthropogenic activities.

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