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Publication

Effects of offshore wind farms on the early life stages of Dicentrarchus labrax

Book Contribution - Chapter

Anthropogenically generated underwater noise in the marine environment is ubiquitous, comprising both intense impulse and continuous noise. The installation of offshore wind farms across the North Sea has triggered a range of ecological questions regarding the impact of anthropogenically produced underwater noise on marine wildlife. Our interest goes out to the impact on the ‘passive drifters’, i.e. the early life stages of fish which form the basis of fish populations and are an important prey for pelagic predators. This study deals with the impact of pile-driving and operational noise generated at offshore wind farms on Dicentrarchus labrax (sea bass) larvae.
Book: The Effects of Noise on Aquatic Life II
Series: Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology
Publication year:2014