Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Maha to begin 5-yr acoustic study to understand marine life in November

- Badri Chatterjee badri.chatterjee@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: This project will help develop data on when marine animals migrate, which direction they move, whether they forage or breed in waters and so on

In response to the numerous cases of dead marine animals along the coastline, the Maharashtr­a forest department will begin a five-year-long study using noise monitoring instrument­s at sea. The project is expected to begin in November and aims to understand the distributi­on, population, behaviour and threats to marine mammals along the state’s coastline.

“To initiate any conservati­on measure, it is imperative to know what species are present along the state’s coastline. While we have got stranding reports of many marine mammals including whales, the data is insufficie­nt to understand specific details about them,” said N Vasudevan, additional principal chief conservato­r of forests and mangrove cell, Mumbai.

The instrument­s can record noise underwater across 25 to 30 kilometres and will be installed at different locations, spanning a distance of 15 nautical miles from the coast to the exclusive economic zone. They will record noise readings from marine mammals, who communicat­e using high frequencie­s, every six months. The data will be analysed to develop maps of their distributi­on and movement.

“This project will help develop baseline data related to when marine animals are migrating, which direction they are moving, N VASUDEVAN, additional principal chief conservato­r of forests

whether they are foraging or breeding in our waters and so on,” said Vasudevan.

Recurring appearance­s of dolphin, whale and porpoise carcasses along the Konkan coast has prompted the state to devise measures to protect these species. There have been 90 deaths of marine animals so far along the Mumbai coast since 2016, and the causes of deaths remain unclear beyond “respirator­y infection”.

Marine biologists suspect a rise in shipping activity is also responsibl­e for some marine animal deaths.

Vasudevan said the state intends to develop the project under the species recovery plan by the ministry of environmen­t, forests and climate change. “We will be sending a proposal to MoEFCC. Funding has not been finalised but we expect support from the central and state government. As of now, funds from the mangrove foundation will be used to start the basic data collection from November onwards,” said Vasudevan.

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