Peter Tyack

Affiliations: 
University of St. Andrews, Saint Andrews, Scotland, United Kingdom 
Google:
"Peter Tyack"

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Donald R. Griffin grad student (Neurotree)

Children

Sign in to add trainee
Douglas P. Nowacek grad student (Marine Ecology Tree)
Susan E. Parks grad student 1998-2003 University of St. Andrews
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Sørensen PM, Haddock A, Guarino E, et al. (2023) Anthropogenic noise impairs cooperation in bottlenose dolphins. Current Biology : Cb
Pereira A, Harris D, Tyack P, et al. (2020) Fin whale acoustic presence and song characteristics in seas to the southwest of Portugal. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 147: 2235
Warren V, Miller P, Tyack P. (2020) Short-term responses of sperm whales Physeter macrocephalus to the attachment of suction cup tags Marine Ecology Progress Series. 645: 219-234
Goldbogen JA, Cade DE, Wisniewska DM, et al. (2019) Why whales are big but not bigger: Physiological drivers and ecological limits in the age of ocean giants. Science (New York, N.Y.). 366: 1367-1372
Kragh IM, McHugh K, Wells RS, et al. (2019) Signal-specific amplitude adjustment to noise in common bottlenose dolphins (). The Journal of Experimental Biology
Curé C, Isojunno S, I Vester H, et al. (2019) Evidence for discrimination between feeding sounds of familiar fish and unfamiliar mammal-eating killer whale ecotypes by long-finned pilot whales. Animal Cognition
Wensveen PJ, Isojunno S, Hansen RR, et al. (2019) Northern bottlenose whales in a pristine environment respond strongly to close and distant navy sonar signals. Proceedings. Biological Sciences. 286: 20182592
Hoop JM, Nousek‐McGregor AE, Nowacek DP, et al. (2019) Foraging rates of ram‐filtering North Atlantic right whales Functional Ecology. 33: 1290-1306
Kvadsheim PH, DeRuiter S, Sivle LD, et al. (2017) Avoidance responses of minke whales to 1-4kHz naval sonar. Marine Pollution Bulletin
Isojunno S, Cure C, Kvadsheim PH, et al. (2016) Sperm whales reduce foraging effort during exposure to 1-2 kHz sonar and killer whale sounds. Ecological Applications : a Publication of the Ecological Society of America. 26: 77-93
See more...