“…Harbour porpoises have sensitive hearing, making them potentially exceptionally vulnerable to noise-induced effects from anthropogenic sound-producing activities at sea (Culik et al, 2001;Kastelein et al, 2002Kastelein et al, , 2010Kastelein et al, , 2012aKastelein et al, , 2012bKastelein et al, , 2013Kastelein et al, , 2014aKastelein et al, , 2014bKastelein et al, , 2015aKastelein et al, , 2015bKetten, 2004;Lucke et al, 2009;Tougaard et al, 2009). The main potential effects of concern of underwater explosions on an individual animal are (1) trauma (from direct or indirect blast wave effect injury) such as crushing, fracturing, hemorrhages, and rupture of body tissues caused by the blast wave, resulting in immediate or eventual mortality; (2) auditory impairment (from exposure to the acoustic wave), resulting in a temporary or permanent hearing loss such as temporary threshold shift (TTS) and permanent threshold shift (PTS); or (3) behavioural change, such as disturbance to feeding, mating, breeding, and resting.…”