||| FROM PHYS.ORG |||
A team of marine biologists from Norway, the U.S. and Denmark has conducted the first hearing test of a live baleen whale. For their study published in the journal Science, the group corralled a pair of wild minke whales and recorded their brain waves.
Concerned about how human-produced ocean noises may impact the creatures that live in the sea, marine scientists want to learn more about the animals’ hearing capabilities. In this new study, the research team devised a means for testing the hearing of two wild baleen whales by recording their brain waves as they listened to recorded sounds.
The research team chose the minke whales as test subjects because of their relatively small size compared to other whales. To capture their brain waves, they studied their swimming routes through a narrow channel between two islands off the coast of Norway. Next, they placed netted barriers near the area that directed the whales to a small enclosure.
Once they had trapped two whales, they pulled up a net below them, bringing them to the surface. This allowed the researchers to affix electrodes to their heads. The team used the electrodes to record the whales’ brain waves as they responded to sounds played from nearby speakers. One of the whales was tested for a half-hour, the other an hour and a half. The researchers then released the whales back into the wild.
The brain wave recordings mark the first such successful test of their kind. The research team found that the whales responded to most sounds as had been predicted based on prior research that studied the ear structures of dead whales. They also discovered something unexpected—the whales were capable of hearing ultrasonic sounds, a finding that suggests all baleen whales may be able to hear such sounds.
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This study adds to the substantial evidence that cetaceans perceive sound at frequencies that humans cannot detect without electronic devices (both ultrasonic and infrasonic) This “sixth” or maybe “seventh” sense is critical for prey location, navigation and intraspecies communication.
There is now growing suspicion that the low frequency sonic pollution of offshore wind farms on the NE coast of North America may have contributed to the recent whale strandings.
The US Navy should not be testing powerful sonars in our waters. I am wondering now about the sonic footprint of the proposed tidal generator in Rosario Strait.
It is truly heartbreaking to imagine what it must be like to be a whale in the world’s oceans (and seas) these days. I look at the map of global shipping, and look at the many ships in the Salish Sea, and imagine what my life would be like if I was surrounded by a fleet of drones 24/7/365. Hell. It would be hell. And we just keep adding to the noise and physical intrusions and harms. I can only hope it all ends soon.