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An ocean of noise: how sonic pollution is hurting marine life

April 12, 2022 โ€” We were whaling with cameras, joining a flotilla of a dozen other tourist boats from harbours all around the Salish Sea. It was one of my first trips to the area, in August 2001. The fuzz and beep of ship radios stitched a net over the water, a blurry facsimile of the sonic connections of the whales themselves. Every skipper heard the voices of the others, relayed by electromagnetic waves. The quarry could not escape. โ€œWhales guaranteedโ€ shouted the billboards on shore.

We motored on, weaving around island headlands. A sighting off the south-west shore of San Juan Island. Through binoculars: a dorsal fin scythed the water, then dipped. Another, with a spray of mist as the animal exhaled. Then, no sign. But the whalesโ€™ location was easy to spot. A dozen boats clustered, most slowly motoring west, away from the shore. We powered closer, slowing the engine until we were travelling without raising a wake and took our place on the outer edge of the gaggle of yachts and cruisers.

A sheet of marble skated just under the waterโ€™s surface. Oily smooth. A spill of black ink sheeting under the hazed bottle glass of the waterโ€™s surface. Praaf! Surfacing 15 metres ahead of the boat, the exhalation was plosive and rough.

The pod of about 10 animals came to the surface. Part of the L pod of orcas, our captain said, one of three pods that form the โ€œsouthern residentsโ€ in the waters of the Salish Sea between Seattle and Vancouver, often seen hunting salmon around the San Juan Islands. Others โ€“ โ€œtransientsโ€ that ply coastal waters and โ€œoffshoresโ€ that feed mostly in the Pacific โ€“ also visit regularly. The L pod continued west, heading toward the Haro Strait. Our engines purred as the U-shaped arc of boats tracked the pod, leaving open water ahead of the whales.

We dropped a hydrophone over the boatโ€™s gunwale, its cord feeding a small speaker in a plastic casing. Whale sounds! And engine noise, lots of engine noise. Clicks, like taps on a metal can, came in squalls. These sounds are the whalesโ€™ echolocating search beams. The whales use the echoes not only to see through the murky water, but to understand how soft, taut, fast or tremulous matter is around them.

Mixed with the staccato of the whalesโ€™ clicks were whistles and high squeaks, sounds that undulate, dart, inflect up and spiral down. These whistles are the sounds of whale conviviality, given most often when the animals are socialising at close range. When the pod is more widely spaced during searches for food, the whales whistle less and communicate with bursts of shorter sound pulses. These sonic bonds not only connect the members of each pod, but distinguish the pod from others.

Today, ocean waters are a tumult of engine noise, sonar and seismic blasts. Sediments from human activities on land cloud the water. Industrial chemicals befuddle the sense of smell of aquatic animals. We are severing the sensory links that gave the world its animal diversity. Whales cannot hear the echolocating pulses that locate their prey, breeding fish cannot find one another amid the noise and turbidity, and the social connections among crustaceans are weakened as their chemical messages and sonic thrums are lost in a haze of human pollution.

Read the full story at The Guardian

Conservation groups petition President Obama to create โ€˜safe zoneโ€™ for orcas

November 7, 2016 โ€” SEATTLE โ€” Conservative groups from the Pacific Northwest petitioned President Obama on Friday in an effort to protect the Puget Sound orcas.

The Orca Relief Citizenโ€™s Alliance and Project Seawolf want the Obama administration to create a ten square mile โ€œwhale protection zoneโ€ near San Juan Island.

The groups claim the noise and pollution from boats and other human disturbances interfere with the orcasโ€™ feeding.

Read the full story at KATU

Why a Single Crab Has West Coast Researchers Worried

September 8, 2016 โ€” Invasive European green crabs have been swarming up and down both coasts, but because of the flow of ocean currents around the Pacific Northwest, inland waters of BC and Washington State were thought to be relatively safe. Well, on Sept. 2, volunteers announced theyโ€™d recently caught a single crab on San Juan Island, in Puget Sound. Although itโ€™s just one for nowโ€”and it could have hitched a ride on someoneโ€™s fishing gear, or another wayโ€”itโ€™s the first confirmed sighting in these inland waters.

Starting next week, a โ€œrapid response teamโ€ will be out laying traps and trying to figure out if there are more crabs out there. The aliens pose a threat to the regionโ€™s native species.

โ€œIโ€™ll admit, I have a lot of respect for these crabs,โ€ Sean McDonald, a research scientist at the University of Washington, told me. McDonald works with the Washington Sea Grantโ€™s Crab Team, a network of citizen scientists that serves as an early alert for the crustaceanโ€™s encroachment. They caught the crab, and will be organizing next weekโ€™s response. โ€œTheyโ€™re tough and resilient,โ€ he continued. โ€œThey make a living anywhere they can.โ€

Read the full story at Motherboard

University of Washington scientist launches effort to digitize all fish

July 27, 2016 โ€” SEATTLE โ€” University of Washington biology professor Adam Summers no longer has to coax hospital staff to use their CT scanners so he can visualize the inner structures of stingray and other fish.

Last fall, he installed a small computed tomography, or CT, scanner at the UWโ€™s Friday Harbor Laboratories on San Juan Island in Washington state and launched an ambitious project to scan and digitize all of more than 25,000 species in the world.

The idea is to have one clearinghouse of CT scan data freely available to researchers anywhere to analyze the morphology, or structure, of particular species.

So far, he and others have digitized images of more than 500 species, from poachers to sculpins, from museum collections around the globe. He plans to add thousands more and has invited other scientists to use the CT scanner, or add their own scans to the open-access database.

โ€œWe have folks coming from all over the world to use this machine,โ€ said Summers, who advised Pixar on how fish move for its hit animated films โ€œFinding Nemoโ€ and โ€œFinding Doryโ€ and is dubbed โ€œfabulous fish guyโ€ on the credits for โ€œNemo.โ€

He raised $340,000 to buy the CT scanner in November. Like those used in hospitals, the CT scanner takes X-ray images from various angles and combines them to create three-dimensional images of the fish.

With each CT scan he posted to the Open Science Framework, a sharing website, people would ask him, โ€œWhat are you going to scan next?โ€ He would respond: โ€œI want to scan them all. I want to scan all fish.โ€

Read the full story from the Associated Press at the New Bedford Standard-Times

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