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unhappycamper

(60,364 posts)
Mon Dec 23, 2013, 08:24 AM Dec 2013

Battleships: The Navy Is To Intensify Its Sonar Testing, to the Detriment of the Cetaceans

http://watchingamerica.com/News/228291/battleships-the-navy-is-to-intensify-its-sonar-testing-to-the-detriment-of-the-cetaceans/

Battleships: The Navy Is To Intensify Its Sonar Testing, to the Detriment of the Cetaceans
Le Monde, France
Translated By Clare Durif
16 December 2103
Edited by Brent Landon

The U.S. Navy has planned to increase its sonar testing over the next five years. And that’s just too bad for different types of whales and dolphins, who are threatened by these little military experiments.

The problem is nothing new, the Associated Press reminds us, and first arose in the United States about 100 years ago when the Navy began to use sonar. Sonar is a technique which is particularly harmful to these cetaceans; the intensity of the sound which is emitted is so powerful that it disorientates them completely — to such an extent that the noise pollution can drive them to shallow waters, where they can get stuck in the sand or end up beached. This is particularly the case of the bottlenose whale, which is very sensitive to sound. However, scientists warn that the largest living mammal, the blue whale, could also be affected.

“This result has to be taken into consideration by regulators and those planning naval exercises," warned Stacy DeRuiter, who took part in the studies carried out by the University of St. Andrews in Scotland on the impact of sonar on several species of whales.

These studies reproduced the sound of sonar at 200 decibels around whales. In a diameter of 3 to 10 kilometers, all of the species present stopped feeding and swimming before adopting very unusual behavior which was dangerous for their survival.
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