High-power Sonar Did Not Harm Fish; 'Some Small Behavioral Responses' 
US Source: Underwatertimes 7/5/2007

A new University of Maryland study in the July issue of the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America reports that high powered sonar, like that used by U.S. Navy ships, did not harm test fish, including their hearing, in a controlled setting.

The research team, headed by Arthur N. Popper, biology professor at the University of Maryland and expert in fish hearing, and Michele Halvorsen, Ph.D., University of Maryland Research Associate, found that exposure to high intensity, low frequency sonar did not kill rainbow trout used for testing, nor did it damage the fishes' auditory systems, other than for a small and presumably temporary decline in hearing sensitivity.
 

It is a finding that Popper says "should not be extrapolated to other fish species or the effects of other sound sources."

Cause for Concern

There is considerable concern that human-produced (anthropogenic) sounds added to the environment could have damaging effects on marine life. While much of the interest has focused on marine mammals, such as dolphins and whales, there is growing interest in the effects of these sounds on fish.

"The effects of sound on fish could potentially include increased stress, damage to organs, the circulatory and nervous systems," says Popper. "Long-term effects may alter feeding and reproductive patterns in a way that could affect the fish population as a whole."

 
Trout, Rainbow Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
676Putting Azerbaijan back on the global caviar mapthefishsite2024-04-22AZ
677Tiny, endangered fish hinders Californias Colorado River conservation planksby2024-03-31US
678Wild fish spring to life in Lake Ontario, despite dams, pollution and hatchery competitorsthenarwhal2024-04-03CA
679Truck crash spills live salmon into wrong Oregon riverBBC News2024-04-03CA
680Sarasota Bay installs artificial reefs to support commercially essential fish specieswtsp2024-04-04CA
681N.S. salmon operation in receivership after equipment failureCBC News2024-04-05CA
682Snakehead and blue catfish are invasive to Marylandtristatealert2024-04-15US
683Study finds relatives of coronavirus and other pathogens in fishapg-wi2024-04-05US
684U.S., Canada put 7 year ban on all forms of salmon fishing in Yukon, Alaskaaptnnews2024-04-05CA
685Tropical fish worth thousands of dollars stolen from Ottawa Valley restaurantmsn2024-04-17CA
686Pangasius exports to Canada skyrocketdangcongsan2024-04-17VN
687B.C. asks anglers to help eradicate this sport fish common in the rest of Canadactvnews2024-04-17CA
688Lengthy investigation leads to 66 halibut fishing charges in Nova Scotianewswire2021-12-14CA
689Trial begins in Halifax for fisherman, buyer accused of illegal halibut landingsCBC News2022-03-03CA
690Five people, three companies convicted of 18 violations in N.S. halibut fisheryCTV News2024-02-07CA
691Nova Scotia halibut boat fined $5,000 for fishing inside Gully Marine Protected AreaCBC News2023-03-24CA
692How ribs might have been vital in the evolution of walkingcosmosmagazine2024-04-07CA
693Fisherman discovers ugly, frowning human-like fishaol2024-04-17TH
694Sea creatures at Florida Aquarium celebrate Easterwtsp2024-03-30US
695Uruguayan fishing said to be on the brink of collapseÁmbito2024-04-01UY
696Underwater entrance ceremony held for new Japan aquariummainichi2024-03-31JP
697Winston Churchills secret battle after WWII victory - to breed tropical fishdailymail2024-04-02UK
698Thousands of threatened Chinook salmon killed in transit to Imnaha Riverkoin2024-04-02US
699Tillamook woman catches potentially record-breaking eel-like fishkoin2024-04-05US
700Ohio Division of Wildlife debunks fishers perch conspiracy theoriesdispatch2024-04-07US

219 220 221 27 of [222 - pages.]