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
1226Новости с водоемов Волгоградской областиohotniki2023-11-20RU
1227Impermanence is the Opportunity, Says Fish Philosopherwatershedsentinel2023-11-25US
1228Fish rearing facilities offer life support for endangered suckersijpr2023-11-25US
1229What low water levels could mean for Edmonton fish this wintermsn2023-11-18CA
1230Togos tilapia kingthefishsite2023-11-24TO
1231Какая судьба ждет каспийскую воблу?ohotniki2023-11-18RU
1232US regulators will review car-tire chemical that kills salmonseattletimes2023-11-05US
1233Trapped on Chinese squid-fishing ships, crews face beatings, malnutrition and morelatimes2023-11-07CN
1234Forever chemicals in fish worry Charleston anglerscharlestoncitypaper2023-11-10US
1235Survey shows uptick in Lake of the Woods walleye, sauger numbersechopress2023-11-24US
1236DNR, stakeholders to draft new Lake of the Woods management planechopress2023-11-24US
1237Americas eel RAS superstarthefishsite2023-11-15US
1238From taxi driver to trout supremothefishsite2023-11-17IN
1239Карась хорошо клюет до заморозковohotniki2023-11-17RU
1240Koi emerges as new source of souring relations between Japan and Chinaabcnews2023-11-10JP
1241Tasmanian salmon farms could face restrictions to save endangered fishtheguardian2023-11-06AU
1242Nepal’s water hyacinth helps exotic fish invade, harming native speciesmongabay2023-11-07NP
1243Federal Fisheries Department doing a poor job of monitoring fishing industryCBC News2023-11-07CA
1244A story about counting steelhead is an immersive journey to the river.montereycountyweekly2023-11-11US
1245Fishermen threaten to stop fishing, take legal action over massive block of offshore wind farmsportugalresident2023-11-12PT
1246Fishermen Catch Huge Blue Marlin Weighing Over 1,000lbs in Gulf of Mexiconewsweek2023-11-06US
1247Elephantnose Fish ‘Sees’ by Doing an Electric Boogiescientificamerican2023-11-06DE
1248Aucklanders ignore safety warnings to fish in polluted harbourrnz2023-11-09NZ
1249Хороший клев лобастой кефали в Сочиohotniki2023-11-16RU
1250US Commercial fishing groups sue tire manufacturers over fish-killing chemicalreuters2023-11-08US

219 220 221 49 of [222 - pages.]