A minke whale found deft due to man-made noise |
By William J. Broad, The New York Times, July 16, 2012
Scientists have
long known that man-made, underwater noises — from engines, sonars, weapons
testing, and such industrial tools as air guns used in oil and gas exploration
— are deafening whales and other sea mammals. The Navy estimates that loud
booms from just its underwater listening devices, mainly sonar, result in
temporary or permanent hearing loss for more than a quarter-million sea
creatures every year, a number that is rising.
Now, scientists
have discovered that whales can decrease the sensitivity of their hearing to
protect their ears from loud noise. Humans tend to do this with index fingers;
scientists haven’t pinpointed how whales do it, but they have seen the first
evidence of the behavior.
“It’s equivalent to
plugging your ears when a jet flies over,” said Paul E. Nachtigall, a marine
biologist at the University of Hawaii who led the discovery team. “It’s like a
volume control.”
The finding, while
preliminary, is already raising hopes for the development of warning signals
that would alert whales, dolphins and other sea mammals to auditory danger.
Peter Madsen, a
professor of marine biology at Aarhus University in Denmark, said he applauded
the Hawaiian team for its “elegant study” and the promise of innovative ways of
“getting at some of the noise problems.” But he cautioned against letting the
discovery slow global efforts to reduce the oceanic roar, which would aid the
beleaguered sea mammals more directly.
The noise threat
arises because of the basic properties of seawater. Typically, light can travel
for hundreds of feet through ocean water before diminishing to nothingness. But
sound can travel for hundreds of miles.
The world’s oceans
have been getting noisier as companies and governments expand their undersea
activities. Researchers have linked the growing racket to deafness, tissue
damage, mass strandings and disorientation in creatures that rely on hearing to
navigate, find food and care for their young.
The danger has long
been a political football. In 2008, the Supreme Court heard a lawsuit by the
National Resources Defense Council against the Navy over ocean noise; the court
ruled that naval vessels had the right to test sonar systems for hunting
submarines. But environmentalists saw a tacit victory in getting the nation’s
highest court even to consider the health of sea mammals in a debate over
national security.
The latest
development took place at a research facility off Oahu — at an island where the
opening shots of “Gilligan’s Island” were filmed.
Scientists there
are studying how dolphins and toothed whales hear. In nature, the mammals emit
sounds and listen for returning echoes in a sensory behavior known as
echolocation. In captivity, scientists taught the creatures to wear suction-cup
electrodes, which revealed the patterns of brainwaves involved in hearing.
The discovery came
in steps. First, Dr. Nachtigall and his team found the animals could adjust
their hearing in response to their own sounds of echolocation, mainly sharp
clicks. The scientists then wondered if the animals could also protect their
ears from incoming blasts.
The team focused on
a false killer whale named Kina and sought to teach her a conditioned behavior
similar to how Pavlov taught dogs to salivate upon hearing a bell.
First, the
scientists played a gentle tone repeatedly. Then they followed the gentle pulse
with a loud sound. After a few trials, the warning signal alone caused Kina to
decrease the sensitivity of her hearing.
“It shows promise
as a way to mitigate the effects of loud sounds,” said Dr. Nachtigall, founding
director of the Marine Mammal Research Program at the
University of Hawaii. “People are generally very excited about it.”
In
May, Dr. Nachtigall and his colleagues presented the findings to acoustic
scientists and groups meeting in Hong Kong, including the Acoustical Society of
America. The team cited the protective deafening as a potential way to help sea
mammals cope with noisy blasts from naval sonars, civilian air guns and other
equipment.
In the future, the
team plans to expand the research to other species in captivity and ultimately
to animals in the wild. “We have a problem in the world,” Dr. Nachtigall said
of the oceanic roar. “And we think the animals can learn this response very rapidly.”
Scientists
unconnected to the mammal research called it important. “It’s a big deal,” said
Vincent M. Janik, a prominent marine biologist at the University of St. Andrews
in Scotland. In an e-mail, he said it revealed a rare ability among the planet’s
creatures.
Carl Safina,
president of the Blue Ocean Institute, a conservation group in Cold Spring
Harbor, N.Y., called the discovery a potential window into what sea mammals may
already do on some occasions to protect their hearing.
“I’ve sometimes
wondered why these high intensity sounds don’t cause problems all the time,” he
said in an interview. “Maybe it’s that, once the animals hear something very
loud, they can adjust their hearing — dial it down and protect themselves.”
Scientists say the
extraordinary hearing of sea mammals evolved to compensate for poor visibility
beneath the waves and to take advantage of the unique qualities of seawater.
Sound travels five times faster than in air and undergoes far less
diminishment.
The heads of whales
and dolphins are mazes of resonant chambers and acoustic lenses that give the
animals not only extraordinary hearing but complex voices. The distinctive
songs of humpback whales appear to be sung exclusively by males seeking mates.
In recent decades,
scientists have linked the human cacophony to reductions in mammalian
vocalization, which suggests declines in foraging and breeding. And the problem
is poised to get worse: In May, the Navy disclosed draft environmental impact
statements (Atlantic and Pacific operations) that said planned
expansions could raise the annual hearing losses among sea mammals to more than
one million.
Zak Smith, a lawyer
with the Natural Resources Defense Council, recently called the new estimates
“staggering.”
A question of
science, Dr. Nachtigall said, is whether the levels of protective deafening
found in Kina can be increased. The team plans to study the auditory response
in such species as bottlenose dolphins and beluga whales before trying it on
wild populations.
The big political
hurdle is financing, he said. Federal support for the sea mammal research has
declined in recent years, and industry is only starting to show interest in the
finding.
“I’m pulling in
money where I can,” he remarked. Dr. Nachtigall said the research was costly
because sea mammals need high levels of care.
But
he called it revealing and rewarding. “When it comes to whales and sound,” Dr.
Nachtigall said, “we’re just starting to understand.”
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