Noise heard
in the Southern Ocean has been attributed to the underwater chatter of the
Antarctic minke whale
theguardian.com,
Taku Dzimwasha, Wednesday 23 April 2014
![]() |
| The mystery of a bizarre quacking sound heard in the ocean has finally been traced to the Antarctic minke whale, scientists say. Photograph: Ashley Cooper/Alamy |
The mystery
source of a strange quacking sound coming from the ocean has been discovered.
The so-called
"bio-duck" noise, which occurs in the winter and spring in the
Southern Ocean, had confused researchers for over 50 years.
Scientists
have now attributed the sound to underwater chatter of the Antarctic minke
whale.
Submarine
crews first heard the quacking sound – a series of repetitive, low-pitched
pulsing sounds – in the 1960s.
Lead
researcher Denise Risch, from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration north-east fisheries science centre in Massachusetts, told the BBC: "Over the years there have been several suggestions, but no one was
able to really show this species was producing the sound until now."
The
research team attached suction-cup sensor tags equipped with underwater
microphones to a pair of minke whales off the western Antarctic peninsula in
February last year, with the aim of monitoring their feeding behaviour and
movements.
These were
the first acoustic tags deployed on Antarctic minke whales, and the team
compared their recordings with years worth of collected audio recordings to
match the sounds. Researchers were able to identify the quacking noise, as well
as downward-sweeping sounds previously linked to minke whales.
The sounds
"can now be attributed unequivocally to the Antarctic minke whale,"
Risch and her team wrote in a study published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.
Researchers
are hoping to retrospectively analyse previous recordings to investigate
"seasonal occurrence and migration patterns" of the whales.
Scientists
remain puzzled as to why the whales produce the sound, but it is thought that
the animals make the noise close to the surface before they make a deep dives
to feed.
Risch
added: "Identifying their sounds will allow us to use passive acoustic
monitoring to study this species. That can give us the timing of their
migration – the exact timing of when the animals appear in Antarctic waters and
when they leave again – so we can learn about migratory patterns, about their
relative abundance in different areas and their movement patterns between the
areas."

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.