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Plastic Pollution Sounds Like Food to Whales Using Echolocation

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24 Oct, 2024

This post was originally published on Eco Watch

For whales that dive deeper into the oceans for food, they face a growing threat: plastic pollution. That’s because the sounds that plastics make can be very similar to the sounds that prey make, leading to confusion for whales that rely on echolocation to source food.

According to a new study, published in the journal Marine Pollution Bulletin, visual confusion between pollution and prey is not the only way that whales are ingesting plastics.

“These acoustic signatures are similar, and this might be a reason that these animals are driven to consume plastic instead of, or in addition to, their prey,” Greg Merrill, lead author of the study and a graduate student at Duke University, said in a statement.

Some whales, such as sperm whales, pygmy sperm whales and goose-beaked whales, use echolocation to detect food sources deeper into the ocean. They dive deep into the water, then send clicks, creaks and buzzes, the sounds of which will bounce off from objects up to a few hundred meters away and reverberate back to the whales. Whales use fatty sensory mechanisms in their jaw to feel the reverberations, which are then sent to their ears and brains to detect the prey — or, as researchers have determined, plastics — nearby.

More and more research is uncovering plastic waste in the stomachs of deep-diving whales, so the researchers set out to find out why whales were mistaking plastic for food if they couldn’t see the plastics, which are often visually mistaken for food by marine life. 

Samples of plastic beach trash collected in Beaufort and Atlantic Beach, North Carolina and then subjected to underwater acoustic testing. Greg Merrill, Duke Marine Lab

The researchers collected trash like plastic bags, plastic bottles bottles and balloons from a marine environment, as well as pieces of dead squids that had been collected from the stomach of a dead sperm whale, then tested the samples in a sonar transponder. The transponder and samples were placed underwater to mimic the whales’ feeding environments, and the researchers tested the acoustics at different frequencies, since different whales may use varying frequencies when hunting.

According to the study authors, all of the plastic waste tested had similar, if not stronger, acoustic target strengths when compared with the samples of prey, meaning it is likely that deep-diving whales are mistaking plastics for food by confusing the acoustic signals.

Scientists have estimated that about 11 million metric tons per year of plastic pollution ends up in the world’s oceans, reported Ocean Conservancy, which was not involved in the study. As such, the study authors highlighted a need for solutions to reduce the amount of plastic that could harm marine life.

While the authors noted that changing the acoustic properties of plastics could potentially make them more “whale-safe,” such plastics could still threaten whales if they can’t detect these materials in fishing nets and other sources of entanglement.

“Ultimately, work-arounds are insufficient solutions compared to the drastic reduction in production of unnecessary plastic,” the authors wrote in the study. “While plastic does serve many important purposes, such as in medical applications or durable long-lasting products, much of it, such as single-use packaging — like the shopping bags and films found in stranded whale stomachs — is gratuitous and pernicious.”

The post Plastic Pollution Sounds Like Food to Whales Using Echolocation appeared first on EcoWatch.

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Climatelinks 2024 Year in Review: Most Popular Blogs

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jschoshinski
Mon, 12/30/2024 – 14:19

Climatelinks has published over 1,200 blogs, including nearly 150 this year. These blogs provide valuable insight for practitioners working at the intersection of climate and development. Here are some of the most visited blogs published in 2024:
Cultivating Climate Resilience through Sustainable Ube Farming
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African Scientists Harness the Power of 3D Printing to Monitor and Forecast Extreme Weather
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Meet the 2024 Climatelinks Photo Contest Winners
The 2024 Climatelinks Photo Contest captured how communities across the globe are confronting climate change. The contest received over 300 submissions, representing more than 45 countries. This blog showcases this year’s 13 winners. 
Bridging the Gap: Why Climate Finance Has Become a Core Part of USAID’s Development DNA
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Enhancing Community Resilience: Addressing Compound and Cascading Climate Shocks
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Do you have an idea for a Climatelinks blog? We would love to hear from you! Learn about the types of blogs we accept and how you can submit.  

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Climatelinks has published over 1,200 blogs, including nearly 150 this year. These blogs provide valuable insight for practitioners working at the intersection of climate and development. Here are some of the most visited blogs published in 2024.

Publish Date
Mon, 12/30/2024 – 12:00

Author(s)

Jamie Schoshinski

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Blog Post

Strategic Objective

Adaptation
Integration
Mitigation

Region

Global

Topic

Agriculture
Climate Finance
Climate Risk Management
Climate Strategy
Digital technology
Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities
Locally-Led Development
Private Sector Engagement
Resilience
Weather

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Philippines

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Climate

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