Navy Sonar May Be Killing Porpoises
Posted on: Wednesday, 23 July 2003, 06:00 CDT
By PEGGY ANDERSEN
SEATTLE (AP) -- Scientists from around the country have begun necropsies on more than a dozen harbor porpoises found last spring, hoping to discover whether Navy sonar tests contributed to their deaths.
The scientists began work Tuesday in the dissection room at the National Marine Mammal Lab, part of the National Marine Fisheries Service's regional headquarters on Lake Washington.
The exams will help determine whether mid-range sonar testing May 5 by the guided-missile destroyer USS Shoup was a factor in any of the deaths. Environmental groups say the sonar can interfere with marine mammals' communication systems.
In all, 13 dead porpoises were found beached or floating between May 2 and May 20 - eight of them on or after May 5. Two carcasses floated away, so scientists are working with the nine carcasses and two heads recovered.
Springtime strandings are common, federal scientists note.
"At this point, there is no evidence any of these deaths were connected to the Shoup except for the coincidence in time," said Brent Norberg, stranding coordinator for the fisheries service.
The vessel conducted the tests in Haro Strait, which separates Washington's San Juan Islands and Canada's Vancouver Island.
The porpoises, about 4 feet long and weighing up to 100 pounds, have been frozen since they were retrieved from Olympic Peninsula beaches. They were trucked to a private radiology lab Sunday for CT scans and have been thawing since in big, water-filled pans.
Fourteen scientists enlisted from universities, government and military offices as far afield as Massachusetts, North Carolina, California and Canada "collectively are probably the most knowledgeable in the world on this subject," said the service's Regional Administrator Bob Lohn.
Performing the necropsies, the equivalent of autopsies in humans, is expected to take at least three days.
The scientists will not know when or where each animal was found, service spokesman Brian Gorman said, so as not to let that influence their conclusions. Tissue and fluid samples will be sent to labs around the country for tests.
In 2001, preliminary tests by the Navy and the fisheries service determined that sonar tests in the Bahamas likely caused the deaths of at least a half dozen beaked whales whose carcasses were recovered.
A coalition of environmental groups led by the Natural Resources Defense Council sued the Navy and the fisheries service in federal court last summer to block the use of low-frequency sonar to identify enemy submarines.
The Defense Department is asking Congress for expanded exemption from the Marine Mammal Protection Act and other environmental laws to continue using the sonar system.
-----
On the Net:
Natural Resources Defense Council
National Marine Fisheries Service
More science, space, and technology from RedNova
Copyright © 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.
Related Articles
- Pratt & Whitney F135 Engine Completes Initial Service Release Altitude Qualification Test
- Sonar of Little Harm to Whales, Navy Says
- Statement By Gerald Leape, Vice President, Marine Conservation, National Environmental Trust, on a New Recommendation From Scientists Urging Pregnant Women to Eat More Fish
- Pakistan President Says Nation Proud of Scientists Following Missile Test
- Advanced Communications Subsidiary Cyber-Test Awarded Exclusive National Reverse Logistics Contract With Sling Media, Inc.
- Medical Services Completes Tuberculosis (TB) Testing in Republic of Ukraine
- Singapore Scientists Invent Quick Test Kit for Bird Flu
- Human Form of BSE: Scientists Claim Blood Test on the Horizon
- HepaLife Announces Addition of Toxicology Scientist, to Develop Testing Platform for Liver Toxicity -- the Leading Cause of Drug Withdrawals From Clinical Use
- U.S. Navy Selects Acterna's MTS-5100e; Acterna's Federal Division is Provider of Testing and Measuring for U.S. Navy's OTDR Requirements
User Comments (1)
| 1. |
Posted by jake on 02/13/2009, 10:50 of course, you sick people have to kill animals for no reason at all. get a life. how would you like it if someone did that to you? there just triyng to live. you sick fucking people |



RSS Feeds