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No Evidence that Seismic Surveys Impact Fishes: IAGC Commends Australian Institute of Marine .
International Association of Geophysical ContractorsJuly 20, 2021 GMT
Houston, TX, US, July 19, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) Dr. Alex Loureiro, IAGC’s Director of Marine Environment & Biology today issued the following statement regarding the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) Study, “A large-scale experiment finds no evidence that a seismic survey impacts a demersal fish fauna” published by the Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
“On July 19, the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS), with collaborative input from an extensive group of research scientists, commercial fishers, fishing associations, fisheries research agency, seismic specialists, seismic contractors, and oil and gas representatives, published a paper entitled, A large-scale field experime
Home / Top News / No Evidence that Seismic Surveys Impact Fishes: IAGC Commends Australian Institute of Marine Science & Partners on Publication of Large-Scale Field Experiment of the Effects of Seismic Surveys on Fishes
No Evidence that Seismic Surveys Impact Fishes: IAGC Commends Australian Institute of Marine Science & Partners on Publication of Large-Scale Field Experiment of the Effects of Seismic Surveys on Fishes
Houston, TX, US, July 19, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE)
Dr. Alex Loureiro,
Australian Institute of Marine Science (
AIMS) Study, “A large-scale experiment finds no evidence that a seismic survey impacts a demersal fish fauna” published by the Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Scientific American
A Few Fixes Could Cut Noise Pollution That Hurts Ocean Animals
Redesigning ship propellors and installing acoustic “curtains” could lower the volume on anthropogenic noise that disrupts ocean life
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Shipping noise and other sounds from human activity in oceans harm numerous marine species, according to a broad new assessment of existing research. The findings, published this month in
Science, also include viable solutions some already in use that could buy time to address tougher problems such as ocean acidification and potentially save the lives of imperiled species such as southern resident killer whales, Maui dolphins and Atlantic cod.