Kemp's ridley turtles sensitive to low-frequency ship noise

New research shows that endangered Kemp's ridley sea turtles are particularly attuned to the low-frequency sounds produced by ships and industrial activity in their coastal habitats. Scientists from Duke University, NOAA, and North Carolina State University measured the turtles' hearing and found peak sensitivity around 300 hertz, overlapping with common underwater noise sources. This discovery underscores potential vulnerabilities for the species amid busy shipping routes.

Kemp's ridley sea turtles, among the world's most endangered marine species, inhabit the bustling waters of North America's East Coast and Gulf Coast. These areas host major shipping lanes, exposing the turtles to constant human-generated noise alongside other dangers like fishing gear entanglements, vessel collisions, plastic ingestion, and habitat loss.

A study published in The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America reveals how these turtles perceive sound underwater. Researchers attached noninvasive sensors to the turtles' heads to capture electrical signals from their auditory nerves. They played tones from 50 hertz—near the bottom of human hearing—to 1,600 hertz. The turtles proved most responsive at around 300 hertz, with sensitivity dropping at higher pitches.

"Our findings indicate that the turtles are most sensitive in the same low-frequency band where much industrial and vessel noise occurs," said lead author Charles Muirhead. "This does not automatically mean that harmful effects are occurring, but it highlights where further monitoring and targeted impact studies should be focused."

The turtles rely on acoustic cues for navigation and environmental interaction, and low-frequency noises from ships can propagate far underwater, potentially interfering with these vital signals. As Muirhead noted, the species faces overlapping stressors in nearshore and shelf waters of the Gulf Coast and western North Atlantic, regions dense with human activity.

Looking ahead, the team aims to test turtle responses in natural ocean settings and link lab data to real physiological impacts. "These efforts will help refine our understanding of how human-caused noise interacts with sea turtle sensory systems," Muirhead added. "They will also support evidence-based management approaches aimed at minimizing unintended impacts while balancing human activities in coastal and offshore waters."

The research, detailed in a 2026 paper (DOI: 10.1121/10.0041867), emphasizes the need for noise mitigation to protect this fragile population.

Relaterte artikler

Realistic split-scene illustration of UPenn sleep study: pink noise disrupting REM sleep via headphones on left, earplugs shielding deep sleep from airplane noise on right.
Bilde generert av AI

Study finds pink noise reduced REM sleep in lab trial; earplugs helped protect deep sleep from aircraft noise

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI Faktasjekket

A small sleep-lab study from the University of Pennsylvania reports that continuous “pink noise” played overnight reduced participants’ REM sleep, while earplugs helped blunt deep-sleep losses linked to intermittent aircraft noise. The findings add to a limited evidence base about the long-term effects of broadband “sleep sounds,” and the researchers urge caution—particularly for young children.

New research suggests sea turtles possess an epigenetic mechanism that helps maintain balanced sex ratios despite rising temperatures from global warming. This adaptation could mitigate fears of population collapse due to excessive female hatchlings. Scientists from Queen Mary University of London led the study on loggerhead turtles.

Rapportert av AI

An international team of researchers has developed a new system to identify and compare episodes of sudden underwater darkness, known as marine darkwaves, which threaten light-dependent marine ecosystems. These events, triggered by storms, sediment runoff, and algae blooms, can drastically reduce light to the seafloor for days or months. The framework aims to standardize monitoring of these disruptions worldwide.

Scientists have developed a method to monitor space debris reentering Earth's atmosphere using existing earthquake sensors. By detecting sonic booms from the debris, the technique provides precise tracking of its path and potential landing sites. This approach was tested on debris from China's Shenzhou-15 spacecraft.

Rapportert av AI

New research shows that everyday sights and sounds can trap some people in harmful choices by influencing their brains through associative learning. Those highly sensitive to these cues struggle to update their responses when outcomes turn negative, leading to persistent risky behavior. The findings, led by Giuseppe di Pellegrino at the University of Bologna, highlight implications for addictions and anxiety.

On Prince of Wales Island in Alaska, gray wolves have begun hunting sea otters, a behavior that scientists are racing to understand. Led by University of Rhode Island Ph.D. candidate Patrick Bailey, the research explores how these predators capture marine prey and the broader ecological implications. This shift could link land and ocean food webs in unexpected ways.

Rapportert av AI

Scientists are alarmed by the absence of zombie worms on whale bones placed in the deep ocean off British Columbia. After 10 years of monitoring, none of these key ecosystem engineers appeared, likely due to low oxygen levels. The finding raises concerns about climate-driven disruptions to deep-sea habitats.

 

 

 

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis