Connect with us

Earth & Energy

A New Study Reveals How Climate Change Will Affect Sound Travels Underwater

Marine life could also be impacted.

Published

on

sound-underwater-65847984

Climate change is real and happening.

A recent study conducted by a group of researchers revealed that climate change that warms oceans would remarkably change the way sound travels underwater.

“We calculated the effects of temperature, depth, and salinity based on public data to model the soundscape of the future,” said Alice Affatati, lead author, who works in the emerging field of bioacoustics at the Memorial University in Canada.

Marine life is under threat

Published in Earth’s Future, the research has the characteristic of being the first wide-range evaluation regarding sound speed profile in the ocean. The study says possible changes in the near future could not only alter how sound moves underwater but also harm marine life.

It is a fact that sound travels at a faster speed in the water than in the air. As for warmer water, it spreads “faster and lasts longer before dying away,” Phys reported.

In this regard, the scientists involved in the study foresee that the Greenland Sea and a small part of the Atlantic Ocean could experience the envisaged temperature changes at 50 and 500-meter depths.

How sound underwater could change in the future

Seeing an increase of over 1.5% –or 25 meters per second– is a high probability before the end of the century. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the marine soundscape consists of creatures underwater and humans who produce sound waves due to marine vessel traffic activities.

“The major impact is expected in the Arctic, where we know already there is an amplification of the effects of climate change now,” said Stefano Salon, author of the study. “Not all the Arctic, but one specific part where all factors play together to give a signal that, according to the model predictions, overcomes the uncertainty of the model itself”.

“We chose to talk about one megafauna species, but many trophic levels in the ocean are affected by the soundscape or use of sound,” said Affatati. “All these hotspots are locations of great biodiversity”.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

mariana-trench-1
Earth & Energy5 years ago

Mariana Trench: 8 Fascinating Facts About the Earth’s Deepest Place

moon-Galileo-Galilei
Space6 years ago

10 most famous scientists who contributed to astronomy and space

Northern-Lights
Skywatching6 years ago

Top 25 extremely stunning photos of Northern Lights of 2020 revealed

meteorite-millionaire-4
Engineering6 years ago

Meteorite makes Indonesian man a millionaire as piece crashes through his roof

blood-cancer-1223
Science4 years ago

It’s Now Possible to Predict Blood Cancer With Ten-Second Videos

This Inexpensive Method Speeds up Analysis of 3D Printed Metal Parts 15
Engineering4 years ago

This Inexpensive Method Speeds up Analysis of 3D Printed Metal Parts

spacex-crew-dragon-capsule
Infographic6 years ago

SpaceX Dragon: A Game Changer for NASA

Tiny fish, big boom: This small fish found to roar like a gunshot 16
Earth & Energy2 years ago

Tiny fish, big boom: This small fish found to roar like a gunshot

mars-colony-turkey
Engineering6 years ago

Turkish city unveils design of Mars Colony project for tourists

electron-rain-253927
Science4 years ago

Researchers Reveal the Source of the Electron Rain Phenomenon

sound-underwater-65847984
Earth & Energy4 years ago

A New Study Reveals How Climate Change Will Affect Sound Travels Underwater

crew-dragon-2132
Space4 years ago

SpaceX Announced Crew Dragon Will No Longer Be Produced

space-technologies-1
Tech4 years ago

Here Are 6 Space Technologies We Can Benefit to Improve Life on Earth

russia-iss-1234
Space4 years ago

Russia Warns Sanctions on Moscow Could Endanger the ISS

moon-car-race
Engineering6 years ago

Remote-control cars to race on the Moon in 2021

walking-easier-2133
Engineering4 years ago

A New Study Reveals How to Make Walking Easier

space-debris-1
Space5 years ago

Space Debris Problem Is Getting Worse: Causes and Removal Efforts of Rambling Junk

blue-origin-new-shepard-design-1
Space5 years ago

Here Is Blue Origin’s Touristic Rocket: The New Shepard Design

Microplastic-pollution-human-blood-968745
Science4 years ago

Microplastic Pollution Detected in Human Blood for the First Time

Nvidia CEO declares coding's end in AI era 17
Tech2 years ago

Nvidia CEO declares coding’s end in AI era

Trending