Why
Seals Might Love Having More Wind Farms
From: Steve Williams, Care2, More from this Affiliate
New research reveals that off-shore wind farms are particularly
useful for seals as they appear to act like artificial reefs, drawing in large
groups of fish.
The study, carried out by researchers at St Andrews University in
Scotland and published this month in the journal Current Biology, saw
scientists track a group of seals in the North Sea using GPS devices. The
purpose of the study was to look at whether man-made changes to the structural
ocean environment are affecting marine predator behavior.
To explain that, the scientists highlight that whenever we make
changes to the landscape for the purposes of building or reshaping a particular
location, those changes can affect local wildlife. For instance, and for a not
particularly green example, by creating a landfill, we may attract a variety of
animals that can utilize the rubbish we have thrown out.
This kind of change as a result of our reshaping the environment
is well documented on-land, but until now the effect has not been tracked in
marine environments.
Looking at the tracking data from two groups of harbor and grey
seals, which are good candidates for this kind of research because they are
apex predators, which have no known predators above them affecting their
behavior, the scientists found that a number of seals from each group regularly
visited off-shore wind farms, the Alpha Ventus farm off the German coast, and
the Sheringham Shoal farm close to southeast England.
When looking at the tracking data, the researchers noticed that
rather than just swimming through the wind farms, the seals appeared to be
hunting. They could tell this by the fact that a number of the seals adopted
grid-like movements around particular turbines, methodically searching for fish
in patterns that have previously been observed as classic hunting behavior.
This wasn't a one-off either, with a number of seals repeatedly returning to
the wind farms and displaying the same behavior. The seals were also shown to
do the same around sub-sea pipelines, with the seals following along the line
of the area up to ten times a day.
Continue reading at ENN affiliate Care 2.