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This press release was originally distributed via the eWire press wire service (2002–2016). It is preserved here as a historical record.
IFAW and Cornell University Deploy High-Tech Acoustic Buoys in Cape Cod Bay to Protect Highly Endangered Right Whales
ARCHIVED 2002–2016: Originally distributed via the eWire press wire service. Preserved as historical record.
IFAW and Cornell University Deploy High-Tech Acoustic Buoys in Cape Cod Bay to Protect Highly Endangered Right Whales
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TO ENVIRONMENTAL AND NATIONAL EDITORS:
IFAW and Cornell University Deploy High-Tech Acoustic Buoys in Cape Cod Bay to Protect Highly Endangered Right Whales
CAPE COD, MASSACHUSETTS, Mar. 12 -/E-Wire/-- The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW -- www.ifaw.org) today continued with its highly successful, $150,000 right whale acoustic buoy project, when 5 buoys were deployed into Cape Cod Bay, with the assistance of Cornell University and the Center for Coastal Studies (CCS). Data from the buoys will be used to compile key information that may provide the key to the survival of this highly endangered, great whale species.
The buoys are built of clear glass spheres containing sophisticated passive acoustic monitoring devices, computer equipment and battery power. They are anchored close to the sea floor and will record right whale calls and ship noise over a 40 day period.
During this period, whale distribution near the buoys will be monitored by CCS aerial surveys.
Scientists from IFAW and Cornell University will retrieve the buoys by activating an automatic release system. The acoustic data, when combined with data from aerial and boat based surveys, will help researchers to understand how the acoustic data can be combined with the other survey data to best monitor and predict the movements of right whales in the shipping lanes along the east coast of the United States.
North Atlantic right whales -- the world's most rare whale species -- number around 300 and are highly susceptible to vessel strikes, as shipping lanes cut through the whales' critical habitat. Sixteen right whales are known to have died from ship strikes over the past three decades, while scientists believe many more may be affected but their bodies are never found. Ship strikes and entanglement in fishing gear are the primary human-induced threats to right whales and may be largely responsible for the failure of right whales to recover from the effects of commercial whaling.
"Currently, the population of North Atlantic right whales is dwindling dramatically," said Jared Blumenfeld, Director of IFAW's Habitat for Animals Program. "If this decline cannot be reversed, scientists predict that the right whale will be extinct in less than 200 years. By using this acoustic technology, IFAW hopes to prevent ship strikes with these great whales, bringing them back from the brink of extinction."
When the whales depart from Cape Cod Bay, additional acoustic buoys to be deployed in the Great South Channel off of Cape Cod, will track them for a further six weeks, providing a much longer study period than last year's 40- day deployment by IFAW.
"We hope to use the information we gather to develop a system of intelligent acoustic buoys that can be placed in Great South Channel shipping lanes, and which can automatically relay right whale location information to shore via satellite," said IFAW Right Whale Team Leader, Anna Moscrop.
Editor Notes: For more details on IFAW's efforts to protect the North Atlantic right whale, visit www.rightwhales.org
International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW)
Jennifer Ferguson-Mitchell, [REDACTED-PHONE], [REDACTED-EMAIL]
http://http://www.rightwhales.org
http://http://www.ifaw.org
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