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Noise pollution imperils tropical fish.
A recent study by Dr. Steve Simpson and team from the United Kingdom’s University of Bristol working at the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, has shown that noise pollution can influence the judgment of young fish, leading them away from the protection offered by their natural habitats.

The team built on previous findings that baby tropical fish born at sea are able to return to protective coral reefs based on sounds that are emitted from reef- dwelling organisms.

The scientists thus introduced one group of baby damselfish to natural reef sounds only and another to a combination of synthesized tones. Placing the fish the following day into tube-shaped tanks that offered a choice of direction, they observed that only the group with direct experience ofthe natural sounds swam toward the reef; the other group was actually repelled and would swim away.

Besides highlighting the grave danger to young fish, who might mistakenly follow a ship out to sea rather than traveling to where they could grow in safety, this study also clearly demonstrates the persistent memory of fish in recalling events from the day before.

Dr. Simpson’s team recommended more stringent laws to protect reef areas from noise as well as interim technologies such as “bubble curtains” in certain regions to create insulation from potentially dangerous sounds.

Many thanks Dr. Simpson and University of Bristol colleagues for these findings that highlight both the intelligence and sensitivity of our aquatic co-inhabitants.

May we act responsibly and with respect to protect their lives and the ecosystems that are vital to our own survival. Supreme Master Ching Hai has many times reminded of the unconditional love and necessary balance offered by our fellow beings in all corners of the Earth, as during the following August 2009 videoconference in Thailand.

Supreme Master Ching Hai: The animals are truly noble, gentle beings, selfless, and in harmony with one another, the environment, and with Heaven. Their role has always been since time immemorial to bring love and blessing to the world with their pure presence. If we would only stop harming and torturing them and killing them, and give them a chance to fulfill their God-given mission, then our planet will be saved and will be kept in splendor.  

They wait on the sidelines in full support of humans, for the day they can be our friends again, truly, not our victims. On that day of peacemaking between humans and animals, our eyes may begin to be opened to our co-inhabitants’ true magnificent roles on Earth.


http://www.southkoreanews.net/story/672589

Extra News
The September/October 2010 issue of Sierra magazine, published by US-based conservation group Sierra Club, ranks universities for their low-carbon endeavors such as sustainable energy use, recycling, organic growing and Meatless Monday programs to release a list of the “Top 100 Green Schools” in the USA.
http://www.lajollalight.com/news/273446-ucsd-among-coolest-green-schools
http://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/201009/coolschools/top100.aspx

Researchers discover that the huge, half-ton meiolaniid turtle, originally thought to have died out 40,000 years ago, actually vanished only three millennia ago on the island of Vanuatu after the first humans arrived and hunted it  for meat to extinction.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn19320-horned-turtles-butchered-to-extinction.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-10970082
 
The nations of Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, the Bahamas, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, and Jamaica now join the 131 countries already endorsing the Copenhagen Accord, which was established at the 2009 United Nations climate change conference in Denmark.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/environment/Six-Caribbean-countries-endorse-Copenhagen-Accord_7910957

A study by the US-based Women’s Health Initiative finds that women’s intake of even one glass of wine daily leads to twice the risk for certain types of invasive breast cancer.
http://jnci.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/djq316v1
http://www.medpagetoday.com/HematologyOncology/BreastCancer/21853
http://www.webmd.com/breast-cancer/guide/20061101/alcohol-breast-cancer-risk