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Oysters Can Hear Sounds, and It May Be Important

Magallana gigas, the sound-sensitive Pacific oyster.

THE HEADLINE SOUNDS WHIMSICAL – Yes, oysters can ‘hear.’ They probably wish we’d clam up.

But the concept is serious. A team  of researchers in France have determined that oysters react to many of the sounds of underwater noise pollution, like the engines of passing ships, wind turbines and pile driving.

NOISE LIKELY A THREAT TO MANY FORMS OF MARINE LIFE

Underwater noise pollution has long been a concern regarding whales and fishes. It’s been documented as troublesome for animals like cephalopods.  The researchers suggest that ocean noise pollution may be a significant, undefined problem for many other forms of marine life, as well.

Their study, The sense of hearing in the Pacific oyster, Magallana gigas, was published in the online science journal PLOSOne.

LOW FREQUENCY SOUNDS, NOT HIGH-PITCHED ONES

Focusing on the Pacific oyster Magallana gigas (a significant commercial oyster found worldwide), the researchers measured the speed with which the oysters closed and reopened their shells when subjected to various noises. They found the bivalves significantly reactive to low sounds transmitted through water, like ship engines, but not to higher pitched noise from small boats and jet skis.

They suggest that man-made noise may overwhelm the ability to hear sounds like water currents and rainfall that may provide cues to prepare for the arrival of the plankton they eat and spawning in a synchronized manner.

FOR MORE DETAILS:

The research is described on PlosOne  in The sense of hearing in the Pacific oyster, Magallana gigasYou can find a more reader friendly account in Yes, Oysters Can ‘Hear.’ They probably Wish We’d Clam Up by New York Times science writer Douglas Quenqa.

For more information about oysters and their mollusk cousins clams, scallops and oysters, see Poseidon’s Web’s Bivalve Mollusks: Oysters & Scallops & Clams, Oh My!

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