Can Data from Space Save Dolphins?
Video source record: https://images.nasa.gov/details/GSFC_20171208_Dolphins_m12700_data
Player mode uses your custom Wikivideos controls.
Summary
The age-old mystery of why otherwise healthy dolphins, whales and porpoises get stranded along coasts worldwide deepens: After a collaboration between NASA scientists and marine biologists, new research suggests space weather is not the primary cause of animal beachings — but the research continues. The collaboration is now seeking others to join their search for the factors that send ocean mammals off course, in the hopes of perhaps one day predicting strandings before they happen. Scientists have long sought the answer to why such animals get beached, and one recent collaboration hoped to find a clear cut solution: Scientists from a cross-section of fields pooled massive data sets to see if disturbances to the magnetic field around Earth could be what confuses these sea creatures, known as cetaceans. Cetaceans are thought to use Earth’s magnetic field to navigate. Since intense solar storms can disturb the magnetic field, the scientists wanted to determine whether they could, by ex
This page is styled with a Wikimedia-like layout while preserving the Wikivideos player and chapter workflow.
Details
- Source collection: NASA
- License: Public Domain (US Government)
- Category: Space
Wikipedia cross-links
Academic references
- Primary source record: https://images.nasa.gov/details/GSFC_20171208_Dolphins_m12700_data
- Topic lookup: Google Scholar search for “Can Data from Space Save Dolphins?”