Friday,
January 28, 2005
(01-28)
09:43 PST NEW HAVEN,
Conn. (AP) --
A toxic
chemical used to prevent
barnacles from clinging
to ship hulls may cause
deafness in marine mammals
and could lead whales
to beach themselves,
Yale researchers say.
The hearing
loss would be the latest
environmental hazard
linked to TBT, a chemical
already known to be
harmful to some aquatic
life. TBT is banned
in many countries but
is still widely used.
Yale researchers
based their theory on
a study of guinea pigs,
because mammals have
similar ear structure.
Since
many marine mammals
use sonar to get around,
"it's possible
this could be contributing
to whales and dolphins
beaching and hitting
ships," said Joseph
Santos-Sacchi, professor
of surgery and neurobiology
at Yale School of Medicine.
"I
think it's a reasonable
hypothesis that this
could possibly be happening,"
said Theo Colborn, a
senior fellow at the
World Wildlife Fund
who has studied TBT
but was not involved
in the Yale research.
"It sounds very
logical."
Many scientists
also believe the beaching
of whales occurs for
non-chemical reasons
-- primarily the Navy's
use of sonar.
The Yale
study will be published
in the Biophysical Journal
in March.
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