Crabs are being drawn to high electromagnetic (EMF) fields around undersea cables and getting trapped there for hours, âmesmerizedâ.
They are not just immobilized, in lab tests it screws up their blood chemistry and circadian rhythm too.
Nature-lovers might wonder what other marine life is also being impacted? What if the magnetic fields are playing havoc with migrating fish and turtles too? It might be handy to find that out before we build bigger taller towers offshore with bigger stronger cables.
Where is the Green outcry, or the Save-the-crabs campaign? Perhaps some kinds of pollution are OK âfor the greater goodâ?
These are not some esoteric rare crustaceans, by the way, but common dinner crabs â the ones food chains and fisheries depend on.
If these crabs were victims of coal plants the headlines would be a catastrophe.
Info from joannenova.com.
Underwater power cables are âmesmerizingâ crabs around Scotland
In a new study, researchers found brown crabs âfreezeâ when they come too close to the electromagnetic fields generated by these cables. This disturbing behavior may negatively affect the marine creatureâs migration habits, among other things.
For their new study, researchers at Heriot-Watt University studied nearly 60 crabs at the St Abbs Marine Station in Scotland and found that the high level of electromagnetism coming from the subsea cables is affecting the blood cells of the crabs, which could make them more susceptible to bacterial infections. And thatâs not all.
This might not be so good to have mass unemployed crabs sitting around soaking in the milliGauss?
Alastair Lyndon, a researcher from Heriot-Watt University and one of the studyâs authors, said that crabs are attracted to the electromagnetic field and just sit still when exposed to it. While this doesnât sound like a problem, if crabs arenât moving they arenât looking for foraging for food or a mate. The researchers also found the magnetic fields are causing changes in the animalsâ sugar metabolism.
Isnât renewable energy supposed to âprotect the environmentâ? Info from joannenova.com.
âWe found that exposure to higher levels of electromagnetic field strength changed the number of blood cells in the crabsâ bodies. This could have a range of consequences, like making them more susceptible to bacterial infection,â added Dr Kevin Scott of St Abbs Marine Station.
Surprisingly little research has been done on how underwater cables may be impacting marine life. In fact, most of the concern has surrounded how wildlife is prone to damaging the cables, not the other way around. Nevertheless, itâs clear that human activity is changing the natural electromagnetic environment and many marine creatures, from sharks to lobsters, are sensitive to electromagnetic fields.
From the paper, the lower strength fields of 250 ”T didnât appear to affect the crabs, but at 1000 ”T the fields were blocking their circadian rhythm, causing hyperglycemia (raised blood sugar) and changing crab behaviour. What are the options? Burying the cables, shielding them, or splitting them into multiple lower strength paths? Just add another major expense to the bat-and-bird-killing-towers that make unreliable energy.