Les Blumenthal, Herald Washington, D.C., bureau
WASHINGTON — Without maps or GPS, great white sharks travel thousand of miles round-trip from California to Hawaii or Australia to South Africa.
Sea turtles hatched on the beaches of Florida travel the currents of the North Atlantic Gyre to Europe, Africa and South America before heading home.
And in one of the most mysterious and epic journeys of all, salmon from the streams and rivers of the Pacific Northwest head to sea and swim into the far reaches of the North Pacific before returning home to spawn.
Scientists increasingly believe these marine creatures and others use the earth’s magnetic fields to navigate vast distances.
But as the search for green energy turns to the oceans, there are concerns tidal and wave generators and the cables that bring their electricity to shore could interfere with the internal compasses of everything from salmon, sharks and sea turtles to lobsters and crabs.
Filed under: Around the Sound |
