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How Do Larvae Find a Place to Settle Down?
by
Lippsett, Lonny
in
Acoustic measurement
/ Acoustics
/ Biologists
/ Coral reefs
/ Elastic waves
/ Fish
/ Graduate students
/ Instruments
/ Invertebrates
/ Larvae
/ Oceanographic institutions
/ Oceanography
/ Particle motion
/ Researchers
/ Sound waves
/ Studies
2017
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How Do Larvae Find a Place to Settle Down?
by
Lippsett, Lonny
in
Acoustic measurement
/ Acoustics
/ Biologists
/ Coral reefs
/ Elastic waves
/ Fish
/ Graduate students
/ Instruments
/ Invertebrates
/ Larvae
/ Oceanographic institutions
/ Oceanography
/ Particle motion
/ Researchers
/ Sound waves
/ Studies
2017
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Do you wish to request the book?
How Do Larvae Find a Place to Settle Down?
by
Lippsett, Lonny
in
Acoustic measurement
/ Acoustics
/ Biologists
/ Coral reefs
/ Elastic waves
/ Fish
/ Graduate students
/ Instruments
/ Invertebrates
/ Larvae
/ Oceanographic institutions
/ Oceanography
/ Particle motion
/ Researchers
/ Sound waves
/ Studies
2017
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Magazine Article
How Do Larvae Find a Place to Settle Down?
2017
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Overview
A new study by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution researchers showed that sounds created by adult fish and invertebrates may not travel far enough for larvae to hear them. \"Based on their data, it seems unlikely that larvae would be able to use sound to locate far-off reefs,\" said Max Kaplan, the study's lead author and a graduate student in the MIT-WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography. \"That was a surprise to them.\" Kaplan and his Ph.D. advisor, WHOI biologist Aran Mooney, made painstaking acoustic measurements off the Hawaiian island of Maui, placing sensors at distances ranging from zero to nearly 5,000 feet away from coral reefs. The scientists used two different types of instruments to record two different components of sound -- pressure waves and particle motion.
Publisher
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute
Subject
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