Lobster Tales: Offshore Wind Farms Leave Lobster’s With Deformed & Crippled Young

Spread the love

Crabs and lobsters are being mesmerised, deformed and crippled by the peculiar electromagnetic fields created by the cables that connect offshore wind turbines.

recent scientific study found that the magnetic fields generated by these cables attracts crabs that then remain in place, fixated on the magnetic field, effectively immobilising them.

Now, another study relating to their cousins, the lobster has shown that the same electromagnetic fields deform their young to the point where they are incapable of ordinary movement ie, they become crustacean cripples.

For a creature that needs to move over large distances over the seafloor to feed and breed, offshore wind farms may well amount to a death sentence for any lobsters with the misfortune to have these things speared into their natural habitat.

Not only that, with thousands of these things being plugged into the coastal waters around Britain and along America’s Atlantic Coast, the great offshore wind power push could also spell the death knell for lobster fishers far and wide.

Lobsters are being deformed and left unable to swim because of electromagnetic fields from undersea wind farm power cables
Daily Mail
Chay Quinn
30 April 2022

Lobsters are being deformed by wind farm cables and being left unable to swim, a new study has found.

Electric magnetic fields created by the cables which transport energy from offshore wind farms make lobster larvae three times more like to grow deformed – with bent tail sections most common, according to Heriot-Watt University scientists.

These deformities can also include disrupted eye development and the paper says that this resulted in the creatures being three times more likely to fail a swimming test – showing their ability to get to the surface to find food is impaired.

Researchers St Abbs Marine Station off the east coast of Scotland exposed over 4,000 lobster and crab eggs to electromagnetic fields in controlled conditions.

Dr Alastair Lyndon, a marine biologist at Heriot-Watt University, told the Telegraph: ‚Lobsters were more affected than crabs by the electromagnetic field, at least in the short term.

‚Both crab and lobster larvae exposed to the electromagnetic field were smaller, which could have an impact on their survival. Underwater, bigger means better able to avoid predators.

‚The electromagnetic field had a much bigger impact on the lobsters.

‚We put them through a vertical swimming test to check they could get to the surface to find food. The exposed lobsters were almost three times more likely to fail the test, by not reaching the top of the chamber, than the unexposed ones.

‚Lobster isn’t an endangered species but it is under sustained pressure because of its commercial value.

‚We should be aware of the need to shield them from electromagnetic fields, particularly during early development, as well as monitoring their long-term behaviour and development, which also goes for crabs.

Petra Harsanyi, from St Abbs Marine Station, said: ‚Exposure to the electromagnetic field made the crab larvae smaller. While that hasn’t had an immediate effect, it does show that there’s an interference with their development.

‚It would be interesting to monitor this over time to see whether these crabs have long-term impairments or increased mortality.‘

The claims come as a massive expansion of offshore wind has been planned to help the UK meet its Net-Zero carbon emissions pledge by 2050.

Researchers have advised that underwater cables be under the seabed to avoid impact on small fisheries.

Plans focus mainly on wind farms in the sea, the plans are expected to include measures to increase production on land.

Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng suggested capacity could double to 30GW by 2030.

But the PM faces strong opposition to the plan from shire Tories, which could instead see the majority of turbines built in more remote areas like the Scottish Highlands.

No 10 distanced itself from a massive expansion in onshore wind, saying any expansion would require ‚community consent‘.
Daily Mail

Latest victims of the wind industry’s efforts to ‘save’ the planet.

via STOP THESE THINGS

May 28, 2022 by stopthesethings