YouTube home Comedy Week on YouTube
Upload

March 2012.....Catastrophe for Dolphins in Peru Linked to Seismic Blasts for Oil Exploration

charrobSix charrobSix·142 videos
40
3,053
Like     Dislike 0

Sign in to YouTube

Sign in with your Google Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to like charrobSix's video.

Sign in to YouTube

Sign in with your Google Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to dislike charrobSix's video.

Sign in to YouTube

Sign in with your Google Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to add charrobSix's video to your playlist.

Published on Apr 3, 2012

Blue Voice.org

Seismic Blasts for oil exploration, most occur at 260 decibal, cause extreme pain, brain hemorraging, complete hearing loss, and death in dolphins who are anywhere near the blasts. The blasts frequently occur every 12 to 15 seconds for months on end. In this case it appears thousands of dolphins beached themselves to escape the painful affects of the blasts.

From Bluevoice.org:
Detailed Report From Peru Dolphin Mortality Event

Here are some results from Dr. Carlos Yaipen Llanos's tests on dolphins washed up on Peruvian beaches. These tests were undertaken by ORCA - Peru and funded by BlueVoice. Additional results will be published here shortly.

As previously reported, two species have been affected: Long beaked
common dolphin (Delphinus capensis) and Burmeister's porpoise (Phocoena
spinipinnis). We counted 615 common dolphins. All age classes were
affected: Adult males, females, lactating females, juveniles, calves and
newborns. We counted 19 porpoises, only females and calves.

There are carcasses in different degrees of decomposition and every 10
to 30 meters, none of them older than 5 weeks. This matches with the fact
that these strandings happened right after our previous survey. We found
animals recently dead (no more than 12 hours) and several carcasses of
juveniles and calves showed "rigor mortis" as being dead on land, then
stranded alive (stiff arc position, beak open, belly down, transversal to
tide line, no more than 3 days dead).

Necropsies were performed on site. Macroscopic findings include:
hemorrhagic lesions in the middle including the acoustic chamber,
fractures in the periotic bones, bubbles in blood filling liver and
kidneys (animals were diving, so the main organs were congested), lesions
in the lungs compatible with pulmonary emphysema, sponge-like liver. So
far we have 12 periotic samples from different animals, all with different
degree of fractures and 80% of them with fracture in the right periotic
bones, compatible with acoustic impact and decompression syndrome.

Posted by BlueVoice Breaking News at 9:48 AM

----------------------------------------­------------------------

BlueVoice.org stated that "initial tests ... show evidence of acoustical impact from sonic blasts used in exploration for oil."

The ORCA Peru expert, veterinarian Carlos Yaipen Llanos, said that while "we have no definitive evidence," he suspects acoustic testing created a "marine bubble" -- in essence a sonic blast that led to internal bleeding, loss of equilibrium and disorientation.

Loading icon Loading...

Loading icon Loading...

Loading icon Loading...

Loading icon Loading...

Ratings have been disabled for this video.
Rating is available when the video has been rented.
This feature is not available right now. Please try again later.

All Comments (8)

Sign in now to post a comment!
  • dylp420

    its the switchig of the poles! the goverment is trying to reverse the poles. just search: "Mayan Explanation"

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate dylp420's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate dylp420's comment.
  • tasteegold7772

    yeah fucking right "drill baby drill" asswipes!..when we stop meddling in the earth like kids in a sandbox THIS kind of shit will stop happening

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate tasteegold7772's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate tasteegold7772's comment.
  • Tom Pajak

    this is a war people...the United States NAVY has found an unknown lifeform that rivals us in the oceans for intelligence and the only answer it has to deal with it is violence using sonar weapons..the proof is in the witnesses and drawings of history..these species were known but we were told they were fantasy..the species wants us gone because we don't respect the planet..we take and take and kill the oceans..the planet is fighting back..

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate Tom Pajak's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate Tom Pajak's comment.
  • Found911

    If blasting were the case there wouldnt be that many dolphins washing up with massive sonar related damage. They would go the opposite direction of the blasts, not toward them....and this has been going on since at least January...This is something else...

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate Found911's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate Found911's comment.
  • Brittany Decker

    omg that is so terrible!! =(

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate Brittany Decker's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate Brittany Decker's comment.
  • Loading comment...
Loading...
Loading...
Working...
Sign in to add this to Watch Later