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SCIENCE
You might think your dog can predict an earthquake, but a recent study suggests otherwise.
You might think your dog can predict an earthquake, but a recent study suggests otherwise.
The first rigorous analysis of the phenomenon concludes that there is no strong evidence behind the claim.
The paper instead suggests that most of this "evidence" consists of single observations and anecdotes that cannot be tested rigorously. Its authors suggest a series of questions that researchers should use in analysing the evidence that abnormal animal behaviour predicts earthquakes.
Heiko Woith and colleagues at the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences say scientists must determine whether the link between the animal behavior and the earthquake is based on clearly defined rules (such as the animal's distance from earthquakes of a certain magnitude), whether the animal behavior has ever been observed and not followed by an earthquake, whether there is a statistical testing hypothesis in place to examine the evidence, and whether the animal population is healthy, among other questions.
These questions are rarely asked, making it difficult to systematically analyze the evidence for animal prediction, the researchers concluded after studying 729 reports of abnormal animal behaviour related to 160 earthquakes.
"Many review papers on the potential of animals as earthquake precursors exist, but to the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that a statistical approach was used to evaluate the data," said Woith.
The researchers collected reports on potential earthquake predictions across a variety of animals, from elephants to silkworms. Most reports were anecdotes rather than experimental studies, and the majority of the reports came from three events: the 2010 Darfield earthquake in New Zealand, the 1984 Nagano-ken Seibu earthquake in Japan, and the 2009 L'Aquila earthquake in Italy.
The unusual behaviours occurred anywhere from seconds to months prior to the earthquakes and at distances from a few to hundreds of kilometres from the earthquake origins. Only 14 of the reports record a series of observations of the animals over time--most reports are single observations.
These weaknesses in the data make it difficult to confirm that these behaviours are predictive--meaning they signal an earthquake event before the event begins--rather than random occurrences or behaviours linked to the initial stages of an earthquake, such as foreshocks.
Foreshocks and abnormal animal behaviour strongly cluster together in the statistical analysis by Woith and colleagues, suggesting that at least some of the behaviours may be related to physical phenomena from a seismic event already underway.
"The animals may sense seismic waves--it could P, S or surface waves--generated by foreshocks," Woith suggested. "Another option could be secondary effects triggered by the foreshocks, like changes in groundwater or release of gases from the ground which might be sensed by the animals."
One of the biggest problems with the animal data, Woith says, is the lack of continuous, long-term observations of animals experiencing earthquakes. "Up to now, only very few time series with animal behaviour exists at all, the longest being just one year."
Without a long record, Woith said, researchers cannot be sure that their observations relate to an earthquake and not some other kind of environmental change or long-term fluctuation in the health of an animal population or its predators.
The paper has been published in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America.