Chinese scientists have started using thousands of animals, including chickens and pigs to try to predict when an earthquake may strike, according to a media report.
Seismologists in Nanjing, the capital of eastern Jiangsu province, have set up seven observation centres at zoos and animal parks in the region, the Modern Express website reported.
They will be watching for changes in behaviour among thousands of animals, which might be a sign of an imminent tremor.
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An ecological park in the city's Yuhuatai district has become one of the seismic monitoring sites, with 2,000 chickens, 200 pigs and 2 sq km of fish ponds, the BBC quoted the report as saying.
Cameras have been installed around the park, and staff will report back to the seismological bureau on the animals' behaviour twice a day.
"Animals sometimes become stressed before an earthquake," says Zhao Bing, Nanjing Seismological Bureau's chief of scientific monitoring.
But the occasional bit of oddness from one chicken does not necessarily spell trouble, so groups of animals are being observed, "so that their behaviour can be cross-checked", he said.
A member of staff at Hongshan Forest Zoo, another monitoring site, says animals can be just as effective as specialist technology when trying to predict a quake.
"Birds can become 'nervous' - if their tails are wagging like a dog's, you should pay attention," Shen Zhijun said.
The report came as China was today hit by a powerful 6.5 magnitude earthquake which flattened about 3,000 houses in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, killing at least six persons and injuring 48 others.
It has long been thought that animal behaviour could provide an early warning of seismic activity.
In 2011, scientists said animals may be able to detect chemical changes in groundwater which precede a quake. Their study was prompted by a colony of toads abandoning its pond in the Italian city of L'Aquila days before it was devastated by a 6.3 magnitude quake.
Another study observed changes in wild animal behaviour in the three weeks before Peru's 7.0 magnitude earthquake in 2011.


