Fish in habitats with higher motorboat disturbance show reduced sensitivity to motorboat noise
Harding, H; Gordon, T; Hsuan, R; et al.Mackaness, A; Radford, A; Simpson, SD
Date: 3 October 2018
Article
Journal
Biology Letters
Publisher
Royal Society
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Anthropogenic noise can negatively impact many taxa worldwide. It is possible that in noisy, high
disturbance environments the range and severity of impacts could diminish over time, but the
influence of previous disturbance remains untested in natural conditions. This study demonstrates
effects of motorboat noise on the physiology ...
Anthropogenic noise can negatively impact many taxa worldwide. It is possible that in noisy, high
disturbance environments the range and severity of impacts could diminish over time, but the
influence of previous disturbance remains untested in natural conditions. This study demonstrates
effects of motorboat noise on the physiology of an endemic cichlid fish in Lake Malaŵi. Exposure to
motorboats (driven 20–100 m from fish) and loudspeaker-playback of motorboat noise both
elevated oxygen-consumption rate at a single lower-disturbance site, characterised by low historic
and current motorboat activity. Repeating this assay at further lower-disturbance sites revealed a
consistent effect of elevated oxygen consumption in response to motorboat disturbance. However,
when similar trials were repeated at four higher-disturbance sites, no effect of motorboat exposure
was detected. These results demonstrate that disturbance history can affect local population
responses to noise. Action regarding noise pollution should consider the past, as well as the present,
when planning for the future.
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