| Literature DB >> 24088868 |
Natacha Aguilar de Soto1, Natali Delorme, John Atkins, Sunkita Howard, James Williams, Mark Johnson.
Abstract
Understanding the impact of noise on marine fauna at the population level requires knowledge about the vulnerability of different life-stages. Here we provide the first evidence that noise exposure during larval development produces body malformations in marine invertebrates. Scallop larvae exposed to playbacks of seismic pulses showed significant developmental delays and 46% developed body abnormalities. Similar effects were observed in all independent samples exposed to noise while no malformations were found in the control groups (4881 larvae examined). Malformations appeared in the D-veliger larval phase, perhaps due to the cumulative exposure attained by this stage or to a greater vulnerability of D-veliger to sound-mediated physiological or mechanical stress. Such strong impacts suggest that abnormalities and growth delays may also result from lower sound levels or discrete exposures during the D-stage, increasing the potential for routinely-occurring anthropogenic noise sources to affect recruitment of wild scallop larvae in natural stocks.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24088868 PMCID: PMC3789146 DOI: 10.1038/srep02831
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Comparative results for the control (C) and noise (N) groups.
The height of the bars indicates the mean proportion of abnormal larvae (with body malformations) and of larvae in the most advanced developmental stage observed for each sampling interval: (A) trocophore; (B) flagelated early veliger; (C) newly secreted straight-hinged D-veliger; (D), (E), (F), (G) straight-hinged D-veliger mixed with some pediveliger in (G). The error bars mark the minimum and maximum values observed for each condition. Sample size was 800 larvae per sampling in (A) to (D) and 738, 473 and 470 larvae in (E), (F) and (G), respectively. Larval schematics reproduced with permission from FAO (2004) Helm, Bourne and Lovatelli. The hatchery culture of bivalves, a practical manual. http://www.fao.org/docrep/007/y5720e/y5720e0a.htm.
Figure 2Diagram of the experimental set-up in the tank and characteristics of the noise exposure received by the scallop larvae, showing the waveform and the power spectrum level of an individual pulse (1024 point FFT, 50% overlap, 2048 Hanning window).