| Literature DB >> 25276507 |
Rick Bruintjes1, Andrew N Radford2.
Abstract
Anthropogenic (man-made) noise has been shown to have a negative impact on the behaviour and physiology of a range of terrestrial and aquatic animals. However, direct assessments of fitness consequences are rare. Here we examine the effect of additional noise on early life stages in the model cichlid fish, Neolamprologus pulcher. Many fishes use and produce sounds, they are crucial elements of aquatic ecosystems, and there is mounting evidence that they are vulnerable to anthropogenic noise; adult N. pulcher have recently been shown to change key behaviours during playback of motor boat noise. Using a split-brood design to eliminate potential genetic effects, we exposed half of the eggs and fry from each clutch to four weeks of playbacks of noise originally recorded from small motor boats with the other half acting as a control (receiving no noise playback). There was no significant effect of additional noise on hatching success or fry survival, length or weight at the end of the exposure period. Although care should be taken not to generalize these findings on a single species from a laboratory study, our data suggest that moderate noise increases do not necessarily have direct negative impacts on early-life survival and growth. Further studies on a range of species in natural conditions are urgently needed to inform conservation efforts and policy decisions about the consequences of anthropogenic noise.Entities:
Keywords: Anthropogenic noise; Cichlidae; Development; Fitness; Growth; Lake Tanganyika; Long-term noise exposure; Offspring survival; Sound; Teleost; Vertebrates
Year: 2014 PMID: 25276507 PMCID: PMC4178459 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.594
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Spectral densities of field and tank-based recordings.
Spectral level densities in an experimental aquarium during playback of an additional-noise track (AN aquarium) and playback of no noise as an ambient control condition (Ambient aquarium), as well as the spectral level densities from recordings made in Lake Tanganyika during the passing of a boat (BN lake) and during an ambient condition without additional boat noise (Ambient lake). The spectral level densities were created using Avisoft Saslab pro (FFT analysis: spectral level units, Hann evaluation window, 50% overlap, FFT size 1024, averaged from a 15 s sample of each recording, presented are 43 Hz intervals).
Boat sizes and engine types.
Data on boat sizes and engine types recorded in Bristol harbour (United Kingdom) and Mpulungu harbour in Lake Tanganyika (Zambia). All passing boats were recorded while cruising at average speed 10–50 m from the hydrophone.
| Boat number | Place | Boat size (m) | Engine |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bristol harbour | 2.0 | Outboard, 50 hp, Yamaha |
| 2 | Bristol harbour | 3.0 | Outboard, 25 hp, Mariner |
| 3 | Bristol harbour | 4.5 | Outboard, 50 hp, Yamaha |
| 4 | Bristol harbour | 8.0 | Inboard, 40 hp, unknown brand |
| 5 | Bristol harbour | 11.0 | Inboard, 40 hp, unknown brand |
| 6 | Bristol harbour | 12.0 | Inboard, 120 hp, unknown brand |
| 7 | Bristol harbour | 12.0 | Outboard, 25 hp, Mercury |
| 8 | Bristol harbour | 12.0 | Inboard, 70 hp, unknown brand |
| 9 | Bristol harbour | 14.0 | Inboard, 70 hp, Ford Fiesta |
| 10 | Bristol harbour | 14.0 | Inboard, 50 hp, Ford fsd marine diesel |
| 11 | Bristol harbour | 14.0 | Inboard, 50 hp, unknown brand |
| 12 | Bristol harbour | 15.0 | Inboard, 41 hp, Mitsubishi diesel |
| 13 | Bristol harbour | 15.0 | Inboard, 40 hp, unknown brand |
| 14 | Bristol harbour | 18.0 | Inboard, 60 hp, unknown brand |
| 15 | Bristol harbour | 23.0 | Inboard, 80 hp, unknown brand |
| 16 | Bristol harbour | 28.0 | Inboard, 75 hp, unknown brand |
| 17 | Bristol harbour | 28.0 | Inboard, 80 hp, unknown brand |
| 18 | Mpulungu harbour | 3.5 | Outboard, 25 hp, Mercury |
| 19 | Mpulungu harbour | 20.0 | Inboard, 40 hp, unknown brand |
| 20 | Mpulungu harbour | 20.0 | Inboard, 60 hp, unknown brand |
| 21 | Mpulungu harbour | 26.0 | Inboard, 40 hp, unknown brand |
Sample sizes.
Individual sample sizes used for analyses of hatching success, survival, and length and weight after four weeks of exposure to additional-noise and control conditions.
| Descriptive data | Hatching | Fry survival | Fry measurements at week 4 |
|---|---|---|---|
| No. of clutches used | 10 | 20 | 20 |
| Total no. eggs or fry | 109 fry hatched | 191 fry survived | 191 fry survived |
| Range of egg or fry | 7–34 eggs; | 7–34 eggs; | 7–34 eggs; |
Notes.
In 19 out of 20 clutches at least one fry survived in one or both treatment(s).
Length of one clutch was not taken, resulting in 179 length measurements.
Figure 2Hatching success, survival, length and weight at four weeks.
Proportion of clutch that successfully hatched (n = 10) (A), proportion of clutch that survived to four weeks (B), mean length of fry at four weeks (C), and mean dry weight of fry at four weeks (D) in the two sound treatments. Presented in (B)–(D) are values from first clutches (n = 11), with solid lines representing clutches receiving noise starting during the fry stage and dotted lines clutches receiving noise starting during the egg stage. Four clutches in (A) and one in (B) had no hatching success or survival, but are shown above zero for visualization. In (C) and (D), unconnected ‘x’ symbols represent fry surviving in one of the treatments.