| Literature DB >> 26587351 |
Camille Desjonquères1, Fanny Rybak2, Marion Depraetere3, Amandine Gasc3, Isabelle Le Viol4, Sandrine Pavoine5, Jérôme Sueur3.
Abstract
The past decade has produced an increased ecological interest in sonic environments, or soundscapes. However, despite this rise in interest and technological improvements that allow for long-term acoustic surveys in various environments, some habitats' soundscapes remain to be explored. Ponds, and more generally freshwater habitats, are one of these acoustically unexplored environments. Here we undertook the first long term acoustic monitoring of three temperate ponds in France. By aural and visual inspection of a selection of recordings, we identified 48 different sound types, and according to the rarefaction curves we calculated, more sound types are likely present in one of the three ponds. The richness of sound types varied significantly across ponds. Surprisingly, there was no pond-to-pond daily consistency of sound type richness variation; each pond had its own daily patterns of activity. We also explored the possibility of using six acoustic diversity indices to conduct rapid biodiversity assessments in temperate ponds. We found that all indices were sensitive to the background noise as estimated through correlations with the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). However, we determined that the AR index could be a good candidate to measure acoustic diversities using partial correlations with the SNR as a control variable. Yet, research is still required to automatically compute the SNR in order to apply this index on a large data set of recordings. The results showed that these three temperate ponds host a high level of acoustic diversity in which the soundscapes were variable not only between but also within the ponds. The sources producing this diversity of sounds and the drivers of difference in daily song type richness variation both require further investigation. Such research would yield insights into the biodiversity and ecology of temperate ponds.Entities:
Keywords: Acoustic diversity indices; Monitoring; Ponds; Sound
Year: 2015 PMID: 26587351 PMCID: PMC4647551 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Spectrograms and oscillograms of chosen sound productions illustrating the acoustic diversity found in the studied ponds (Fourier window length: 1,024 samples, frame overlap: 50%, window type: Hanning).
(A) Sound type 18 recorded in pond 1 on the 9th of July at 12:00 pm. (B) Sound types 24 and 31 recorded in pond 2 on the 3rd of July at 4:00 am. (C) Sound types 30 and 33 recorded in pond 3 on the 14th of July at 4:00 am. Sound type numbers refer to Supplemental Information.
Figure 2Sample based rarefaction curves of sound types per recording for each pond.
Each one minute recording is a sample and the sound types are equivalent to species in the rarefaction process. Shaded area around the curves indicates 95% confidence intervals.
Figure 3Result of the Correspondence Analysis (CA) with the sound types as variables and the recording points as samples.
Each point represents a point of recording in the pond, each ellipse corresponds to 67% of the point dispersion around the centroid for each pond. The axes 1 and 2 explain 26% and 17% of the variance, respectively.
Figure 4Frequency distribution of sound type richness as a function of time.
The size of each point is related to the number of recordings containing the same number of different sound types (total number of recordings N = 332). The three dashed lines show the fitted model for each of the three ponds.
Spearman correlations between acoustic indices (Ht, Hf, M, AR, ACI and NP) and richness and abundance of sound types and SNR.
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| SNR | −0.61*** | −0.41*** | 0.48*** | −0.19* | 0.42*** | 0.55*** |
| Richness | −0.5*** | −0.3*** | 0.44*** | −0.04 | 0.34*** | 0.49*** |
| Abundance | −0.53*** | −0.34*** | 0.47*** | −0.06 | 0.36*** | 0.5*** |
Notes.
Stars indicate the significance of the correlation test.
Bonferroni adjusted p-value ∗ < 0.05, ∗∗ < 0.01, ∗∗∗ < 0.001.
Spearman partial correlations between acoustic indices (Ht, Hf, M, AR, ACI and NP) and richness and abundance of sound types given the SNR.
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| Richness | −0.02 | 0.06 | 0.11 | 0.2** | 0 | 0.1 |
| Abundance | −0.04 | 0 | 0.15 | 0.19** | 0.02 | 0.08 |
Notes.
Stars indicate the significance of the correlation test.
Bonferroni adjusted p-value ∗ < 0.05, ∗∗, P < 0.01; ∗∗∗, P < 0.001.