| Literature DB >> 28765626 |
Sophie L Nedelec1,2, Suzanne C Mills3,4, Andrew N Radford5, Ricardo Beldade3,4, Stephen D Simpson6, Brendan Nedelec5, Isabelle M Côté7.
Abstract
Human-made noise is contributing increasingly to ocean soundscapes. Its physical, physiological and behavioural effects on marine organisms are potentially widespread, but our understanding remains largely limited to intraspecific impacts. Here, we examine how motorboats affect an interspecific cleaning mutualism critical for coral reef fish health, abundance and diversity. We conducted in situ observations of cleaning interactions between bluestreak cleaner wrasses (Labroides dimidiatus) and their fish clients before, during and after repeated, standardised approaches with motorboats. Cleaners inspected clients for longer and were significantly less cooperative during exposure to boat noise, and while motorboat disturbance appeared to have little effect on client behaviour, as evidenced by consistency of visit rates, clientele composition, and use of cleaning incitation signals, clients did not retaliate as expected (i.e., by chasing) in response to increased cheating by cleaners. Our results are consistent with the idea of cognitive impairments due to distraction by both parties. Alternatively, cleaners might be taking advantage of distracted clients to reduce their service quality. To more fully understand the importance of these findings for conservation and management, further studies should elucidate whether the efficacy of ectoparasite removal by cleaners is affected and explore the potential for habituation to boat noise in busy areas.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28765626 PMCID: PMC5539144 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-06515-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Mean power spectral density (PSD) levels for (a) sound pressure and (b) mono (horizontal) axis particle acceleration, over 5 min. Recordings were made within 50 cm of a juvenile bluestreak cleaner wrasse at 4 m depth on a coral wall with a SCUBA diver hovering motionless 1–2 m away. The grey line shows the noise caused by the diver; the black line, the noise caused by the diver and a motorboat passing repeatedly 10–100 m away from the cleaner and diver. Sample rate = 44.1 kHz, FFT length (number of frequency bands) = 1024.
Figure 2(a) Total time (in seconds) spent inspecting fish clients, and (b) average inspection duration (in seconds) per client, by juvenile bluestreak cleaner wrasses during 20-min observation periods before, during and after exposure to motorboat noise. Grey lines join the values from the same cleanerfish; black lines show the median values. N = 24 cleanerfish. Bars with stars indicate statistically significant differences.
Figure 3(a) Proportion of fish clients that jolted during inspections by juvenile cleaner wrasses and (b) number of jolts per client during 20-min observation periods before, during and after exposure to motorboat noise. Grey lines join results from the same cleanerfish; black lines show the median values. N = 24 cleanerfish. Bars with stars indicate statistically significant differences.