From indoor to outdoor: Behavioural response of fish to noise exposure of different temporal structures

Human activities, such as shipping and pile driving, produce substantial amounts of man-made noise underwater. The noise may negatively affect fish, causing physical injuries, hearing loss, physiological stress, acoustic masking and behavioural changes. Among these effects, behavioural changes are m...

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Main Authors: Yik Yaw Neo, Hendrik V Winter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/conf.FMARS.2015.03.00204/full
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spelling doaj-79a2e790ce6e4399a7ff25d4eca36eb82020-11-24T23:32:02ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452015-12-01210.3389/conf.FMARS.2015.03.00204181129From indoor to outdoor: Behavioural response of fish to noise exposure of different temporal structuresYik Yaw Neo0Hendrik V Winter1Institute of Biology Leiden (IBL), Leiden UniversityInstitute for Marine Resources & Ecosystem Studies (IMARES), Wageningen UniversityHuman activities, such as shipping and pile driving, produce substantial amounts of man-made noise underwater. The noise may negatively affect fish, causing physical injuries, hearing loss, physiological stress, acoustic masking and behavioural changes. Among these effects, behavioural changes are most problematic, but are understudied, especially under well-controlled field conditions. Moreover, man-made noise varies widely in terms of acoustic characteristics. The influence of temporal patterns of noise on the impacts is largely unknown. We exposed groups of European seabass to sound treatments of different temporal patterns, varying in intermittency, interval regularity and presence of amplitude 'ramp-up'. The study took place in a large octagonal floating pen (⌀ = ~12.5m) in Oosterschelde, a marine inlet in the Netherlands. We tracked the fish swimming trajectories with an acoustic 3D telemetry system and looked into the behavioural changes and recovery. Upon noise exposure, the fish swam to greater depths in tighter shoals, similar to previous studies conducted in a basin. Moreover, the fish swam away from the noise source, suggesting avoidance behaviour. The different temporal patterns seemed to differ in their impact strengths although the results were not significant. These findings may carry important scientific and management implications.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/conf.FMARS.2015.03.00204/fullFish behaviourField studiesAnthropogenic soundDicentrarchus labraxPile drivingramp-up
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yik Yaw Neo
Hendrik V Winter
spellingShingle Yik Yaw Neo
Hendrik V Winter
From indoor to outdoor: Behavioural response of fish to noise exposure of different temporal structures
Frontiers in Marine Science
Fish behaviour
Field studies
Anthropogenic sound
Dicentrarchus labrax
Pile driving
ramp-up
author_facet Yik Yaw Neo
Hendrik V Winter
author_sort Yik Yaw Neo
title From indoor to outdoor: Behavioural response of fish to noise exposure of different temporal structures
title_short From indoor to outdoor: Behavioural response of fish to noise exposure of different temporal structures
title_full From indoor to outdoor: Behavioural response of fish to noise exposure of different temporal structures
title_fullStr From indoor to outdoor: Behavioural response of fish to noise exposure of different temporal structures
title_full_unstemmed From indoor to outdoor: Behavioural response of fish to noise exposure of different temporal structures
title_sort from indoor to outdoor: behavioural response of fish to noise exposure of different temporal structures
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Human activities, such as shipping and pile driving, produce substantial amounts of man-made noise underwater. The noise may negatively affect fish, causing physical injuries, hearing loss, physiological stress, acoustic masking and behavioural changes. Among these effects, behavioural changes are most problematic, but are understudied, especially under well-controlled field conditions. Moreover, man-made noise varies widely in terms of acoustic characteristics. The influence of temporal patterns of noise on the impacts is largely unknown. We exposed groups of European seabass to sound treatments of different temporal patterns, varying in intermittency, interval regularity and presence of amplitude 'ramp-up'. The study took place in a large octagonal floating pen (⌀ = ~12.5m) in Oosterschelde, a marine inlet in the Netherlands. We tracked the fish swimming trajectories with an acoustic 3D telemetry system and looked into the behavioural changes and recovery. Upon noise exposure, the fish swam to greater depths in tighter shoals, similar to previous studies conducted in a basin. Moreover, the fish swam away from the noise source, suggesting avoidance behaviour. The different temporal patterns seemed to differ in their impact strengths although the results were not significant. These findings may carry important scientific and management implications.
topic Fish behaviour
Field studies
Anthropogenic sound
Dicentrarchus labrax
Pile driving
ramp-up
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/conf.FMARS.2015.03.00204/full
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