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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
There are substantial concerns that increasing levels of anthropogenic noise in the oceans may impact
aquatic animals. Noise can affect animals physically, physiologically and behaviourally, but one of the
most obvious effects is interference with acoustic communication. Acoustic communication often plays a
crucial role in reproductive interactions and over 800 species of fish have been found to communicate
acoustically. There is very little data on whether noise affects reproduction in aquatic animals, and none
in relation to acoustic communication. In this study we tested the effect of continuous noise on courtship
behaviour in two closely-related marine fishes: the two-spotted goby (Gobiusculus flavescens) and the
painted goby (Pomatoschistus pictus) in aquarium experiments. Both species use visual and acoustic
signals during courtship. In the two-spotted goby we used a repeated-measures design testing the same
individuals in the noise and the control treatment, in alternating order. For the painted goby we allowed
females to spawn, precluding a repeated-measures design, but permitting a test of the effect of noise on
female spawning decisions. Males of both species reduced acoustic courtship, but only painted gobies
also showed less visual courtship in the noise treatment compared to the control. Female painted gobies
were less likely to spawn in the noise treatment. Thus, our results provide experimental evidence for
negative effects of noise on acoustic communication and spawning success. Spawning is a crucial
component of reproduction. Therefore, even though laboratory results should not be extrapolated
directly to field populations, our results suggest that reproductive success may be sensitive to noise
pollution, potentially reducing fitness.
Description
Keywords
Acoustic communication Aquatic noise pollution Gobiidae Multimodal courtship Spawning success
Citation
Environmental Pollution, 1-10 Doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.11.003
Publisher
Elsevier