Halfwerk Wouter, Slabbekoorn Hans
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apartado 0843-03092 Balboa, Ancón, Panama Section of Integrative Biology, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78712, USA Institute of Biology, Leiden University, 2300 Leiden, The Netherlands
Institute of Biology, Leiden University, 2300 Leiden, The Netherlands.
Biol Lett. 2015 Apr;11(4):20141051. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2014.1051.
Anthropogenic sensory pollution is affecting ecosystems worldwide. Human actions generate acoustic noise, emanate artificial light and emit chemical substances. All of these pollutants are known to affect animals. Most studies on anthropogenic pollution address the impact of pollutants in unimodal sensory domains. High levels of anthropogenic noise, for example, have been shown to interfere with acoustic signals and cues. However, animals rely on multiple senses, and pollutants often co-occur. Thus, a full ecological assessment of the impact of anthropogenic activities requires a multimodal approach. We describe how sensory pollutants can co-occur and how covariance among pollutants may differ from natural situations. We review how animals combine information that arrives at their sensory systems through different modalities and outline how sensory conditions can interfere with multimodal perception. Finally, we describe how sensory pollutants can affect the perception, behaviour and endocrinology of animals within and across sensory modalities. We conclude that sensory pollution can affect animals in complex ways due to interactions among sensory stimuli, neural processing and behavioural and endocrinal feedback. We call for more empirical data on covariance among sensory conditions, for instance, data on correlated levels in noise and light pollution. Furthermore, we encourage researchers to test animal responses to a full-factorial set of sensory pollutants in the presence or the absence of ecologically important signals and cues. We realize that such approach is often time and energy consuming, but we think this is the only way to fully understand the multimodal impact of sensory pollution on animal performance and perception.
人为感官污染正在影响全球生态系统。人类活动产生噪音、发出人造光并排放化学物质。所有这些污染物都已知会影响动物。大多数关于人为污染的研究都关注污染物在单峰感官领域的影响。例如,高水平的人为噪音已被证明会干扰声学信号和线索。然而,动物依赖多种感官,而且污染物往往同时存在。因此,对人为活动影响进行全面的生态评估需要采用多模态方法。我们描述了感官污染物如何同时出现,以及污染物之间的协方差与自然情况可能有何不同。我们回顾了动物如何整合通过不同模态到达其感官系统的信息,并概述了感官条件如何干扰多模态感知。最后,我们描述了感官污染物如何在不同感官模态内和跨感官模态影响动物的感知、行为和内分泌学。我们得出结论,由于感官刺激、神经处理以及行为和内分泌反馈之间的相互作用,感官污染会以复杂的方式影响动物。我们呼吁获取更多关于感官条件协方差的实证数据,例如,关于噪音和光污染相关水平的数据。此外,我们鼓励研究人员在存在或不存在具有生态重要性的信号和线索的情况下,测试动物对一整套全因子感官污染物的反应。我们意识到这种方法通常耗时耗力,但我们认为这是全面了解感官污染对动物表现和感知的多模态影响的唯一途径。