Eggleston David B, Lillis Ashlee, Bohnenstiehl DelWayne R
Department of Marine, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Center for Marine Sciences and Technology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, 27695, USA.
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2016;875:255-63. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4939-2981-8_30.
We quantified the effects of habitat-associated sounds on the settlement response of two species of bivalves with contrasting habitat preferences: (1) Crassostrea virginicia (oyster), which prefers to settle on other oysters, and (2) Mercenaria mercenaria (clam), which settles on unstructured habitats. Oyster larval settlement in the laboratory was significantly higher when exposed to oyster reef sound compared with either off-reef or no-sound treatments. Clam larval settlement did not vary according to sound treatments. Similar to laboratory results, field experiments showed that oyster larval settlement in "larval housings" suspended above oyster reefs was significantly higher compared with off-reef sites.
(1)弗吉尼亚巨蛎(牡蛎),它更喜欢在其他牡蛎上定居;(2)硬壳蛤,它在无结构的栖息地定居。与礁外或无声处理相比,实验室中暴露于牡蛎礁声音时,牡蛎幼虫的定居率显著更高。蛤幼虫的定居率并未因声音处理而有所不同。与实验室结果相似,野外实验表明,悬挂在牡蛎礁上方的“幼虫饲养箱”中牡蛎幼虫的定居率比礁外地点显著更高。