Nelson Danielle V, Klinck Holger, Carbaugh-Rutland Alexander, Mathis Codey L, Morzillo Anita T, Garcia Tiffany S
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Oregon State University Corvallis OR USA; ARCS Foundation Scholar Arcata CA USA.
Bioacoustics Research Program Cornell Lab of Ornithology Cornell University Ithaca NY USA; Cooperative Institute for Marine Resources Oregon State University and NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory Newport OR USA.
Ecol Evol. 2016 Dec 20;7(1):429-440. doi: 10.1002/ece3.2622. eCollection 2017 Jan.
Loss of acoustic habitat due to anthropogenic noise is a key environmental stressor for vocal amphibian species, a taxonomic group that is experiencing global population declines. The Pacific chorus frog () is the most common vocal species of the Pacific Northwest and can occupy human-dominated habitat types, including agricultural and urban wetlands. This species is exposed to anthropogenic noise, which can interfere with vocalizations during the breeding season. We hypothesized that Pacific chorus frogs would alter the spatial and temporal structure of their breeding vocalizations in response to road noise, a widespread anthropogenic stressor. We compared Pacific chorus frog call structure and ambient road noise levels along a gradient of road noise exposures in the Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA. We used both passive acoustic monitoring and directional recordings to determine source level (i.e., amplitude or volume), dominant frequency (i.e., pitch), call duration, and call rate of individual frogs and to quantify ambient road noise levels. Pacific chorus frogs were unable to change their vocalizations to compensate for road noise. A model of the active space and time ("spatiotemporal communication") over which a Pacific chorus frog vocalization could be heard revealed that in high-noise habitats, spatiotemporal communication was drastically reduced for an individual. This may have implications for the reproductive success of this species, which relies on specific call repertoires to portray relative fitness and attract mates. Using the acoustic call parameters defined by this study (frequency, source level, call rate, and call duration), we developed a simplified model of acoustic communication space-time for this species. This model can be used in combination with models that determine the insertion loss for various acoustic barriers to define the impact of anthropogenic noise on the radius of communication in threatened species. Additionally, this model can be applied to other vocal taxonomic groups provided the necessary acoustic parameters are determined, including the frequency parameters and perception thresholds. Reduction in acoustic habitat by anthropogenic noise may emerge as a compounding environmental stressor for an already sensitive taxonomic group.
人为噪声导致的声学栖息地丧失是发声两栖类物种面临的关键环境压力源,该分类群体正经历全球种群数量下降。太平洋树蛙()是太平洋西北部最常见的发声物种,可栖息于人类主导的栖息地类型,包括农业和城市湿地。该物种会接触到人为噪声,这可能会干扰其繁殖季节的发声。我们假设太平洋树蛙会改变其繁殖发声的时空结构,以应对道路噪声这一普遍存在的人为压力源。我们比较了美国俄勒冈州威拉米特谷不同道路噪声暴露梯度下太平洋树蛙的叫声结构和环境道路噪声水平。我们使用被动声学监测和定向录音来确定个体青蛙的声源级(即振幅或音量)、主频(即音高)、叫声持续时间和叫声速率,并量化环境道路噪声水平。太平洋树蛙无法改变其发声来补偿道路噪声。一个关于太平洋树蛙叫声可被听到的有效空间和时间(“时空通信”)的模型显示,在高噪声栖息地,个体的时空通信大幅减少。这可能会对该物种的繁殖成功率产生影响,因为其繁殖依赖于特定的叫声 repertoire 来展现相对健康状况并吸引配偶。利用本研究定义的声学叫声参数(频率、声源级、叫声速率和叫声持续时间),我们为该物种开发了一个简化的声学通信时空模型。该模型可与确定各种声屏障插入损耗的模型结合使用,以定义人为噪声对受威胁物种通信半径的影响。此外,只要确定了必要的声学参数,包括频率参数和感知阈值,该模型就可应用于其他发声分类群体。人为噪声导致的声学栖息地减少可能会成为一个对本已敏感的分类群体产生复合影响的环境压力源。