Department of Biomedical Sciences, WCVM, University of Saskatchewan, 52 Campus Drive, Saskatoon, Canada
ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, and College of Marine and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia.
Proc Biol Sci. 2018 Jan 31;285(1871). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2018.0033.
Noise produced by anthropogenic activities is increasing in many marine ecosystems. We investigated the effect of playback of boat noise on fish cognition. We focused on noise from small motorboats, since its occurrence can dominate soundscapes in coastal communities, the number of noise-producing vessels is increasing rapidly and their proximity to marine life has the potential to cause deleterious effects. Cognition-or the ability of individuals to learn and remember information-is crucial, given that most species rely on learning to achieve fitness-promoting tasks, such as finding food, choosing mates and recognizing predators. The caveat with cognition is its latent effect: the individual that fails to learn an important piece of information will live normally until the moment where it needs the information to make a fitness-related decision. Such latent effects can easily be overlooked by traditional risk assessment methods. Here, we conducted three experiments to assess the effect of boat noise playbacks on the ability of fish to learn to recognize predation threats, using a common, conserved learning paradigm. We found that fish that were trained to recognize a novel predator while being exposed to 'reef + boat noise' playbacks failed to subsequently respond to the predator, while their 'reef noise' counterparts responded appropriately. We repeated the training, giving the fish three opportunities to learn three common reef predators, and released the fish in the wild. Those trained in the presence of 'reef + boat noise' playbacks survived 40% less than the 'reef noise' controls over our 72 h monitoring period, a performance equal to that of predator-naive fish. Our last experiment indicated that these results were likely due to failed learning, as opposed to stress effects from the sound exposure. Neither playbacks nor real boat noise affected survival in the absence of predator training. Our results indicate that boat noise has the potential to cause latent effects on learning long after the stressor has gone.
人为活动产生的噪声在许多海洋生态系统中不断增加。我们研究了播放船只噪声对鱼类认知的影响。我们专注于小型机动船的噪声,因为它的出现可能会主导沿海社区的声音景观,产生噪声的船只数量迅速增加,而且它们靠近海洋生物可能会造成有害影响。认知——即个体学习和记忆信息的能力——至关重要,因为大多数物种都依赖于学习来完成促进适应度的任务,例如寻找食物、选择配偶和识别捕食者。认知的警示之处在于其潜在的影响:未能学习到重要信息的个体在需要信息做出与适应度相关的决策之前,仍会正常生活。这种潜在的影响很容易被传统的风险评估方法所忽视。在这里,我们进行了三项实验,使用常见的、保守的学习范式,评估了船只噪声播放对鱼类识别捕食威胁能力的影响。我们发现,在暴露于“珊瑚礁+船只噪声”播放的情况下接受捕食者识别训练的鱼类,随后无法对捕食者做出反应,而它们在“珊瑚礁噪声”对照环境下则能做出适当的反应。我们重复了训练,让鱼类有三次机会学习三种常见的珊瑚礁捕食者,并将它们在野外释放。在“珊瑚礁+船只噪声”播放环境下接受训练的鱼类,在我们的 72 小时监测期间,存活率比“珊瑚礁噪声”对照环境下的鱼类低 40%,与未受过捕食者训练的鱼类相当。我们的最后一项实验表明,这些结果可能是由于学习失败,而不是由于声音暴露的应激效应。在没有捕食者训练的情况下,无论是播放还是真实的船只噪声都不会影响鱼类的存活率。我们的研究结果表明,船只噪声在压力源消失后很久,仍有可能对学习产生潜在的影响。