Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Department of Animal Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW), Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Nat Ecol Evol. 2020 Apr;4(4):502-511. doi: 10.1038/s41559-020-1135-4. Epub 2020 Mar 16.
Global expansion of human activities is associated with the introduction of novel stimuli, such as anthropogenic noise, artificial lights and chemical agents. Progress in documenting the ecological effects of sensory pollutants is weakened by sparse knowledge of the mechanisms underlying these effects. This severely limits our capacity to devise mitigation measures. Here, we integrate knowledge of animal sensory ecology, physiology and life history to articulate three perceptual mechanisms-masking, distracting and misleading-that clearly explain how and why anthropogenic sensory pollutants impact organisms. We then link these three mechanisms to ecological consequences and discuss their implications for conservation. We argue that this framework can reveal the presence of 'sensory danger zones', hotspots of conservation concern where sensory pollutants overlap in space and time with an organism's activity, and foster development of strategic interventions to mitigate the impact of sensory pollutants. Future research that applies this framework will provide critical insight to preserve the natural sensory world.
人类活动的全球化扩张伴随着新刺激物的引入,如人为噪声、人工灯光和化学制剂。由于对这些影响背后的机制知之甚少,因此在记录感官污染物的生态影响方面进展缓慢。这严重限制了我们设计缓解措施的能力。在这里,我们整合了动物感官生态学、生理学和生活史的知识,阐明了三种感知机制——掩蔽、分散和误导——这些机制清楚地解释了人为感官污染物是如何以及为何影响生物的。然后,我们将这三种机制与生态后果联系起来,并讨论它们对保护的意义。我们认为,该框架可以揭示“感官危险区”的存在,即感官污染物在空间和时间上与生物活动重叠的热点区域,这为制定战略干预措施以减轻感官污染物的影响提供了依据。未来应用该框架的研究将为保护自然感官世界提供重要的见解。