Department of Ecological Science, VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Animal Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW), Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Proc Biol Sci. 2020 Apr 8;287(1924):20192951. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2019.2951.
Anthropogenic noise levels are globally rising with profound impacts on ecosystems and the species that live in them. Masking or distraction by noise can interfere with relevant sounds and thereby impact ecological interactions between individuals of the same or different species. Predator-prey dynamics are particularly likely to be influenced by rising noise levels, with important population- and community-level consequences, as species may differentially adapt to noise disturbance. Acoustic noise can, however, also impair the use of visual information by animals through the process of cross-sensory interference, possibly impacting species interactions that have so far been largely ignored by noise impact studies. Here, we assessed how noise affected the performance of great tit () foraging on cryptic prey. Birds trained individually to search for paper moths differing in the level of camouflage with the test background were tested in the presence and absence of noise. We found that noise significantly increased approach and attack latencies, but that the effect depended on the level of crypsis. Noise increased latencies for cryptic prey targets, but not for conspicuous and colour-matched prey targets. Our results show that noise can interfere with the processing of visual information, particularly in difficult tasks such as separating objects from a similar looking background. These results have important ecological and evolutionary implications as they demonstrate how globally rising anthropogenic noise levels can influence the arms race between predators and prey across sensory domains.
人为噪声水平在全球范围内不断上升,对生态系统和生活在其中的物种产生了深远的影响。噪声的掩蔽或干扰可能会干扰相关声音,从而影响同一物种或不同物种个体之间的生态相互作用。捕食者-猎物动态特别容易受到不断上升的噪声水平的影响,从而产生重要的种群和群落水平的后果,因为物种可能会对噪声干扰有不同的适应。然而,通过交叉感官干扰的过程,声噪声也会损害动物对视觉信息的利用,可能会影响到迄今为止在噪声影响研究中很大程度上被忽视的物种相互作用。在这里,我们评估了噪声如何影响大山雀(Parus major)觅食隐蔽性猎物的表现。鸟类经过单独训练,以搜索与测试背景在伪装程度上存在差异的纸蛾,然后在有噪声和无噪声的情况下进行测试。我们发现,噪声显著增加了接近和攻击的潜伏期,但这种效果取决于伪装的程度。噪声增加了隐蔽性猎物目标的潜伏期,但对明显和颜色匹配的猎物目标没有影响。我们的研究结果表明,噪声可以干扰视觉信息的处理,特别是在分离与相似背景相似的物体等困难任务中。这些结果具有重要的生态和进化意义,因为它们表明全球人为噪声水平的不断上升如何影响捕食者和猎物在不同感觉领域的军备竞赛。