Department of Evolution, Behaviour and Environment, University of Sussex, John Maynard Smith Building, Falmer, Brighton, BN1 9QG, U.K.
Conserv Biol. 2021 Feb;35(1):115-129. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13510. Epub 2020 Aug 20.
Anthropogenic noise is a globally widespread sensory pollutant, recognized as having potentially adverse effects on function, demography, and physiology in wild animals. Human population growth and associated changes in urbanization, transportation, and resource extraction all contribute to anthropogenic noise and are predicted to increase in the coming decades. Wildlife exposure to anthropogenic noise is expected to rise correspondingly. Data collected through field research are uniquely important in advancing understanding of the real-world repercussions of human activity on wildlife. We, therefore, performed a systematic review of literature published from 2008 to 2018 that reported on field investigations of anthropogenic noise impacts. We evaluated publication metrics (e.g., publication rates and journal type), geographical distribution of studies, study subject, and methods used. Research activity increased markedly over the assessment period. However, there was a pronounced geographical bias in research, with most being conducted in North America or Europe, and a notable focus on terrestrial environments. Fewer than one-fifth of terrestrial studies were located in rural areas likely to experience urbanization by 2030, meaning data on ecosystems most likely to be affected by future changes are not being gathered. There was also bias in the taxonomic groups investigated. Most research was conducted on birds and aquatic mammals, whereas terrestrial mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and invertebrates received limited attention. Almost all terrestrial studies examined diurnal species, despite evidence that nocturnality is the prevailing animal activity pattern. Nearly half the studies investigated effects of road or urban noise; the bulk of research was restricted to functional, rather than physiological or demographic consequences. Few experimental studies addressed repercussions of long-term exposure to anthropogenic noise or long-term postexposure effects, and multiple noise types or levels were rarely compared. Tackling these knowledge gaps will be vital for successful management of the effects of increasing wildlife exposure to anthropogenic noise.
人为噪声是一种全球性的感官污染物,已被认为可能对野生动物的功能、种群和生理产生不利影响。人口增长以及城市化、交通和资源开采等方面的变化都导致了人为噪声的增加,并预计在未来几十年内还会进一步增加。野生动物接触人为噪声的情况预计也会相应增加。通过实地研究收集的数据对于深入了解人类活动对野生动物的实际影响至关重要。因此,我们对 2008 年至 2018 年期间发表的关于人为噪声影响的实地调查的文献进行了系统回顾。我们评估了出版物的指标(例如,出版率和期刊类型)、研究的地理分布、研究对象和使用的方法。研究活动在评估期间显著增加。然而,研究存在明显的地域偏见,大多数研究集中在北美或欧洲,并且明显侧重于陆地环境。在可能受到 2030 年城市化影响的农村地区进行的陆地研究不到五分之一,这意味着未来变化最有可能影响的生态系统的数据尚未收集。在研究的分类群中也存在偏见。大多数研究是在鸟类和水生哺乳动物上进行的,而陆地哺乳动物、爬行动物、两栖动物、鱼类和无脊椎动物则受到的关注较少。几乎所有的陆地研究都检查了昼行性物种,尽管有证据表明夜间活动是动物主要的活动模式。近一半的研究调查了道路或城市噪声的影响;大部分研究仅限于功能后果,而不是生理或人口统计学后果。很少有实验研究涉及长期接触人为噪声或长期暴露后的影响,而且很少比较多种噪声类型或水平。解决这些知识差距对于成功管理野生动物接触人为噪声的影响至关重要。