Osbrink Alison, Meatte Megan A, Tran Alan, Herranen Katri K, Meek Lilliann, Murakami-Smith May, Ito Jacelyn, Bhadra Some, Nunnenkamp Carrie, Templeton Christopher N
Department of Biology, Pacific University, 2043 College Way, Forest Grove, OR 97116, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2021 Feb 10;288(1944):20202851. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2020.2851. Epub 2021 Feb 3.
Noise pollution is commonly associated with human environments and mounting evidence indicates that noise has a variety of negative effects on wildlife. Noise has also been linked to cognitive impairment in humans and because many animals use cognitively intensive processes to overcome environmental challenges, noise pollution has the potential to interfere with cognitive function in animals living in urban areas or near roads. We experimentally examined how road traffic noise impacts avian cognitive performance by testing adult zebra finches () on a battery of foraging tasks in the presence or absence of traffic noise playback. Here, we show that traffic noise reduces cognitive performance, including inhibitory control, motor learning, spatial memory and social learning, but not associative colour learning. This study demonstrates a novel mechanism through which anthropogenic noise can impact animals, namely through cognitive interference, and suggests that noise pollution may have previously unconsidered consequences for animals.
噪声污染通常与人类环境相关联,越来越多的证据表明噪声对野生动物有多种负面影响。噪声还与人类的认知障碍有关,并且由于许多动物利用需要高强度认知的过程来应对环境挑战,噪声污染有可能干扰生活在城市地区或道路附近的动物的认知功能。我们通过在有或没有交通噪声回放的情况下,对成年斑胸草雀进行一系列觅食任务测试,实验性地研究了道路交通噪声如何影响鸟类的认知表现。在此,我们表明交通噪声会降低认知表现,包括抑制控制、运动学习、空间记忆和社会学习,但不影响联想颜色学习。这项研究证明了一种人为噪声影响动物的新机制,即通过认知干扰,并表明噪声污染可能对动物有先前未被考虑到的后果。