Birch Abigail, Cox Kieran D, Murchy Kelsie A, Emry Sandra, Harley Christopher D G
Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
PLoS One. 2025 Aug 12;20(8):e0329098. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0329098. eCollection 2025.
Recent decades have seen significant alterations to ocean soundscapes. These changes are primarily driven by human-generated sources (i.e., anthropogenic noise), which is now recognized as a marine pollutant of emerging concern. In contrast to research on marine mammals and fish, studies on the effects of noise on marine invertebrates are limited, and while behavioural changes have been observed in some invertebrate taxa, few investigations have considered whether marine invertebrates can develop a tolerance to this pollutant. We examined the behavioral impacts of shipping noise on the shore crab Hemigrapsus oregonensis and whether they can develop tolerance to noise. Cohorts collected from sites with low and high noise levels were exposed to playbacks of ship noise in the laboratory. We measured initial responses to a simulated predator attack, time taken to seek shelter following the attack, and disruption during feeding. Our results indicated that ship noise significantly impacts shore crabs' initial response after a simulated predator attack, with a 66% likelihood of movement in noise-exposed individuals compared to 32% in the controls. However, ship noise did not significantly impact whether the crabs retreated to shelter after a predator attack, nor did it disrupt feeding. The interaction between treatment and site type was not significant for any of the behavioral metrics, indicating no evidence of tolerance related to prior noise exposure. Finally, we assessed broader relationships between sound and marine arthropods' behavior by combining our results with 71 data points extracted from 17 published studies. A meta-analysis of these data indicated that sound can have a positive, negative, or null effect on marine arthropods. Our results highlight the importance of considering marine invertebrates when evaluating the ecological impacts of anthropogenic noise, and suggest that more work is required to identify the contexts in which this emerging pollutant is particularly detrimental.
近几十年来,海洋声景发生了显著变化。这些变化主要由人类活动产生的声源(即人为噪声)驱动,现在人为噪声被认为是一种新出现的令人担忧的海洋污染物。与对海洋哺乳动物和鱼类的研究相比,关于噪声对海洋无脊椎动物影响的研究有限,虽然在一些无脊椎动物类群中观察到了行为变化,但很少有研究考虑海洋无脊椎动物是否能对这种污染物产生耐受性。我们研究了船舶噪声对海滨蟹俄勒冈招潮蟹的行为影响,以及它们是否能对噪声产生耐受性。从低噪声和高噪声水平的地点收集的蟹群在实验室中暴露于船舶噪声的回放中。我们测量了对模拟捕食者攻击的初始反应、攻击后寻找庇护所所需的时间以及进食过程中的干扰情况。我们的结果表明,船舶噪声显著影响了模拟捕食者攻击后海滨蟹的初始反应,暴露于噪声中的个体移动的可能性为66%,而对照组为32%。然而,船舶噪声对捕食者攻击后螃蟹是否退回到庇护所没有显著影响,也没有干扰进食。处理和地点类型之间的相互作用对任何行为指标都不显著,这表明没有证据表明与先前的噪声暴露有关的耐受性。最后,我们将我们的结果与从17项已发表研究中提取的71个数据点相结合,评估了声音与海洋节肢动物行为之间更广泛的关系。对这些数据的荟萃分析表明,声音对海洋节肢动物可能有积极、消极或无影响。我们的结果强调了在评估人为噪声的生态影响时考虑海洋无脊椎动物的重要性,并表明需要更多的工作来确定这种新出现的污染物特别有害的背景。