Abstract

Motorboats are a pervasive, growing source of anthropogenic noise in marine environments, with known impacts on fish physiology and behaviour. However, empirical evidence for the disruption of parental care remains scarce and stems predominantly from playback studies. Additionally, there is a paucity of experimental studies examining noise-mitigation strategies. We conducted two field experiments to investigate the effects of noise from real motorboats on the parental-care behaviours of a common coral-reef fish, the Ambon damselfish Pomacentrus amboinensis, which exhibits male-only egg care. When exposed to motorboat noise, we found that males exhibited vigilance behaviour 34% more often and spent 17% more time remaining vigilant, compared to an ambient-sound control. We then investigated nest defence in the presence of an introduced conspecific male intruder, incorporating a third noise treatment of altered motorboat-driving practice that was designed to mitigate noise exposure via speed and distance limitations. The males spent 22% less time interacting with the intruder and 154% more time sheltering during normal motorboat exposure compared to the ambient-sound control, with nest-defence levels in the mitigation treatment equivalent to those in ambient conditions. Our results reveal detrimental impacts of real motorboat noise on some aspects of parental care in fish, and successfully demonstrate the positive effects of an affordable, easily implemented mitigation strategy. We strongly advocate the integration of mitigation strategies into future experiments in this field, and the application of evidence-based policy in our increasingly noisy world.

Highlights

  • Ocean soundscapes throughout the world are increasingly altered by human-generated noise

  • Upon further evaluation of this trend, we found there was a significant decrease from the baseline in the motorboat treatment (V33 1⁄4 180, p 1⁄4 0.044, r 1⁄4 0.35), where males spent on average a 19% lower proportion of time fanning when exposed to motorboat noise, but no significant change from the baseline in the ambient treatment (V33 1⁄4 360, p 1⁄4 0.293)

  • We found that motorboat noise affected some behaviours of the tropical damselfish Pomacentrus amboinensis both inside and outside the nest during the breeding season; a critical life-history phase

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Summary

Introduction

Ocean soundscapes throughout the world are increasingly altered by human-generated noise. Nedelec et al (2017) showed that spiny chromis Acanthochromis polyacanthus parents experiencing 12 days of motorboat-noise playback at natural nests increased their nestdefence behaviours, but suffered higher juvenile mortality compared to control parents experiencing ambient-sound playback. Two of these experiments were conducted in situ, all used playback of recordings as a noise treatment, which does not fully replicate sound exposures that would be experienced when exposed to real noise sources (Slabbekoorn, 2015)

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