Coral reef species assemblages are associated with ambient soundscapes
Coral reef species assemblages are associated with ambient soundscapes
Date
2015-06
Authors
Kaplan, Maxwell B.
Mooney, T. Aran
Partan, James W.
Solow, Andrew R.
Mooney, T. Aran
Partan, James W.
Solow, Andrew R.
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Date Created
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Keywords
Bioacoustics
Biodiversity
Fishes
Sound production
Biodiversity
Fishes
Sound production
Abstract
Coral reefs provide a wide array of ecosystem services and harbor some of the highest levels of
biodiversity on the planet, but many reefs are in decline worldwide. Tracking changes is
necessary for effective resource management. Biological sounds have been suggested as a means
to quantify ecosystem health and biodiversity, but this requires an understanding of natural
bioacoustic variability and relationships to the taxa present. This investigation sought to
characterize spatial and temporal variation in biological sound production within and among
reefs that varied in their benthic and fish diversity. Multiple acoustic recorders were deployed for
intensive 24-hour periods and longer term (~4-month) duty-cycled deployments on three reefs
that varied in coral cover and fish density. Short-term results suggest that while there were
statistically significant acoustic differences among recorders on a given reef, these differences
were relatively small, indicating that a single sensor may be suitable for acoustic characterization
of reefs. Analyses of sounds recorded over ~4 months indicated that the strength of diel trends in
a low frequency fish band (100-1000 Hz) was correlated with coral cover and fish density but the
strength of high-frequency snapping-shrimp (2-20 kHz) trends was not, suggesting that low-frequency recordings may be better indicators of the species assemblages present. Power spectra
varied within reefs over the deployment periods, underscoring the need for long-duration
recordings to characterize these trends. These findings suggest that, in spite of considerable
spatial and temporal variability within reef soundscapes, diel trends in low-frequency sound
production correlate with reef species assemblages.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2015. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Inter-Research for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Marine Ecology Progress Series 533 (2015): 93-107, doi:10.3354/meps11382.