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A large-scale experiment finds no evidence that a seismic survey impacts a demersal fish fauna

Mark G. Meekan, Conrad W. Speed, Robert D. McCauley, Rebecca Fisher, Matthew J. Birt, Leanne M. Currey‐Randall, Jayson M. Semmens, Stephen J. Newman, Katherine Cure, Marcus Stowar, Brigit I. Vaughan, Miles Parsons

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Seismic surveys are used to locate oil and gas reserves below the seabed and can be a major source of noise in marine environments. Their effects on commercial fisheries are a subject of debate, with experimental studies often producing results that are difficult to interpret. We overcame these issues in a large-scale experiment that quantified the impacts of exposure to a commercial seismic source on an assemblage of tropical demersal fishes targeted by commercial fisheries on the North West Shelf of Western Australia. We show that there were no short-term (days) or long-term (months) effects of exposure on the composition, abundance, size structure, behavior, or movement of this fauna. These multiple lines of evidence suggest that seismic surveys have little impact on demersal fishes in this environment.

Topics & Concepts

Demersal zoneFaunaFisheryDemersal fishAbundance (ecology)Fish <Actinopterygii>Environmental scienceOceanographyEcologyGeologyBiologyMarine animal studies overviewUnderwater Acoustics ResearchMarine and fisheries research
A large-scale experiment finds no evidence that a seismic survey impacts a demersal fish fauna | Litcius