Litcius/Paper detail

Effects of seismic airgun playbacks on swimming patterns and behavioural states of Atlantic cod in a net pen

Jeroen Hubert, James Campbell, Hans Slabbekoorn

2020Marine Pollution Bulletin17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Anthropogenic sound can affect fish behaviour and physiology which may affect their well-being. However, it remains a major challenge to translate such effects to consequences for fitness at an individual and population level. For this, energy budget models have been developed, but suitable data to parametrize these models are lacking. A first step towards such parametrization concerns the objective quantification of behavioural states at high resolution. We experimentally exposed individual Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in a net pen to the playback of seismic airgun sounds. We demonstrated that individual cod in the net pen did not change their swimming patterns immediately at the onset of the sound exposure. However, several individuals changed their time spent in three different behavioural states during the 1 h exposure. This may be translated to changes in energy expenditure and provide suitable input for energy budget models that allow predictions about fitness and population consequences.

Topics & Concepts

GadusAtlantic codSound exposurePopulationParametrization (atmospheric modeling)Fish <Actinopterygii>Affect (linguistics)Environmental scienceEnergy budgetEnergy (signal processing)FisherySound (geography)EcologyBiologyOceanographyGeologyPsychologyStatisticsMathematicsCommunicationDemographyPhysicsRadiative transferSociologyQuantum mechanicsMarine animal studies overviewAnimal Vocal Communication and BehaviorUnderwater Acoustics Research
Effects of seismic airgun playbacks on swimming patterns and behavioural states of Atlantic cod in a net pen | Litcius