{"title":"What is the evidence for the impacts of airborne anthropogenic noise on wildlife? A systematic map update.","authors":"Léa Terray, Benjamin Petiteau, Guillaume Dutilleux, Sylvie Vanpeene, Pamela Amiard, Romain Sordello, Yorick Reyjol","doi":"10.1186/s13750-025-00368-3","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Background: </strong>Noise from human activities is a major concern for wildlife, with numerous studies demonstrating significant impacts. In 2020, Sordello and collaborators systematically mapped the literature on the impacts of anthropogenic noise on wildlife up to 2018. Since then, research on this topic has continued to grow steadily. To reflect these developments, we present an updated systematic map encompassing studies published through 2023, exclusively focused on airborne noise.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>The method follows the a priori protocol published by Sordello and collaborators in 2019. The present work includes literature searches by Sordello et al. (2020) and a complementary search update performed on 2020-2023. Literature from Sordello et al. (2020) was re-screened to align with the updated scope, now restricted to airborne noise. For the update, both peer-reviewed and grey literature were retrieved from Scopus, the Web of Science Core Collection, and Google Scholar. Titles, abstracts, and full texts were screened by eligibility criteria, and included articles were coded. We included all wild terrestrial or semi-aquatic taxonomic groups, and anthropogenic noise from various sources (e.g., transport, urban, recreational) was considered, along with all relevant outcomes (e.g., behaviour, reproduction, physiology).</p><p><strong>Review findings: </strong>Sordello et al. (2020) provided 1,794 articles, of which 466 were retained after re-screening the full texts. The search update yielded 13,698 citations, resulting in 397 relevant articles. A total of 863 articles were included in the map (665 primary research studies, 196 reviews and meta-analyses, 2 modelling papers). Most studies have been conducted in the USA. Birds are the most studied taxonomic group (64%), followed by mammals (22%); transportation is the most studied source of noise (43%), followed by urban noise (24%); behaviour (27%) and vocal communication (25%) are the most studied outcomes.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>The map represents an updated state of the art on the impact of airborne anthropogenic noise on wildlife and can serve as a starting point for further syntheses of evidence. Three clusters of knowledge were identified as suitable candidates for future syntheses: (1) What is the impact of anthropogenic noise on mammals' behaviour? (2) What is the impact of anthropogenic noise on birds' reproductive success? (3) What is the impact of anthropogenic noise on species richness and diversity? In addition, the knowledge gaps identified may be used to inform future research and address the apparent imbalance in the published research: many taxonomic groups are still understudied (e.g., especially reptiles and arachnids), many potential sources of noise disturbance are neglected (e.g., recreational and military noise) and the impacts of noise are unevenly studied between taxonomic groups.</p>","PeriodicalId":48621,"journal":{"name":"Environmental Evidence","volume":"14 1","pages":"14"},"PeriodicalIF":5.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-07-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12297495/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Environmental Evidence","FirstCategoryId":"93","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1186/s13750-025-00368-3","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"环境科学与生态学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Noise from human activities is a major concern for wildlife, with numerous studies demonstrating significant impacts. In 2020, Sordello and collaborators systematically mapped the literature on the impacts of anthropogenic noise on wildlife up to 2018. Since then, research on this topic has continued to grow steadily. To reflect these developments, we present an updated systematic map encompassing studies published through 2023, exclusively focused on airborne noise.
Methods: The method follows the a priori protocol published by Sordello and collaborators in 2019. The present work includes literature searches by Sordello et al. (2020) and a complementary search update performed on 2020-2023. Literature from Sordello et al. (2020) was re-screened to align with the updated scope, now restricted to airborne noise. For the update, both peer-reviewed and grey literature were retrieved from Scopus, the Web of Science Core Collection, and Google Scholar. Titles, abstracts, and full texts were screened by eligibility criteria, and included articles were coded. We included all wild terrestrial or semi-aquatic taxonomic groups, and anthropogenic noise from various sources (e.g., transport, urban, recreational) was considered, along with all relevant outcomes (e.g., behaviour, reproduction, physiology).
Review findings: Sordello et al. (2020) provided 1,794 articles, of which 466 were retained after re-screening the full texts. The search update yielded 13,698 citations, resulting in 397 relevant articles. A total of 863 articles were included in the map (665 primary research studies, 196 reviews and meta-analyses, 2 modelling papers). Most studies have been conducted in the USA. Birds are the most studied taxonomic group (64%), followed by mammals (22%); transportation is the most studied source of noise (43%), followed by urban noise (24%); behaviour (27%) and vocal communication (25%) are the most studied outcomes.
Conclusion: The map represents an updated state of the art on the impact of airborne anthropogenic noise on wildlife and can serve as a starting point for further syntheses of evidence. Three clusters of knowledge were identified as suitable candidates for future syntheses: (1) What is the impact of anthropogenic noise on mammals' behaviour? (2) What is the impact of anthropogenic noise on birds' reproductive success? (3) What is the impact of anthropogenic noise on species richness and diversity? In addition, the knowledge gaps identified may be used to inform future research and address the apparent imbalance in the published research: many taxonomic groups are still understudied (e.g., especially reptiles and arachnids), many potential sources of noise disturbance are neglected (e.g., recreational and military noise) and the impacts of noise are unevenly studied between taxonomic groups.
背景:人类活动产生的噪音是野生动物的一个主要问题,许多研究表明其影响重大。2020年,Sordello和合作者系统地绘制了截至2018年关于人为噪音对野生动物影响的文献。从那时起,关于这一主题的研究一直在稳步增长。为了反映这些发展,我们提供了一个更新的系统地图,其中包括截至2023年发表的研究,专门关注空气噪声。方法:该方法遵循Sordello及其合作者于2019年发表的先验方案。目前的工作包括Sordello等人(2020)的文献检索和2020-2023年进行的补充检索更新。Sordello等人(2020)的文献被重新筛选,以符合更新的范围,现在仅限于空气噪声。为了进行更新,同行评审文献和灰色文献都是从Scopus、Web of Science Core Collection和谷歌Scholar中检索的。根据资格标准筛选标题、摘要和全文,并对纳入的文章进行编码。我们纳入了所有野生陆生或半水生分类类群,并考虑了各种来源(如交通、城市、娱乐)的人为噪声,以及所有相关结果(如行为、繁殖、生理)。综述结果:Sordello et al.(2020)提供了1794篇文章,其中466篇在重新筛选全文后被保留。搜索更新产生了13,698个引用,产生了397篇相关文章。该地图共收录了863篇文章(665篇主要研究,196篇综述和元分析,2篇建模论文)。大多数研究都是在美国进行的。鸟类是被研究最多的分类类群(64%),其次是哺乳动物(22%);交通是研究最多的噪声源(43%),其次是城市噪声(24%);行为(27%)和声音交流(25%)是研究最多的结果。结论:该地图代表了空气中人为噪音对野生动物影响的最新技术水平,可以作为进一步综合证据的起点。三个知识集群被确定为未来合成的合适候选人:(1)人为噪音对哺乳动物行为的影响是什么?(2)人为噪声对鸟类繁殖成功率的影响是什么?(3)人为噪声对物种丰富度和多样性有何影响?此外,所发现的知识差距可用于为未来的研究提供信息,并解决已发表研究中明显的不平衡问题:许多分类类群(例如,特别是爬行动物和蛛形纲动物)仍未得到充分研究,许多潜在的噪声干扰源被忽视(例如,娱乐和军事噪声),噪声的影响在分类类群之间的研究不均衡。
期刊介绍:
Environmental Evidence is the journal of the Collaboration for Environmental Evidence (CEE). The Journal facilitates rapid publication of evidence syntheses, in the form of Systematic Reviews and Maps conducted to CEE Guidelines and Standards. We focus on the effectiveness of environmental management interventions and the impact of human activities on the environment. Our scope covers all forms of environmental management and human impacts and therefore spans the natural and social sciences. Subjects include water security, agriculture, food security, forestry, fisheries, natural resource management, biodiversity conservation, climate change, ecosystem services, pollution, invasive species, environment and human wellbeing, sustainable energy use, soil management, environmental legislation, environmental education.