Implication of Altered Acoustic Active Space for Cetacean Species That Result from Soundscape Changes and Noise Additions

IF 1.3 Q3 ACOUSTICS
R. Burnham, D. Duffus
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Organisms use multi-modal, scale-dependent, sensory information to decipher their surroundings. This can include, for example, recognizing the presence of con- or heterospecifics, including a predatory threat, the presence and abundance of prey, or navigational cues to travel between breeding or feeding areas. Here we advocate for the use of the concept of active space to understand the extent to which an individual might be sending and receiving habitat information, describing this as the active component of their niche space. We present the use of active space as a means to understand ecological interactions, giving focus to those species whose active space is acoustically defined, in particular, cetacean species. We show how the application of estimates of active space, and changes in extent, can help better understand the potential disturbance effects of changes in the soundscape, and be a useful metric to estimate possible adverse effects even when stress responses, or behavioral or calling modifications are not obvious.
声景变化和噪声增加对鲸类动物声活动空间的影响
生物体使用多模态、依赖尺度的感官信息来解读周围环境。这可以包括,例如,识别同种或异种物种的存在,包括掠食性威胁,猎物的存在和丰富程度,或在繁殖区或觅食区之间旅行的导航线索。在这里,我们提倡使用活动空间的概念来理解个体可能发送和接收栖息地信息的程度,并将其描述为其生态位空间的活动组成部分。我们提出利用活动空间作为理解生态相互作用的一种手段,重点关注那些活动空间是声学定义的物种,特别是鲸类物种。我们展示了如何应用活动空间和程度变化的估计,可以帮助更好地理解声景变化的潜在干扰效应,并且即使在应激反应或行为或呼叫变化不明显的情况下,也可以作为估计可能的不利影响的有用度量。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
11 weeks
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