From behaviour to complex communities: resilience to anthropogenic noise in a fish-induced trophic cascade

  • Articles in SCI Journals
  • Dec, 2023

Rojas, E., Gouret, M., Agostini, S., Fiorini, S., Fonseca, P.J., Lacroix, G. & Médoc, V. (2023) From behaviour to complex communities: resilience to anthropogenic noise in a fish-induced trophic cascade.

Environmental Pollution, 335, 122371. DOI:10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122371 (IF2022 8,9; Q1 Environmental Sciences)
Summary:

Sound emissions from human activities represent a pervasive environmental stressor. Individual responses in terms of behaviour, physiology or anatomy are well documented but whether they propagate through nested ecological interactions to alter complex communities needs to be better understood. This is even more relevant for freshwater ecosystems that harbour a disproportionate fraction of biodiversity but receive less attention than marine and terrestrial systems. We conducted a mesocosm investigation to study the effect of chronic exposure to motorboat noise on the dynamics of a freshwater community including phytoplankton, zooplankton, and roach as a planktivorous fish. In addition, we performed a microcosm investigation to test whether roach's feeding behaviour was influenced by the noise condition they experienced in the mesocosms. Indeed, compared to other freshwater fish, the response of roach to motorboat noise apparently does not weaken with repeated exposure, suggesting the absence of habituation. As expected under the trophic cascade hypothesis, predation by roach induced structural changes in the planktonic communities with a decrease in the main grazing zooplankton that slightly benefited green algae. Surprisingly, although the microcosm investigation revealed persistent alterations in the feeding behaviour of the roach exposed to chronic noise, the dynamics of the roach-dominated planktonic communities did not differ between the noisy and noiseless mesocosms. It might be that roach's individual response to noise was not strong enough to cascade or that the biological cues coming from the conspecifics and the many planktonic organisms have diverted each fish's attention from noise. Our work suggests that the top-down structuring influence of roach on planktonic communities might be resilient to noise and highlights how extrapolating impacts from individual responses to complex communities can be tricky.


https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0269749123013738?viaihub

Team

  • From behaviour to complex communities: resilience to anthropogenic noise in a fish-induced trophic cascade Paulo Fonseca Conservation in Socio-Ecological Systems - CSES