‘Habitat-associated soundscape’ hypothesis tested on several coral reefs within a lagoon (Bora-Bora Island, French Polynesia)

被引:0
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作者
Lana Minier
Xavier Raick
Emma Gairin
Tehani Maueau
Vincent Sturny
Eric Blin
Eric Parmentier
Frédéric Bertucci
David Lecchini
机构
[1] PSL University,Laboratory of Functional and Evolutionary Morphology, FOCUS
[2] EPHE-UPVD-CNRS,Marine Eco‐Evo‐Devo Unit
[3] UAR 3278 CRIOBE,undefined
[4] Laboratoire d’Excellence « CORAIL »,undefined
[5] University of Liège,undefined
[6] Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology,undefined
[7] Association Ia Vai Ma Noa Bora-Bora,undefined
[8] Polynésienne des Eaux,undefined
[9] Suez Eau France SAS,undefined
[10] UMR MARBEC,undefined
[11] University of Montpellier,undefined
[12] CNRS,undefined
[13] IFREMER,undefined
[14] IRD,undefined
来源
Marine Biology | 2023年 / 170卷
关键词
Coral reefs; Biophony; Passive acoustic monitoring; Remote sensing; Fish sounds;
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学科分类号
摘要
Coral reefs encompass different habitats that have their own living communities. The present study aimed to test the hypothesis that these different kinds of habitats were characterized by specific soundscapes. Within the lagoon of Bora-Bora, acoustic recordings and visual surveys of substrate type and fish communities were conducted on four reef sites belonging to the three main geomorphological habitats (fringing reef, channel reef, barrier reef) from February to April 2021. Two acoustic parameters were measured for each site and month, during the day and at night: the peak frequency (Fpeak, in Hz) and the corresponding power spectral density (PSDpeak, in dB re 1 µPa2 Hz−1). Our results showed that each geomorphological unit could be characterized by these two parameters and therefore had a specific acoustic signature. Moreover, our study showed that a higher living coral cover was significantly positively correlated with Fpeak in the low-frequency band (50–2000 Hz) during day-time. Although biodiversity indices based on visual surveys did not differ significantly, fish communities and soundscapes were significantly different between sites. Overall, our study underlines the importance of passive acoustics in coral reef monitoring as soundscapes are habitat specific.
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