Âé¶¹ÒùÔº

January 13, 2020

Can an underwater soundtrack really bring coral reefs back to life?

Credit: AI-generated image ()
× close
Credit: AI-generated image ()

The ocean is a vast, quiet place, right? Vast, yes; quiet, not so much.

As a researcher who studies coral reefs, I've floated above many and, when I listen closely, my ears are invariably filled with sounds. There might be the sound of small waves breaking on the beach and coral rubble rolling on the sand as the waves retreat. Beyond the sound of water, there is something quieter.

For some people, these faint noises sound like the snap, crackle and pop of breakfast cereal when milk hits it; for others, they are reminiscent of frying bacon.

Whatever the analogy, they are natural sounds, and noisy reefs are a very good thing. So good, in fact, that we might be able to use the sound of healthy coral reefs to improve the .

For the past three decades, rising ocean temperatures have put the world's coral reefs under a great deal of stress. Extreme events can kill large portions of a reef in a short time. For example, . It can take 15-25 years for a reef to recover from a bleaching event.

Who's making the noise?

The noise makers on coral reefs include all manner of fishes and invertebrates. . In fact, much like birds, some fish species sing at dawn and dusk, and sometimes through the night, in .

Get free science updates with Science X Daily and Weekly Newsletters — to customize your preferences!

High-frequency sounds tend to be produced by invertebrates. Of these, snapping shrimps are the winners in terms of pitch and loudness. Snapping shrimps have one enlarged claw that, due to a marvel of anatomy and physics, makes an .

If you had your ear next to the tiny crustacean, the sound could reach 190 decibels, . Luckily, no one will ever be that close since these shrimps live deeply ensconced in coral crevices, snapping away day and night.

Credit: AI-generated image ()
× close
Credit: AI-generated image ()

Why is sound important?

Most coral reef animals spend the early part of their lives as tiny larvae floating in the water. This larval period can last from a few days to several weeks, moving a few metres to hundreds of kilometres from where it was born.

For those long-distance dispersers, the ability to find a new home in the vastness of the ocean is critical. Three decades ago, scientists thought that larval fish were transported at the whim of currents; settling onto a new piece of real estate was largely a matter of chance.

We know better now. Reef fish larvae are able to , and to swim quite competently towards it.

Scientists have submerged , known to catch fish larvae attracted to light, with a nearby underwater speaker that plays the sounds of reefs, other habitats or nothing at all. They have built , or introduced a tiny fish larva to , to see which sound it prefers and swims toward.

These studies show that . Light traps and rubble heaps that play reef noise catch far more larvae than when no reef noise is played. They also catch larvae of more species and more families.

Reef noise can also repel some fish larvae, perhaps because it reveals that there are too many predators or too few potential shoal mates. These species settle in places with sounds they dislike the least, rather than like the most.

What do reef sounds reveal?

Reef sounds reveal a lot about the state of the coral reef. Louder coral reefs, dominated by : they have .

Credit: AI-generated image ()
× close
Credit: AI-generated image ()

In contrast, coral reefs with : they have more dead coral, more seaweed and fewer fishes.

Coral reefs with a mixture of high- and low-frequency sounds have a larger variety of fish species. , as did those on the Great Barrier Reef before a series of recent storms and mass coral bleaching. .

The underwater soundscape is critical for a fish larva to know whether there is a coral reef nearby, and whether that reef is a good place to settle. But some species have better hearing than others, and the depth and structure of the habitat can also affect the way sounds emanate from the reef.

Can we use sound to repopulate degraded reefs?

It's an obvious step to go from knowing that natural sounds are important for fish recruitment to using those same sounds to actively attract fish to depleted reefs.

A tested this idea and found it promising. Twice as many fish, across all the major feeding groups, settled on coral-rubble reefs that played the sounds of healthy reefs than on similar but silent reefs. Healthy sounding reefs also attracted 50 percent more species.

This suggests that acoustic enrichment could be a new and potentially powerful tool to help build up fish communities on unhealthy . The authors warned it has to be used alongside interventions to tackle the causes of coral reef decline, in particular.

Without these simultaneous actions, using an attractive soundtrack to invite small onto degraded reefs that offer little food or shelter would be false advertisement. And that never ends well for the fooled party.

Provided by The Conversation

Load comments (0)

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.