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Get Free AccessOceans have become substantially noisier since the Industrial Revolution. Shipping, resource exploration, and infrastructure development have increased the anthrophony (sounds generated by human activities), whereas the biophony (sounds of biological origin) has been reduced by hunting, fishing, and habitat degradation. Climate change is affecting geophony (abiotic, natural sounds). Existing evidence shows that anthrophony affects marine animals at multiple levels, including their behavior, physiology, and, in extreme cases, survival. This should prompt management actions to deploy existing solutions to reduce noise levels in the ocean, thereby allowing marine animals to reestablish their use of ocean sound as a central ecological trait in a healthy ocean.
Carlos M. Duarte, Lucille Chapuis, Shaun P. Collin, Daniel P. Costa, Reny P. Devassy, Victor M. Eguı́luz, Christine Erbe, Timothy A. C. Gordon, Benjamin S. Halpern, Harry R. Harding, Michelle-Nicole Havlik, Mark G. Meekan, Nathan D. Merchant, Jennifer Miksis‐Olds, Miles Parsons, Milica Predragovic, Andrew N. Radford, Craig A. Radford, Stephen D. Simpson, Hans Slabbekoorn, Erica Staaterman, Ilse van Opzeeland, Jana Winderen, Xiangliang Zhang, Francis Juanes (2021). The soundscape of the Anthropocene ocean. , 371(6529), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aba4658.
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Type
Article
Year
2021
Authors
25
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aba4658
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