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Temporal variation of the underwater soundscape in Jiaotou Bay, an Indo‐Pacific humpback dolphin ( Sousa chinensis ) habitat off Hainan Island, China
Author(s) -
DONG Lijun,
DONG Jianchen,
CARUSO Francesco,
ZHAO Likun,
LI Songhai
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
integrative zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.904
H-Index - 34
ISSN - 1749-4877
DOI - 10.1111/1749-4877.12530
Subject(s) - diel vertical migration , bay , soundscape , habitat , marine habitats , environmental science , sound (geography) , fishery , underwater , oceanography , indo pacific , foraging , population , marine ecosystem , geography , ecology , ecosystem , biology , geology , demography , sociology
The underwater soundscape is an important ecological element affecting numerous aquatic animals, in particular dolphins, which must identify salient cues from ambient ocean noise. In this study, temporal variations in the soundscape of Jiaotou Bay were monitored from February 2016 to January 2017, where a population of Indo‐Pacific humpback dolphins ( Sousa chinensis ) has recently been a regular sighting. An autonomous acoustic recorder was deployed in shallow waters, and 1/3‐octave band sound pressure levels (SPLs) were calculated with central frequencies ranging from 25 Hz to 40 kHz, then were grouped into 3 subdivided bands via cluster analysis. SPLs at each major band showed significant differences on a diel, fishing‐related period, seasonal, and tidal phase scale. Anthropogenic noise generated by passing ships and underwater explosions were recorded in the study area. The fish and dolphin acoustic activities both exhibited diel and seasonal variations, but no tidal cycle patterns. A negative significant relationship between anthropogenic sound detection rates and dolphin detection rates were observed, and fish detection rates showed no effect on dolphin detection rates, indicating anthropogenic activity avoidance and no forced foraging in dolphins in the study area. The results provide fundamental insight into the acoustic dynamics of an important Indo‐Pacific humpback dolphin habitat within a coastal area affected by a rapid increase in human activity, and demonstrate the need to protect animal habitat from anthropogenic noises.

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