March 16, 2016 by Robyn Mills
Snapping shrimps, the loudest
invertebrate in the ocean, may be silenced under increasing ocean
acidification, a University
of Adelaide study has
found.
Published today in the journal Proceedings
of the Royal Society B, the researchers report that under forecast levels of
CO2 predicted to be found in oceans by the end of the century, thesound of snapping shrimps would be
reduced substantially.
This is expected to have profound
consequences for many species that rely on sound cues for information about the
location and quality of resources (food, shelter, partners and potential predators).
"Coastal reefs are far from being
quiet environments ─ they are filled with loud
crackling sounds," says Mr Tullio Rossi, PhD candidate in the University's
School of Biological Sciences .
"Shrimp "choruses" can be
heard kilometres offshore and are important because they can aid the navigation
of baby fish to their homes. But ocean acidification is
jeopardising this process."
The snapping shrimp is the most common
and noisiest of the sound-producing marine animals in coastal ecosystems. They
can produce sounds of up to 210dB through the formation of bubbles by the rapid
closing action of their snapping claw, used as a warning sign to scare off
predators and in their own hunting.
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