Degraded coral reefs are far
quieter than five years ago, and no longer sound like a suitable habitat to
young fish searching for a place to live and breed, according to research
published today in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Baby fish looking for a home can
use noisy coral reef sounds
including snapping shrimp clicks, damselfish chirps, and clownfish chattering
to locate and select suitable habitat. But that "coral reef
orchestra" has been quietened following recent cyclone and coral-bleaching
damage on the Great Barrier Reef, raising fears that young fish may no longer
hear their way home.
An international team of
scientists, led by the University of Exeter, carried out field experiments on
the Northern Great Barrier Reef and found that reefs sound much quieter and
less acoustically diverse than they did before three years of cyclones and
coral bleaching.
The soundscapes of these
recently-degraded reefs are less attractive to juvenile fishes attracting 40%
fewer fish compared to the sound of previous healthy reefs.
Lead author Tim Gordon, a marine
biologist at the University of Exeter, said: "It's heart-breaking to hear.
The usual pops, chirps, snaps and chatters of countless fish and invertebrates
have disappeared. The symphony of the sea is being silenced."
This loss of attractiveness of
reef sounds to fish in the sea could have devastating consequences for reefs.
Fish communities are instrumental
to maintaining healthy reefs by removing algae, facilitating coral growth,
contributing to nutrient cycles and keeping food webs in balance. Damaged reefs
with healthy fish populations recover faster than reefs that have lost their
fish.
Harry Harding, co-author from the
University of Bristol, explains: "If fish aren't hearing their way home
anymore, that could be bad news for the recovery prospects of reefs. Fish play
critical roles on coral
reefs, grazing away harmful algae and allowing coral to grow. A
reef without fish is a reef that's in trouble."
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