Testing the odontocete acoustic prey debilitation hypothesis: no stunning results.

J Acoust Soc Am

College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, 104 COAS Administration Building, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA.

Published: August 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study tested whether sounds from odontocetes (like dolphins) could disrupt the behavior of fish that they typically prey on.
  • Researchers exposed different types of fish to high-frequency clicks from two dolphin species and measured their swimming behavior using video cameras.
  • No significant changes in behavior were observed in the fish when exposed to these sounds, leading to the conclusion that odontocete sounds do not disorient or incapacitate their prey.

Article Abstract

The hypothesis that sounds produced by odontocetes can debilitate fish was examined. The effects of simulated odontocete pulsed signals on three species of fish commonly preyed on by odontocetes were examined, exposing three individuals of each species as well as groups of four fish to a high-frequency click of a bottlenose dolphin [peak frequency (PF) 120 kHz, 213-dB peak-to-peak exposure level (EL)], a midfrequency click modeled after a killer whale's signal (PF 55 kHz, 208-dB EL), and a low-frequency click (PF 18 kHz, 193-dB EL). Fish were held in a 50-cm diameter net enclosure immediately in front of a transducer where their swimming behavior, orientation, and balance were observed with two video cameras. Clicks were presented at constant rates and in graded sweeps simulating a foraging dolphin's "terminal buzz." No measurable change in behavior was observed in any of the fish for any signal type or pulse modulation rate, despite the fact that clicks were at or near the maximum source levels recorded for odontocetes. Based on the results, the hypothesis that acoustic signals of odontocetes alone can disorient or "stun" prey cannot be supported.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.2211508DOI Listing

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