Spatio‐temporal variability of marine soundscapes reflects environmental dynamics and local habitat health. This study characterizes the coastal soundscape of the Cres‐Lošinj Natura 2000 Site of Community Importance, encompassing the non‐tourist (11–15 March 2020) and the tourist (26–30 July 2020) season. A total of 240 h of continuous recordings were manually analyzed and the abundance of animal vocalizations and boat noise was obtained; sound pressure levels were calculated for the low (63–2000 Hz) and high (2000–20,000 Hz) frequency range. Two fish sound types were drivers of both seasonal and diel variability of the low‐frequency soundscape. The first is emitted by the cryptic Roche’s snake blenny (Ophidion rochei), while the second, whose emitter remains unknown, was previously only described in canyons and coralligenous habitats of the Western Mediterranean Sea. The high‐frequency bands were characterized by bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) vocalizations, indicating dolphins’ use of area for various purposes. Boat noise, however, dominated the local soundscape along the whole considered periods and higher sound pressure levels were found during the Tourist season. Human‐generated noise pollution, which has been previously found 10 years ago, is still present in the area and this urges management actions.

A Fish and Dolphin Biophony in the Boat Noise‐Dominated Soundscape of the Cres‐Lošinj Archipelago (Croatia)

Picciulin M.;Petrizzo A.;
2022

Abstract

Spatio‐temporal variability of marine soundscapes reflects environmental dynamics and local habitat health. This study characterizes the coastal soundscape of the Cres‐Lošinj Natura 2000 Site of Community Importance, encompassing the non‐tourist (11–15 March 2020) and the tourist (26–30 July 2020) season. A total of 240 h of continuous recordings were manually analyzed and the abundance of animal vocalizations and boat noise was obtained; sound pressure levels were calculated for the low (63–2000 Hz) and high (2000–20,000 Hz) frequency range. Two fish sound types were drivers of both seasonal and diel variability of the low‐frequency soundscape. The first is emitted by the cryptic Roche’s snake blenny (Ophidion rochei), while the second, whose emitter remains unknown, was previously only described in canyons and coralligenous habitats of the Western Mediterranean Sea. The high‐frequency bands were characterized by bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) vocalizations, indicating dolphins’ use of area for various purposes. Boat noise, however, dominated the local soundscape along the whole considered periods and higher sound pressure levels were found during the Tourist season. Human‐generated noise pollution, which has been previously found 10 years ago, is still present in the area and this urges management actions.
2022
Istituto di Scienze Marine - ISMAR
Anthropogenic noise
Bioacoustics
Boat traffic
Bottlenose dolphin
Coastal areas
Cusk eel
Dolphins
Ecoacoustics
Fish
Fish monitoring
Human impacts
Passive acoustic monitoring
Protected species
Remote sensing
Sound pressure levels
Spawning
Underwater noise
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/536831
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