Publication | Open Access
Location, location, location: finding a suitable home among the noise
90
Citations
47
References
2012
Year
EngineeringAcoustical OceanographyUnderwater AcousticOceanographyCommunicationLocalizationSocial SciencesBuilt EnvironmentCoastal Crab SpeciesEnvironmental NoiseNoiseSuitable HomeTerrestrial CrustaceanHousingBiologyBioacousticsEvolutionary BiologySettlement-stage LarvaeNoise PollutionStrong SettlementMarine Biology
While sound is a useful cue for guiding the onshore orientation of larvae because it travels long distances underwater, it also has the potential to convey valuable information about the quality and type of the habitat at the source. Here, we provide, to our knowledge, the first evidence that settlement-stage coastal crab species can interpret and show a strong settlement and metamorphosis response to habitat-related differences in natural underwater sound. Laboratory- and field-based experiments demonstrated that time to metamorphosis in the settlement-stage larvae of common coastal crab species varied in response to different underwater sound signatures produced by different habitat types. The megalopae of five species of both temperate and tropical crabs showed a significant decrease in time to metamorphosis, when exposed to sound from their optimal settlement habitat type compared with other habitat types. These results indicate that sounds emanating from specific underwater habitats may play a major role in determining spatial patterns of recruitment in coastal crab species.
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