1. A large-scale experiment finds no evidence that a seismic survey impacts a demersal fish fauna
- Author
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Conrad W. Speed, Jayson M. Semmens, Marcus Stowar, Katherine Cure, Brigit Vaughan, Miles Parsons, Robert D. McCauley, Matthew J. Birt, Rebecca Fisher, Leanne M. Currey-Randall, Mark G. Meekan, and Stephen J. Newman
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,MBACI ,Fauna ,Population Dynamics ,Fisheries ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Demersal zone ,Demersal fish ,Predatory fish ,predatory fish ,Abundance (ecology) ,Animals ,Ecosystem ,Seabed ,Multidisciplinary ,Ecology ,biology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,telemetry ,Seismic survey ,Fishes ,Acoustics ,Western Australia ,Biological Sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,BRUVS ,Fishery ,Remote Sensing Technology ,community ,Environmental science ,Scale (map) ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Significance Seismic surveys are used to locate deposits of oil and gas in seabeds throughout the world’s oceans. There are conflicting views on the impact of these surveys on fish fauna and whether they harm commercial catches. To resolve this issue, we conducted an experimental seismic survey and monitored the composition, abundance, behavior, and movement of an assemblage of commercially important demersal fishes on a shelf habitat using acoustic telemetry and underwater video. We found that the seismic survey did not alter fish abundance or behavior in multiple before-after-control-impact and dose–response experimental frameworks. Our work may allay some of the concerns of stakeholders about the negative impacts of seismic surveys on demersal fishes in tropical shelf environments., Seismic surveys are used to locate oil and gas reserves below the seabed and can be a major source of noise in marine environments. Their effects on commercial fisheries are a subject of debate, with experimental studies often producing results that are difficult to interpret. We overcame these issues in a large-scale experiment that quantified the impacts of exposure to a commercial seismic source on an assemblage of tropical demersal fishes targeted by commercial fisheries on the North West Shelf of Western Australia. We show that there were no short-term (days) or long-term (months) effects of exposure on the composition, abundance, size structure, behavior, or movement of this fauna. These multiple lines of evidence suggest that seismic surveys have little impact on demersal fishes in this environment.
- Published
- 2021
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