Spawning Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.) exposed to noise from seismic airguns do not abandon their spawning site

Author:

McQueen Kate1,Meager Justin J2,Nyqvist Daniel3,Skjæraasen Jon Egil1,Olsen Esben Moland1,Karlsen Ørjan1,Kvadsheim Petter H4,Handegard Nils Olav1,Forland Tonje Nesse1,Sivle Lise Doksæter1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Marine Research , PO Box 1870, Nordnes, 5817 Bergen , Norway

2. Natural Resources, GHD , 3 South Sea Islander Way, Maroochydore, Qld, 4558 , Australia

3. Politecnico di Torino , Turin 10129 , Italy

4. Norwegian Defence Research Establishment , PO Box 115, Horten, 3191 , Norway

Abstract

Abstract Seismic airgun surveys may disturb and displace fish at large ranges. If such displacement causes fish to abandon spawning grounds, reproductive success could be impacted. To investigate whether airgun sound causes cod (Gadus morhua L.) to leave their spawning grounds, acoustic telemetry arrays were deployed on two cod spawning grounds: a test and a reference site. From 2019 to 2021, 136 mature cod from the test site and 45 from the reference site were tagged with acoustic transmitters. Intermittent seismic shooting of two 40 in.3 airguns for 1 week during the spawning periods of 2020–2021 resulted in fluctuating sound exposure levels (SEL) at the test site, comparable to a full-scale industrial survey 5–>40 km away. Residency and survival of tagged cod were analysed with capture–mark–recapture models fitted to the detection and recapture data. Departure rate of the mature cod varied between spawning seasons but was similar between the test and reference sites. Neither survival nor departure significantly differed between seismic exposure and baseline periods. The results indicated that exposure to airguns at received SEL of up to ∼145 dB re 1 µPa2 s, comparable to a seismic survey occurring several kilometres away, did not displace tagged cod from spawning grounds.

Funder

Norwegian Research Council

Institute of Marine Research

Equinor

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

Reference65 articles.

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