Prof Karen Diele K.Diele@napier.ac.uk
Professor
First Recordings of the Soundscape of Pristine European Flat Oyster Reefs
People Involved
Project Description
European flat oyster reefs (EFORs) are ecologically and economically important as they improve water quality, increase overall biodiversity, store carbon and are a much valued food source. Over fishing in the early 1900’s vastly reduced number and extent of UK EFORs, and
today only trace populations remain. Similar trends have been observed all over Europe and to save/restore these precious ecosystems it is important that European countries collaborate.
This project takes a novel approach investigating soundscapes associated with EFORs to evaluate if acoustics can be used as a rapid tool to assess ecosystem complexity and health, and inform restoration efforts. By deploying passive acoustic monitoring units, the first ever EFOR soundscapes are being recorded in Scottish remnant habitats where the oysters have experienced different levels of degradation. To complement the data set and fully understand
the acoustic complexity related to EFOR, it is crucial to record soundscapes of old undisturbed reefs, such as of the rare ones along the Swedish west coast.
Status | Project Complete |
---|---|
Funder(s) | Scottish Funding Council |
Value | £2,926.00 |
Project Dates | Jan 1, 2022 - Aug 31, 2022 |
Partner Organisations | IVL SVENSKA MILJOEINSTITUTET AB |
You might also like
Effects of artifical noise on marine invertebrates Oct 29, 2014 - Nov 30, 2016
To address this lack of knowledge investigating whether underwater noise, such as arising from installation and running of marine renewables, has any effects on a range of behavioural, physiological, and genetic processes, evaluating how the increasi...
Read More about Effects of artifical noise on marine invertebrates.
Effects of Anthropogenic Noise Playbacks on Marine Invertebrates Dec 1, 2015 - Dec 31, 2016
The project aims to address this lack of knowledge investigating whether underwater noise, such as arising from installation and running of marine renewables, has any effects on a range of behavioural, physiological, and genetic processes, evaluating...
Read More about Effects of Anthropogenic Noise Playbacks on Marine Invertebrates.
Building and evaluating recorders for seabird vocalisations at nesting sites with differing degrees of human disturbance Apr 1, 2016 - Aug 31, 2017
Long-duration recorders are commercially available for week-scale terrestrial sound monitoring, but expensive and large, thus difficult to disguise in colonies. We have an active collaboration with the Soundtags group at St Andrews who have co-develo...
Read More about Building and evaluating recorders for seabird vocalisations at nesting sites with differing degrees of human disturbance.
Mangrove Invertebrates Apr 17, 2013 - Jun 5, 2014
Effects of Combined Aquatic Noise and Chemical Pollution on Early Stage Marine Invertebrates in Different Temperature Contexts Oct 1, 2017 - Jul 31, 2022
Effects of Combined Aquatic Noise and Chemical Pollution on Early Stage Marine Invertebrates in Different Temperature Contexts