Data from: Anthropogenic noise impairs cooperation in bottlenose dolphins
Understanding the impact of human disturbance on wildlife populations is of societal importance, with anthropogenic noise known to impact a range of taxa, including mammals, birds, fish, and invertebrates. While animals are known to use acoustic and other behavioural mechanisms to compensate for inc...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding the impact of human disturbance on wildlife populations is
of societal importance, with anthropogenic noise known to impact a range
of taxa, including mammals, birds, fish, and invertebrates. While animals
are known to use acoustic and other behavioural mechanisms to compensate
for increasing noise at the individual level, our understanding of how
noise impacts social animals working together remains limited. Here, we
investigated the effect of noise on coordination between two bottlenose
dolphins performing a cooperative task. We previously demonstrated that
the dolphin dyad can use whistles to coordinate their behaviour, working
together with extreme precision. By equipping each dolphin with a
sound-and-movement recording tag (DTAG-3) and exposing them to increasing
levels of anthropogenic noise, we show that both dolphins nearly doubled
their whistle durations and increased whistle amplitude in response to
increasing noise. While these acoustic compensatory mechanisms are the
same as those frequently used by wild cetaceans, they were insufficient to
overcome the effect of noise on behavioural coordination. Indeed,
cooperative task success decreased in the presence of noise, dropping from
85% during ambient noise control trials to 62.5% during the highest noise
exposure. To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate in any
non-human species that noise impairs communication between conspecifics
performing a cooperative task. Cooperation facilitates vital functions
across many taxa and our findings highlight the need to account for the
impact of disturbance on functionally important group tasks in wild animal
populations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.g1jwstqv3 |