4.7 Article

The sound of recovery: Coral reef restoration success is detectable in the soundscape

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
Volume 59, Issue 3, Pages 742-756

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.14089

Keywords

bioacoustics; coral reef; ecoacoustics; ecosystem monitoring; passive acoustic monitoring; restoration; soundscape

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/L002434/1, NE/P001572/1]
  2. Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung [P2SKP3-181384]
  3. University of Exeter Education Incubator Research-Inspired Learning
  4. University of Exeter Global Challenges Research Fund
  5. MARS Sustainable Solutions
  6. NERC [NE/P001572/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  7. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [P2SKP3_181384] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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The degradation of coral reefs worldwide has led to significant investments in their active restoration. Research shows that restoration efforts not only help increase coral cover but also play a vital role in restoring the soundscape of the reef ecosystem, which is essential for the recruitment of reef organisms. Passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) could be a valuable tool for evaluating ecosystem-level recovery, but caution is needed when choosing metrics and interpreting results as different PAM metrics may reflect different aspects of the reef soundscape.
Pantropical degradation of coral reefs is prompting considerable investment in their active restoration. However, current measures of restoration success are based largely on coral cover, which does not fully reflect ecosystem function or reef health. Soundscapes are an important aspect of reef health; loud and diverse soundscapes guide the recruitment of reef organisms, but this process is compromised when degradation denudes soundscapes. As such, acoustic recovery is a functionally important component of ecosystem recovery. Here, we use acoustic recordings taken at one of the world's largest coral reef restoration projects to test whether successful restoration of benthic and fish communities is accompanied by a restored soundscape. We analyse recordings taken simultaneously on healthy, degraded (extensive historic blast fishing) and restored reefs (restoration carried out for 1-3 years on previously degraded reefs). We compare soundscapes using manual counts of biotic sounds (phonic richness), and two commonly used computational analyses (acoustic complexity index [ACI] and sound-pressure level [SPL]). Healthy and restored reef soundscapes exhibited a similar diversity of biotic sounds (phonic richness), which was significantly higher than degraded reef soundscapes. This pattern was replicated in some automated analyses but not others; the ACI exhibited the same qualitative result as phonic richness in a low-frequency, but not a high-frequency bandwidth, and there was no significant difference between SPL values in either frequency bandwidth. Furthermore, the low-frequency ACI and phonic richness scores were only weakly correlated despite showing a qualitatively equivalent overall result, suggesting that these metrics are likely to be driven by different aspects of the reef soundscape. Synthesis and applications. These data show that coral restoration can lead to soundscape recovery, demonstrating the return of an important ecosystem function. They also suggest that passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) might provide functionally important measures of ecosystem-level recovery-but only some PAM metrics reflect ecological status, and those that did are likely to be driven by different communities of soniferous animals. Recording soundscapes represents a potentially valuable tool for evaluating restoration success across ecosystems, but caution must be exercised when choosing metrics and interpreting results.

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