Noise pollution causes parental stress on marine invertebrates, the Giant scallop example

Noise pollution causes parental stress on marine invertebrates, the Giant scallop example

Gigot M., Tremblay R., Bonnel J., Mathias D., Meziane T., Chauvaud L. et Olivier F., 2024. – “Noise pollution causes parental stress on marine invertebrates, the Giant scallop example”. Marine Pollution Bulletin DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2024.116454

In marine invertebrates, abiotic stresses on adults can act directly on gametes quality, which impacts phenotype and development success of the offspring. Human activities introduce noise pollution in the marine environment but still few studies on invertebrates have considered the impacts on adult or larval stages separately, and to our knowledge, never investigated the cross-generational effects of anthropogenic noise. This article explores parental effects of pile driving noise associated with the building phase of offshore wind turbines on a coastal invertebrate, Pecten maximus (L.). Adults were exposed to increasing levels of sound during gametogenesis, then their offspring were also exposed. The results highlight that anthropogenic noise experienced by the parents reduces their reproductive investment and modify larval response in similar conditions. Also, larvae from exposed adults grew 6-fold faster and metamorphosed 5-fold faster, which could be an amplified adaptive strategy to reduce the pelagic phase in a stressful environment.

BOREA contact: Frédéric OLIVIER, frederic.olivier@mnhn.fr

 

Frédéric OLIVIER's picture
Frédéric OLIVIER
MNHN Concarneau marine station
Professor
SOMAQUA
The French National Museum of Natural History (MNHN)
Published on 19 Jun 2024
Updated on 25 Aug 2024