Abstract
Underwater sound is directional and can convey important information about the surrounding environment or the animal emitting the sound. Therefore, sound is a major sensory channel for fishes and plays a key role in many life-history strategies. The effect of anthropogenic noise on aquatic life, which may be causing homogenisation or fragmentation of biologically important signals underwater is of growing concern. In this review we discuss the role sound plays in the ecology of fishes, basic anatomical and physiological adaptations for sound reception and production, the effects of anthropogenic noise and how fishes may be coping to changes in their environment, to put the ecology of fish hearing into the context of the modern underwater soundscape.
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Putland, R. L., Montgomery, J. C., & Radford, C. A. (2019, July 1). Ecology of fish hearing. Journal of Fish Biology. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1111/jfb.13867
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