Chlorophyll is the basis for ecosystem productivity in most marine environments. We report on an ongoing effort to examine whether ambient sounds are tied to chlorophyll levels. We hypothesized that an increase in food-web available energy will be distributed across trophic levels, eventually reaching sound-producing animals and increasing acoustic levels. To test our hypothesis, we compared reef environments to explore links between soundscapes and chlorophyll a concentrations. The study sites resided in disparate oceanographic regimes that experienced substantially different oceanographic conditions. We anticipated that the results would show differing patterns of primary productivity between sites and therefore would be reflected in the soundscapes.
CITATION STYLE
Fisher-Pool, P. I., Lammers, M. O., Gove, J., & Wong, K. B. (2016). Does primary productivity turn up the volume? Exploring the relationship between chlorophyll a and the soundscape of coral reefs in the pacific. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 875, pp. 289–293). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-2981-8_34
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