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DOI: 10.1890/12-0133.1
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Anthropogenic noise is associated with reductions in the productivity of breeding Eastern Bluebirds (<i>Sialia sialis</i>)

Caitlin R. Kight,Margaret S. Saha,John P. Swaddle

Songbird
Habitat
Ecology
2012
Although previous studies have related variations in environmental noise levels with alterations in communication behaviors of birds, little work has investigated the potential long-term implications of living or breeding in noisy habitats. However, noise has the potential to reduce fitness, both directly (because it is a physiological stressor) and indirectly (by masking important vocalizations and/or leading to behavioral changes). Here, we quantified acoustic conditions in active breeding territories of male Eastern Bluebirds (Sialia sialis). Simultaneously, we measured four fitness indicators: cuckoldry rates, brood growth rate and condition, and number of fledglings produced (i.e., productivity). Increases in environmental noise tended to be associated with smaller brood sizes and were more strongly related to reductions in productivity. Although the mechanism responsible for these patterns is not yet clear, the breeding depression experienced by this otherwise disturbance-tolerant species indicates that anthropogenic noise may have damaging effects on individual fitness and, by extraction, the persistence of populations in noisy habitats. We suggest that managers might protect avian residents from potentially harmful noise by keeping acoustically dominant anthropogenic habitat features as far as possible from favored songbird breeding habitats, limiting noisy human activities, and/or altering habitat structure in order to minimize the propagation of noise pollution.
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    Anthropogenic noise is associated with reductions in the productivity of breeding Eastern Bluebirds (<i>Sialia sialis</i>)” is a paper by Caitlin R. Kight Margaret S. Saha John P. Swaddle published in 2012. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.