Divergent effects of short-term and continuous anthropogenic noise exposure on Western Bluebird parental care behavior

PeerJ. 2024 Nov 26:12:e18558. doi: 10.7717/peerj.18558. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Sensory environments are rapidly changing due to increased human activity in urban and non-urban areas alike. For instance, natural and anthropogenic sounds can interfere with parent-offspring communication and mask cues reflective of predation risk, resulting in elevated vigilance at the cost of provisioning. Here we present data from two separate studies involving anthropogenic noise and nestling provisioning behavior in Western Bluebirds (Sialia mexicana): one in response to short-term (1 h) experimental noise playback and a second in the context of nests located along a gradient of exposure to continuous noise. In the short-term playback experiment, nests were sequentially exposed to trials with either traffic noise or a silent audio track. The effect of the playback type interacted with the effect of the order in which trials were presented. The outcome was that provisioning rates during second trials with the silent track playback were higher than provisioning rates during noise playback on first or second trials, but not first trials with the silent track playback. Additionally, failed provisioning attempts only occurred during noise trials. In contrast, provisioning rates increased with the amplitude of noise among nests located in a gradient of continuous noise exposure. For nests along the noise gradient, the latency to resume provisioning behavior following human disturbance from approaching the nest negatively covaried with noise exposure amplitude. Specifically, birds resumed provisioning behavior more quickly with increased noise amplitude. Collectively, both studies demonstrate that noise can influence avian parental care of offspring, but the direction of the effect of noise are opposite. This difference could reflect variation in populations, noise characteristics or latent environmental contexts, or different ages of nestlings. However, it is also possible that the divergent responses reflect important differences in organismal responses to short-term versus long-term noise exposure. The possibility of mismatches in responses to short-term versus long-term noise exposure should be the focus of additional research, especially because short-term noise exposure experiments are often used to understand the consequences of noise pollution for organisms living in noisy environments.

Keywords: Anthropogenic noise; Field-based experiment; Nestling provisioning; Noise pollution; Playback experiment; Predation risk; Western Bluebird.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Environmental Exposure / adverse effects
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Maternal Behavior / physiology
  • Nesting Behavior* / physiology
  • Noise* / adverse effects

Grants and funding

This research was supported by the Natural Sounds and Night Skies Division of the National Park Service (P17AC01178), an American Ornithological Society Research Award and an Animal Behavior Society Student Research Grant. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.