'Grunts, growls and hums': B.C. researchers help compile online database of fish sounds - Action News
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British Columbia

'Grunts, growls and hums': B.C. researchers help compile online database of fish sounds

The noises fish make are part of anew database created by researchers who hope thatcataloguing the sounds will allow for a better understanding of marine ecosystems and the health of aquatic life.

Cataloguing fish sounds will allow for a better understanding of marine ecosystems, researchers say

A yellowtail rockfish photographed in the waters off the coast of British Columbia. It is part of the FishSounds.net database. (Kieran Cox)

Some fish grunt, some growl, andsome squeal. These fish noises and many more are part of anew database created by researchers who hope thatcataloguing the sounds will allow for a better understanding of marine ecosystems and the health of aquatic life.

"The reality is that there are 34,000 species of fish in the world and we're learning very quickly that many of them are contributing to aquatic soundscapes," said Kieran Cox, one of the B.C.-based researchers behind FishSounds.net.

It's the first online database of its kind that makes public all known recordings of underwater fish sounds more than 200 so far including thoserelated to mating, communicating, foragingor eating food.

Researchers behind the project say that having an open-source, free database of the noises fish makewill make it easier to use sound to track where fish are and what they're up to.

WATCH | Videos captured by researchers show some of the sounds fish make underwater

What do fish sound like?

2 years ago
Duration 0:26
Scientists have created a new online database of fish sounds that they hope will make it easier to track fish and study their behaviour.

For instance, one species, the freshwater drum, which is considered an invasive species by some experts, makes a distinctive drum-like sound called a chorus. Cox says the fish could be tracked using underwater microphones to give a better sense of their movements.

"Anyone who studies invasive species, knows that this is one of the primary challenges, tracing where they are, tracking their movement patterns to try to understand that," said Cox.

Cox, who completed hisPhD at the University of Victorialast yearand is now the Liber Ero and NSERC Postdoctoral Fellow at SFU, worked with other researchers in the U.S. and Brazil on the project.

One of the FishSounds collaborators, Kieran Cox, returning from deploying a hydrophone within a Rockfish conservation area in waters off the B.C. coast. (Hailey Davies)

They reviewed more than 3,000 documents and data from 834 studies in multiple languages from 1874 to 2020 to determine that 989 fish species produce active sounds such as hums, growls and grunts. There are thousands of species that have yet to be studied.

'Sounds are a kind of calling card'

The team then accessed federal funding to have Canada's Marine Environmental Research Infrastructure for Data Integration and Application Network (MERIDIAN) create the website so that the recorded sounds and scientific entriescould be made available for free online.

Audrey Looby, who studies aquatic noise at the University of Florida and was part of the project, said having the sounds available to the public and other researchers will help scientists and citizens better understand aquatic landscapes.

"Because we can match fish sounds to fish species, their sounds are a kind of calling card that can tell us what kinds of fish are in an area and that can be very helpful monitoring environmental health," she said in a release from the University of Victoria.

For example, if a species is not making noises associated with its normal behaviour, then researchers might look for a stressin the environment affecting the species.

A kelp greenling photographed in the waters off the coast British Columbia. It is part of the FishSounds.net database. (Kieran Cox)

Several other studies over the past decade, including some Cox has been involved with, have shown that noise from human activities in marine environments can negatively affect marine life.

Cox hopes that knowing more about the sounds fish makewill help scientists better understand what happens when animal-made noise and human-made noises interact with one another.

"And understand that the ocean is this incredibly diverse soundscape where we contribute to it, fishes contribute to it and this is a two-way relationship," he said. "When we introduce noise pollution we change the soundscapes."

Looby and Cox recently wrote about fish noises as co-authors of a paper called, "A Quantitative Inventory of Global Soniferous Fish Diversity"published in Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries.

The paper said despite the hundreds of sounds uploaded to FishSounds.net, some 96 per cent of fish species lacked an examination of the sounds they make and how they contribute to their behaviour and health.

Researchers behind FishSounds.net hope to add new recordings to the database regularly.

With files from Megan Thomas and Kathryn Marlow