文章摘要
基于文献计量分析-鱼类对人为噪声的响应
Bibliometric Analysis of Fish Responses to Anthropogenic Noise
投稿时间:2025-04-21  修订日期:2025-05-07
DOI:
中文关键词: 鱼类  人为噪声  文献计量  鱼类福利
英文关键词: Fish  Anthropogenic noise  Bibliometric analysis  Fish welfare
基金项目:国家重点研发项目-深远海养殖大规格苗种行为特征及与环境互作机制(024YFD2400101)
作者单位邮编
李贤* 中国海洋大学水产学院 266003
孙雯 中国海洋大学水产学院 
苏俊洁 中国海洋大学水产学院 
段姗杉 中国海洋大学水产学院 
张翔宇 中国海洋大学水产学院 
吴乐乐 中国海洋大学水产学院 
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中文摘要:
      人为噪声通常指由人类活动产生并释放到环境中的各种噪声,它在水下环境中对鱼类及其他水生生物产生显著的负面影响。随着全球船舶运输、海上工程建设、水上娱乐活动以及集约化水产养殖等活动的快速发展,人为噪声对鱼类福利的影响已引起环保组织、政府部门、科研机构、水产养殖行业从业者和消费者的广泛关注。近些年来,人为噪声对鱼类福利的研究数量逐渐增多,但大多数研究集中于单一鱼类对噪声响应分析,缺乏从鱼类栖息环境分类的视角系统探讨不同生态类型鱼类对噪声响应的差异性。本文通过文献计量分析方法,概述了鱼类对人为噪声响应的研究进展,并分别探讨了自然环境和养殖环境下的人为噪音对鱼类生长、生理、行为等福利参数影响的研究现状。本文对提升公众认知、助力制定指导政策、推动相关领域交叉学科发展以及技术创新具有重要意义,通过梳理人为噪声和鱼类响应之间的复杂关系,旨在促进人类活动与鱼类赖以生存的水下声景环境的协调,提升鱼类福利,实现经济效益与生态效益的双赢。
英文摘要:
      Anthropogenic noise generally refers to various types of noise generated by human activities and released into the environment, encompassing mechanical operation sounds, ship navigation noises, engineering blasting sounds, and other similar acoustic emissions. As a secondary pollutant introduced into natural environments through human activities, the underwater acoustic propagation characteristics and ecological impacts of anthropogenic noise have emerged as a critical interdisciplinary research focus at the intersection of marine environmental science and aquatic biology. Unlike in terrestrial environments, industrial noise in aquatic systems exhibits long-term, cumulative, and cross-habitat propagation characteristics, imposing significant negative impacts on fish and other aquatic organisms in underwater ecosystems. With the acceleration of globalization, the intensity of marine development has increased exponentially. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO, 2024), global merchant fleet tonnage has grown by 75% over the past two decades, offshore wind power capacity has expanded at an annual rate of 22%, and intensive aquaculture production now accounts for 52% of total fishery output. The noise fields generated by these activities—ranging from ship propeller cavitation to pile-driving for offshore infrastructure and mechanical vibrations in aquaculture facilities—have significantly altered the marine soundscape. Background noise levels in some coastal waters have increased by 15–20 dB compared to the 1960s, a change driven by the cumulative effect of continuous low-frequency rumble from shipping and intermittent high-energy pulses from construction activities. This drastic transformation of the underwater acoustic environment poses multidimensional stresses to fish, which rely heavily on sound for essential life processes. Physiologically, prolonged noise exposure disrupts sensory systems: it causes microstructural damage to swim bladders, critical for sound resonance, and induces apoptosis of auditory hair cells in the inner ear, impairing sound detection. Behaviorally, noise interferes with navigation, communication, and survival strategies: coral reef fish struggle with mate recognition and predator avoidance as ambient noise masks species-specific acoustic signals. At the population level, these effects cascade into declines in local species abundance and alterations in community structure. The rapid expansion of human activities—including global shipping, offshore engineering, recreational boating, and industrial aquaculture—has brought the issue of anthropogenic noise affecting fish welfare to the forefront of attention for environmental organizations, government agencies, research institutions, aquaculture practitioners, and consumers. In recent years, the scientific community has responded with a growing body of research, thereby reflecting heightened awareness of this ecological challenge. However, current research remains constrained by notable limitations. The majority of studies focus on single model species subjected to acute noise exposure in controlled laboratory settings, measuring short-term behavioral changes or physiological indicators like elevated serum cortisol. While such studies provide insights into species-specific threshold responses, there is a lack of systematic discussion from the perspective of fish habitat classification on the differences in responses among different ecological fish types to noise. Based on this, this paper systematically collates and analyzes a large body of relevant literature through bibliometric analysis, and further employs the VOSviewer visualization tool to conduct multidimensional quantitative analysis of 283 documents. This process constructs a keyword co-occurrence network, a national collaboration map, and an institutional distribution map, aiming to provide visual support for interpreting research progress and outline advancements in studies on fish responses to anthropogenic noise. The paper also respectively discusses the current research status of how anthropogenic noise in natural and aquaculture environments affects fish welfare parameters such as growth, physiology, and behavior. In natural environments, fish exhibit altered swimming behaviors—for example, when ships approach, they change their swimming direction, make rapid turns, or display avoidance behaviors. Recent studies have also revealed that fish behavioral responses to anthropogenic noise extend to anti-predation and foraging activities. Physiologically, intermittent high-level ship noise induces acute stress responses in coastal marine fish, manifesting as abnormal physiological indicators such as sudden increases in serum cortisol concentration. In terms of reproductive behavior, traffic noise masks the acoustic signals emitted by male fish during the breeding period in freshwater streams, disrupting females’ ability to extract information about males from these signals and negatively impacting successful mating. At the survival capacity level, ship traffic restricts the activity ranges of marine fish, potentially causing them to miss food resources and thus affecting their long-term survival. In aquaculture environments, fish in marine cages, lake enclosures, and land-based industrial farms are all affected by persistent anthropogenic noise. Take recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS) as an example: the low-frequency vibrations and mechanical noise generated by equipment operation have been proven to stress the growth performance and immune function of freshwater fish such as rainbow trout. This research is of significant importance for enhancing public awareness, aiding in formulating guiding policies, promoting interdisciplinary development in related fields, and driving technological innovation. By unraveling the complex relationships between anthropogenic noise and fish responses, it seeks to facilitate coordination between human activities and the underwater soundscape environment on which fish depend for survival, improve fish welfare, and achieve a win-win situation between economic benefits and ecological sustainability.
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