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The WFSU Ecology Blog

  • Home
    • About
    • EcoAdventures
      • Kayak and Canoe Adventures
      • Hiking
      • Wildlife Watching
    • Observations From the Field
      • White Pelicans Visit Dr. Charles L. Evans Pond in Tallahassee
      • An April Walk at Ochlockonee River WMA
      • Nesting Raptors at Honeymoon Island State Park
    • WFSU Public Media Home
  • Documentaries
    • In Their Words: Black Legacy Communities in North Florida
    • EcoCitizen Show | Seasons in South Tallahassee
    • Red Wolf Family Celebrates First Year at the Tallahassee Museum
    • Roaming the Red Hills
    • Oyster Doctors
    • Testing the Ecology of Fear
    • EcoShakespeare
    • Stories from the Apalachicola
    • Classic WFSU Ecology Documentaries
  • Habitats
    • Estuaries
      • Oyster Reef
        • The Effects of Predators and Fear on Oyster Reefs
        • Apalachicola Oyster Research
        • Animal Species in a North Florida Intertidal Oyster Reef
        • Oyster Reef Ecology | On the Reef
      • Salt Marsh
        • In the Grass- Salt Marsh Biodiversity Study
        • Plants and Animals of a North Florida Salt Marsh
        • Salt Marsh Ecology | In the Grass
      • Seagrass Bed
        • Predatory Snails, and Prey, of the Bay Mouth Bar Seagrass Beds
      • In the Grass, On the Reef Glossary
    • Waterways Big and Small
      • Aucilla/ Wacissa Watershed
      • Apalachicola Basin
        • Apalachicola Bluffs and Ravines | Virtual Field Trip
        • The Age of Nature Screening & Discussion | The Future of the Apalachicola
        • Apalachicola River and Bay
        • Apalachicola RiverTrek | Kayaking, Camping, & Hiking the River Basin
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      • The Case for Weeds, Our Unsung Florida Native Plants
      • Devil’s Walkingstick: Your New Favorite Thorny Pollinator Plant?
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Oyster Reef Ecology | On the ReefWildlife in North Florida- Critters Big and Small

Sounds of the Oyster Reef

by Rob Diaz de Villegas March 13, 2012
by Rob Diaz de Villegas March 13, 2012 0 comment
Rob Diaz de Villegas WFSU-TV
IGOR chip_ predators_NCE 150

Imagine you’re watching a slasher movie starring mud crabs as the protagonists.  A mud crab leaves the party in the muck under the oyster reef, where the other crabs are chomping down juvenile oysters.  As he pokes his head out from between a couple of shells, you hear a drumming sound and you shout at the screen “Don’t go out there!”

It’s fun to anthropomorphize some of the freaky looking residents of an oyster reef.  But these are the realities of living within the ecology of fear.  Predator cues have a definitive impact on how the smaller, intermediate consumers such as mud crabs behave.  That’s what David Kimbro, Randall Hughes & co. are studying in Alligator Harbor and at their sites across the southeast.  Large predators send certain cues to their prey- perhaps a certain way they move in the water, perhaps.  When the prey species sense that the predators are near, they cease activity- including the eating of juvenile oysters.  That is how large predators help maintain a healthy oyster reef- they make intermediate consumers (mud crabs) eat less of the basal species (oysters, the foundation of the oyster reef habitat).

At high tide, this reef will be covered in turbid water, and large predators like catfish, blue crabs, and red drum will move in to eat smaller animals such as mud crabs.

I recently came across a study conducted by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. where they used bioacoustics to learn more about how spotted seatrout spawn near Tampa Bay.  They created recordings of the trout and of several other marine species, many of which David Kimbro has found on his oyster reefs.  The thought occurred to me- would these sounds qualify as predator cues to mud crabs?  Do they hear sounds like we do, or do they feel the vibrations of the sound waves?  It’s not something David and Randall are looking at currently, and perhaps it’s not so much of a factor in how the nonconsumptive effects of predators help maintain oyster reefs.  But I thought it would be neat to listen to some of the recordings made by FWC, and get an idea of what it sounds like down there.  The two fish that are absent are the hardhead and sail catfish, which are the main predators in David and Randall’s oyster sites in Florida.  Those are quite vocal fish.

Single Red Drum

If you ever wondered where they get their name, take a listen.

A Few Red Drum

Single Black Drum

An aggregation of Black Drum

Snapping Shrimp

Snapping Shrimp

Snapping shrimp have also been found on the Kimbro/ Hughes oyster reefs.  The photo on the right was taken during the initial sampling of the Alligator Harbor sites, when the oyster team was setting nets and minnow traps.  I remember hearing the “snapping” of this singular shrimp.  In the recording above, you can hear an aggregation of shrimp, and it sounds a little like the frying of bacon.

Single Gulf Toadfish

The dominant predator of North Carolina oyster reefs, they are present in Florida’s coastal waters, even if catfish rule our local reefs. Here’s what these beautiful animals look like:

Toadfish
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Alligator Harborbioacousticsblack drumcoastal ecologyconsumptive_nonconsumptiveoyster reefRed drumsnapping shrimptoadfish
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Rob Diaz de Villegas

Rob Diaz de Villegas is a senior producer for WFSU-TV, covering outdoors and ecology. After years of producing the music program OutLoud, Rob found himself in a salt marsh with a camera, and found a new professional calling as well. That project, the National Science Foundation funded "In the Grass, On the Reef," spawned the award winning WFSU Ecology Blog. Now he spends time exploring north Florida's forests, coasts, waterways, and the endlessly fascinating ecosystem that is the backyard garden. Rob is married with two young sons, who make a pretty fantastic adventure squad.

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