The COVID-19 pandemic has led to unprecedented changes in human behavior around the world. These changes have impacted local soundscapes in both terrestrial and marine environments resulting in a global ‘quieting’ event that has allowed for the opportunity to evaluate the activity of soniferous organisms in unique acoustic environments. Across the world’s oceans, patterns of commercial, research, and recreational vessel traffic have all been altered, with corresponding alterations in the anthropogenic contribution to underwater noise. To assess these changes we used long-term acoustic recorders at three different coral reef sites on the Southern coast of the island of St. John in the United States Virgin Islands (USVI). We compared conditions pre-coronavirus outbreak (2019) and post-outbreak (2020) and found a decrease in the incidence of boat noise over the course of the pandemic. Because anthropogenic noise tends to overlap with the low frequencies used by marine fishes and invertebrates for sound production and detection, we predicted that changes in boat noise patterns would lead to concurrent changes in biological sound production of coral reef organisms. Understanding the impacts of this “quiet time” on marine organismal activity in the USVI could play a role in worldwide coral reef acoustic studies and conservation efforts.
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