Imagine! A tilapia farmer in Rwanda's Southern Province wakes up before sunrise,
checks his fish ponds, and notices something troubling. His fish are clustering
near the water surface, breathing rapidly, barely touching their food. The water
quality looks fine. Temperature is good. There are no obvious signs of disease.
So what's wrong?
He might never guess that part of the answer could lie in something as
surprising as sound.
Yes—you read that right. The sounds around your fish farm, from the hum of
pump motors and the splashing of aerators to the noise of passing vehicles and
workers talking, could be quietly stressing your fish, cutting into their
growth rates, and eating into your profits without you even realizing it.
And on the flip side, some researchers are asking a fascinating question: could
carefully chosen sounds—even music—actually help fish do better?
This article digs into the science of fish stress, the emerging research on
music and sound in aquaculture, and what it all means for fish farmers in
Rwanda and across East Africa. Whether you run a small pond in Bugesera or
manage cage culture on Lake Kivu, this is relevant to you.
Do Fish Actually Feel Stress? The Answer Might Surprise You
One of the biggest myths in aquaculture — especially among small-scale farmers
— is that fish don't really "feel" stress the way cattle, pigs, or
poultry do. This assumption has quietly caused a lot of preventable production
losses over the years.
The truth is that fish have a well-documented stress response system. When a
fish encounters something threatening — overcrowding, rough handling, poor
water quality, loud noise, or sudden environmental changes — its body releases
cortisol, the primary stress hormone in fish. This is the same hormone that
floods the human body during a moment of fear or pressure.
Research confirms that fish produce stress hormones as a response to stressfulsituations, and scientists now measure cortisol levels in blood, body
homogenates, scales, or even water as a way to assess fish welfare in
aquaculture settings.
When cortisol stays elevated—what scientists call "chronic stress"—the
consequences pile up fast. Chronic stress in fish most likely leads to stunted
growth, low performance, impaired reproductive function, poor health, increased
disease susceptibility, and ultimately death.
For a fish farmer, that's not an abstract biological concern. That's money
walking out the door.
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The Hidden Stressor: Noise in Your Fish Farm
When most farmers think about fish stress, they immediately consider
overcrowding, poor feed quality, disease, or bad water. Very few think about
noise. Yet noise is one of the most overlooked stressors in intensive
aquaculture—and one of the fastest-growing problems as farms modernize.
Modern fish farms, especially Recirculating Aquaculture Systems (RAS)—increasingly adopted in Rwanda and across East Africa—rely heavily on water
pumps, aerators, filtration systems, blowers, and mechanical feeding systems.
All of these generate continuous underwater noise.
As intensive aquaculture continues to develop, substantial investments in
equipment have resulted in elevated noise levels within aquaculture
environments, particularly below 2,000 Hz—a frequency range that closely matches
the hearing sensitivity of most cultured fish species. Fish under chronic noise
conditions may experience hearing loss and physiological stress, which can
negatively affect their growth, foraging efficiency, and reproductive
success.
Think of it this way: imagine living your entire life next to a generator that
never switches off. You'd be exhausted, on edge, and unable to sleep or eat
properly. For fish, that's what constant mechanical noise can feel like.
A 2025 peer-reviewed study published in the journal Fishes confirmed that the
noise profile of recirculating aquaculture systems—including its level and
type—can influence fish production performance, making the acoustic
environment an important but underappreciated management variable.
Can Music Help? What the Research Actually Shows
Here's where things get genuinely interesting—and a little
counterintuitive.
According to the results of the research about Noise Sources and
Music Stimuli in Teleost Fish Aquaculture Systems and reported that If noise causes stress in fish, you might expect that adding more sound (music)
would only make things worse. But a growing body of research suggests that the type
and quality of sound matter enormously. Not all acoustic stimuli are equal.
While harsh, irregular, or loud noise disrupts fish physiology, certain
controlled sounds—particularly classical music—appear to have measurable
positive effects.
Classical Music and Tilapia Behavior
One of the most relevant studies for East African fish farmers involved Nile
tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus)—the exact species that dominates aquaculture
in Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania.
A study published in 2026 examined the effects of different music genres on theswimming velocity and behavior of Nile tilapia, exposing them to classical
music, rock music, pop music, electronic music, and a silent control group over
a 30-minute period. Computer vision technology was used to monitor movement
patterns and assess changes in swimming behavior.
The results were eye-opening. In the control condition (no music), tilapia
exhibited minimal movement and maintained natural social behaviors—steady and
predictable, indicating the absence of external stressors. In contrast, tilapia
exposed to classical music and pop music displayed relatively different
behavioral patterns. Classical music, with its structured rhythms and moderate
frequencies, appeared to produce calmer behavioral profiles compared to rock
and electronic music.
This aligns with earlier findings on other commercially important species.
Studies on species like gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata), European seabass (Dicentrarchus
labrax), and common carp (Cyprinus carpio) have shown that acoustic stimuli can
significantly alter motility, blood glucose levels, lactate, and other
physiological biomarkers—suggesting that the acoustic environment plays a substantial
role in the health and well-being of farmed fish.
The Science Behind Why Sound Affects Fish
Fish don't have ears in the way we do, but they're far from deaf. They detect
sound through two systems: the lateral line — a row of pressure-sensitive cells
running along the body — and the inner ear, which includes otoliths (small
calcium carbonate stones that vibrate in response to sound waves). Some
species, like common carp, have a specialized structure called the Weberian
apparatus that enhances their hearing range significantly.
This means that sound literally passes through the water and through the fish's
body. A fish doesn't just "hear" music—it feels it. Low-frequency
sounds, which travel efficiently in water, are particularly powerful. Gentle,
rhythmic, low-frequency sounds can have a physiologically calming effect, while
erratic, high-amplitude sounds trigger alarm responses.
Music as a potential performance-enhancing tool in fish farming works precisely
because fish are sensitive to their acoustic environment, and the right kind of
sound can serve as a form of environmental enrichment—reducing the impact of
farm noise stressors and supporting better welfare outcomes.
Why This Matters for Rwanda and East Africa
Rwanda's aquaculture sector is at a pivotal moment. Aquaculture production in East Africa — including Rwanda, Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania — is experiencing steady growth, driven by increasing demand for fish and fish products for both nutritional and economic purposes, with the sector transitioning from extensive to semi-intensive and moderately intensive farming systems.
In Rwanda, Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) is the most commonly farmed
species, with semi-intensive farming as the dominant system. Fish are cultured
in earthen ponds across all provinces, with the Northern and Southern Provinces
holding the highest concentration of farms.
Rwanda's National Aquaculture Strategy 2023–2035 sets ambitious production
targets, and new infrastructure—including six newly certified hatcheries
approved under the Feed the Future Orora Wihaze project—is expanding
fingerling supply. Rwanda has an ambitious plan to produce over 80,000 tonnes
of fingerlings by 2035, as outlined in the National Aquaculture Strategy, with
newly approved hatcheries across Rwamagana, Kayonza, Bugesera, Gisagara, and
Rusizi.
But here's the challenge: scaling production without addressing fish welfare is
a recipe for disappointing results. As farms intensify—stocking more fish per
square meter, running pump systems and aerators around the clock, and using
mechanical feeders—noise levels inside ponds and tanks rise. If fish welfare
isn't factored into farm design and management, the stress load on the fish
increases even as the technical inputs improve.
For smallholder farmers operating on tight margins, a 10–15% improvement in
growth rate or feed conversion due to better welfare management is not a minor
footnote—it can be the difference between profit and loss for an entire
season.
FarmXpert Insight: Rwanda's fish farmers already face challenges including
high feed costs, substandard fingerlings, and limited access to extension
services. Stress management — including acoustic management — is a low-cost,
high-impact intervention that could give local farmers a real edge. Read more
about Rwanda's fish farming development on FarmXpert Group.
What Kinds of Sounds Stress Fish Out?
Not all noise is equal. Here's a practical breakdown of what to watch out for
on your farm:
High-risk noise sources:
- Diesel generators and water pumps running continuously near or inside
ponds
- Loud aerators placed directly inside tanks without sound dampening
- Banging and hammering during construction or repairs near active ponds
- Motorboat or vehicle engines passing close to cage culture sites on lakes
like Kivu or Ihema
- Workers shouting or playing loud music at high volume near fish
enclosures
Moderate risk:
- Consistent mechanical hum from electric pumps (manageable if
controlled)
- Regular feeding routines that create predictable, low-level vibrations (fish
can adapt to these)
- Rainfall and wind noise on pond surfaces (natural, generally
non-stressful)
Lower risk / potentially beneficial:
- Soft, structured sounds with consistent rhythm (classical music, ambient
nature sounds)
- Low-frequency, predictable vibrations associated with feeding — which fish
actually learn to associate with food delivery
The key distinction researchers emphasize is predictability and intensity.
Sudden, irregular, high-intensity noises are the most damaging. Consistent,
moderate-level, rhythmic sounds are easier for fish to habituate to — and some
may actually support calmer behavior.
Practical Steps Fish Farmers Can Take Right Now
You don't need to pipe Beethoven's Fifth into your fish pond tomorrow to
benefit from this research. Here are science-backed, practical steps any farmer
in Rwanda or East Africa can implement:
1. Position noisy equipment away from the pond edge.
Water pumps, generators, and aerators should ideally be mounted on
vibration-dampening materials (rubber pads work well) and positioned as far
from the main fish culture area as practically possible. Vibrations travel
efficiently through soil and water, so distance matters.
2. Avoid sudden loud disturbances during feeding.
Fish are most vulnerable to stress immediately before and after feeding when
they're most active. Try to keep the pond environment calm during feeding periods.
Loud noises at this stage can trigger cortisol spikes that directly reduce feed
conversion efficiency.
3. Train farm workers on quiet handling protocols.
Banging feeding buckets, shouting near ponds, and running equipment at maximum
speed during daily farm chores all add to the cumulative noise stress load.
Simple training on gentle, consistent farm routines can reduce stress
significantly.
4. Consider a simple test on your own farm.
If you have multiple ponds of similar size and stocking density, try playing
soft classical or ambient music through a waterproof speaker near one pond for
2–4 weeks and monitor differences in feed intake, growth rate, and observable
behavior between ponds. Document your results. This kind of farmer-led observation
is exactly the kind of ground-level data East African aquaculture research
still needs.
5. Monitor behavioral welfare indicators.
You don't need a laboratory to assess fish welfare. Observable indicators include willingness to feed at normal feeding time, calm and structured
schooling behavior, absence of surface gulping (which often signals oxygen
stress or agitation), and consistent coloration. Group-based factors like
behavior and appetite can be used as operational welfare indicators in fish welfare
assessments — practical tools that don't require expensive equipment.
Fish Welfare Is Good Business — Not Just Good Ethics
There's a temptation to think of fish welfare as a concern only for high-end
markets or export-oriented producers. That's a misunderstanding that's costing
African fish farmers real money.
Stressed fish don't grow efficiently. Their immune systems are compromised,
making disease outbreaks more likely and more severe. Their flesh quality
deteriorates — something that increasingly matters as Rwandan and East African
consumers become more discerning about the fish they eat. Companies like
Victory Farms in Kenya and Kivu Choice in Rwanda are demonstrating that
efficient, welfare-conscious production at scale is commercially viable and
increasingly necessary to meet growing regional demand.
The global aquaculture industry is also moving fast toward formal welfare
standards. The FAO and international bodies are developing clearer frameworks
for fish welfare in production settings. Farmers and producers who get ahead of
this curve—by building welfare-conscious practices into their operations now—will be better positioned for premium market access and international
certification as standards tighten in the coming years.
Explore more: Want to understand how Rwanda's aquaculture sector is
developing within the broader framework of agricultural transformation? Read
our detailed analysis: Rwanda's Fish Farming Development: Opportunities and
Challenges
Related reading: Explore all Aquaculture articles on FarmXpert Group
Listen to Your Fish Farm
The idea that music could reduce stress in fish isn't a quirky science
experiment. It sits within a serious and growing body of research on fish
welfare, acoustic ecology, and environmental enrichment in aquaculture. The
science is telling us something important: fish are more sensitive to their
environment than we've traditionally assumed, and the sounds around your fish
farm—whether calming or chaotic—have measurable effects on your fish's
health, behavior, and productivity.
For fish farmers in Rwanda and across East Africa, this opens up a low-cost
management frontier that has barely been explored at the local level. You don't
need expensive equipment or a university laboratory to start paying attention
to the acoustic environment of your farm. You just need to start listening—the same way your fish do.
The next step is yours as a farmer
Have you ever noticed changes in your fish's behavior related to noise or
disturbance on your farm? Share your experience in the comments below. Your
observations from the field are exactly what African aquaculture research needs
to develop practical, local solutions.
If this article opened your eyes to something new, share it with a fellow
farmer, extension worker, or agribusiness professional. The more we learn and
share, the stronger our farming communities become.
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References
1. Duan, S., Vasconcelos, R.O., Wu, L., Li, X., Sun,
W. & Li, X. (2025). Managing Aquaculture Noise: Impacts on Fish Hearing,
Welfare, and Mitigation Strategies. Reviews in Aquaculture, 17, e70013.
https://doi.org/10.1111/raq.70013
2. Fishes (MDPI), 2025. Noise Sources and Music
Stimuli in Teleost Fish Aquaculture Systems — A Review. Fishes, 10(11), 565.
https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes10110565
3. ScienceDirect, 2026. Effects of Auditory Stimuli on
the Swimming Behavior of Nile Tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus): Implications for
Aquaculture Welfare Management.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0168159126000559
4. MisPeces.com. Can Music Enhance Fish Well-being and
Performance in RAS Systems?
https://www.mispeces.com/en/news/Can-music-enhance-fish-well-being-and-performance-in-RAS-system/
5. Research Outreach (2023). New Ways to Assess Stress
in Fish Are Urgently Needed in Aquaculture.
https://researchoutreach.org/articles/new-ways-assess-stress-fish-urgently-needed-aquaculture/
6. Munguti, J. et al. (2024). The Fish Feed Sector in
Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, and Rwanda: Current Status, Challenges, and Strategies
for Improvement. Aquaculture Nutrition. https://doi.org/10.1155/2024/8484451
7. Taylor & Francis (2021). Aquaculture and
Aquafeed in Rwanda: Current Status and Perspectives.
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10454438.2021.2024315
8. Rwanda MINAGRI (2023). National Aquaculture
Strategy for Rwanda 2023–2035.
9. AllAfrica (2024). Rwanda: Six New Tilapia
Hatcheries to Help Scale Up Fish Production.
https://allafrica.com/stories/202408290006.html
10. The Fish Site (2024). Why Small Tilapia Have a Big
Future in African Aquaculture.
https://thefishsite.com/articles/why-small-tilapia-have-a-big-future-in-african-aquaculture
11. FarmXpert Group (2025). Rwanda's Fish Farming
Development: Opportunities and Challenges.
https://www.farmxpertgroup.com/2025/10/rwandas-fish-farming-development.html
12. MDPI Animals (2025). Editorial: Fish Welfare in
Aquaculture and Research — Where Are We Going?
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/15/16/2367
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1 Comments
Very interesting! find for us the function of music in pig farming!
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