Most people have a preferred media format. They either want physical copies, e-books, or audio books, and rarely have interest in other formats. And unlike a preference for softcover or hardback copies of a physical book, a preference for e-books or audio books rarely, if ever, has to do with cost. It’s almost always about either convenience or ease of reading. I’m a very good example of both aspects, I have a very strong preference for e-books over other media for two reasons. First, I travel regularly and I read a lot, so having the ability to carry just my phone instead of the 1200+ pages worth of novels I would typically go through on a (one-way) transatlantic flight is a huge benefit for me. Second, I have poor vision, and the mediocre printing on mediocre paper that is the norm for many novels is actually difficult for me to read, but using e-books lets me tweak the font, text size, and colors so that I have no issues at all.
People like me who prefer e-books will almost never buy a physical book unless we have a very compelling reason to do so. For me, this amounts to one of two cases, either I absolutely need the book in question for some reason (say, a textbook for a class I’m taking), or the content of the book is highly visual in nature instead of textual (think something like a repair manual with lots of diagrams). For some people it might include particularly wanting to read something by an author they already know and particularly like. Some may be willing to for a best-selling book that’s highly recommended. But essentially nobody who prefers e-books is going to buy a physical copy of a book from an author they’ve never heard of who is not exceptionally popular.
The same is largely true of audio books as well.
What this means is that offering these additional formats is going to get you more total copies sold than you would have otherwise, but it will almost certainly have little impact, if any, on the number of physical copies sold.
In addition to that, physical books sell for more because they’re more expensive to produce. Each individual physical book requires raw materials and time to make. But each copy of an e-book or audio book is essentially free to make once you have the original done, because copying the file itself is going to cost at most a few cents. In fact, the profit margin is better in most cases on e-books than they are on physical copies, and this is especially the case if you’re dealing with short print runs or print-to-order (printing is a quintessential example of an industry where economies of scale have a major impact).
So even if there is a decline in physical copies sold, it would likely need to be particularly significant for it to have a major impact on your net profit from sales, because the digital formats will earn more per copy sold than the physical ones.