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RE: Birds and city noise

Subject: RE: Birds and city noise
From: "Arnon Tsairi" <>
Date: Tue, 22 Jul 2003 11:16:01 +0200
Hi,

It was "also" published in Nature:

Slabbekoorn, H. and Peet, M. Birds sing at a higher pitch in urban noise.
Nature. 424:267.

 

Arnon Tsairi

-----Original Message-----
From: Wild Sanctuary  
Sent: Monday, July 21, 2003 15:50
To: 
Subject: [Nature Recordists] Birds and city noise

 

...and this just in from the Washington Post, this AM.

Bernie

******************************

     --  Shankar Vedantam
  City Birds Hit the High Notes
  Even birds, it seems, sometimes need to raise their voices to be 
heard over the din of the city.

  Hans Slabbekoorn and Margriet Peet of Leiden University in the 
Netherlands studied the mating songs of a species of bird known as 
the great titmouse living in different parts of the Dutch city of 
Leiden.

  Male birds living in the noisier parts of the city tended to sing 
higher notes, which other birds can hear more easily above the racket 
around them, than their counterparts in the quieter parts of the 
city, the researchers found.

   Although it is  possible that birds choose places to live that 
match their songs better, the researchers said it was more likely 
that the birds adjusted the songs to their habitat.

  "Our findings show, to our knowledge for the first time, that 
human-altered environments might change the communication signals of 
a wild bird species," the researchers wrote in the July 17 issue of 
the journal Nature.

  Because  mating calls are crucial for the survival of a species, 
those that are unable to make that kind of adjustment may be at 
greater risk of extinction, the researchers said.

  "Cars, planes and all sorts of machinery create a new selection 
pressure on wildlife species that use acoustic signals to achieve 
reproductive success," they wrote.

  "This might create two groups of species: one that can adapt their 
signals to the competing noise, and another that cannot."

     --  Rob Stein




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